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World Cup Preview



Every 4 years, I get real excited about following soccer for a month, and that time is now. The World Cup is not just for soccer fans, its for citizens who love a chance to root for their country in competition against others. There's something about international sports competition that galvanizes people to watch and take interests in things they normally couldn't care less about. I'm talking, of course, about competitions like Olympic swimming, gymnastics, figure skating, track & field, and women's softball.

For the average American watching the World Cup, its very unusual to enter into a crazed fanaticism for something that America doesn't lead in. For the rest of the world, the World Cup is less monumental because of the constant craze and appetite for soccer. Americans, who are less avid about the world's game, hype the World Cup much more than everyone else does, because of events that are considered much more important, like the UEFA Champion's League, Euro Cup, and each nation's respective league.

Let's get to the group by group breakdowns of a fairweather, bandwagon, uniformed soccer fan. Ready?

(I won't be offended if you decide that reading the rest of this would be an epic waste of your time.)


GROUP A

Projected Finish

1. France

FIFA's 9th ranked team is hungry after losing the 2006 World Cup Championship to Italy in PKs. Gone from that team is the controversial Zidane, who was the leader and icon of the French national team for the preceding decade. This team is left in the capable hands of striker Thierry Henry, midfielder Franck Ribery, and defender William Gallas. France needs to bring their best game in the group stage because this draw is no easy one. One loss could keep them from advancing with the strong teams from Mexico and Uruguay.

2. Mexico

After a frustrating draw in the Round of 16 in Germany against Argentina, Mexico is looking to advance into the late rounds to show its true strength. Aside from stars Giovani dos Santos, Carlos Vela, and Rafael Marquez, many of these guys play on clubs in Mexico or America, so the element of the unknown could be in play. This team must beat Uruguay or France if it hopes to advance to the Knockout stage.

3. Uruguay

This team enters the World Cup at 16 in FIFA's rankings, but did not qualify in 2006. Inexperience could be a factor, and there is no time to adjust to the intensity of the game when your opening games are against France, Mexico, and the South African hosts.

4. South Africa

The hosts are the unquestioned weakest team in this tournament and probably robbed a much stronger team from qualifying. This team is crucial to a nation like South Africa for unity and national pride. Because of everything that has gone down in the last 20 years and how far the nation has come, the home field advantage could be historically strong. Playing behind a raucous crowd, I would not be shocked if the team pulled a major upset in the group stage to spoil someone's trip.



GROUP B

1. Argentina

Lionel Messi, arguably the world's best player, leads one of the major contenders through a group that shouldn't give the team too much trouble. This squad is loaded with young guns like Messi, Carlos Tevez and Gonzalo Higuain, and experience. Argentina's chances to win the Cup are as good as anyone.

2. Greece

The Greeks have the look of somebody who doesn't belong at the party. After drawing a weak qualifying pot, Greece barely advanced past the likes of Latvia, Israel, Luxembourg, and Moldova. When tested in qualifying, Greece lost twice to winner Switzerland. The team does have talent in forwards Theofanis Gekas and Angelos Charisteas who will propel them into the Round of 16.

3. South Korea

This team owns Asia, having qualified for its seventh straight World Cup out of the region's qualifying stage. The technical skill of this team has helped them achieve surprising success against more talented teams, like Portugal, Italy, and Spain in the 2002 Cup, and a draw with France in 2006. Ranked only 47th in FIFA, the South Koreans won't out-athletic anyone, but might out-discipline their way past the group stage.

4. Nigeria

The Super Eagles have a shallow history in the World Cup, never finishing better than 9th. It's hard to tell how good this team is in spite of its 21st FIFA rank, because they went undefeated in qualifying against a ho-hum continent and never faced Cameroon or Egypt. This team may be more talented than Greece and South Korea are, but Greece may be better equipped and experienced for this setting.


GROUP C

1. England

This team is poised to win its first World Cup since 1966. Given the expectations that surround this team every World Cup, the slew of 6th-8th place finishes is cause for depression.
Wayne Rooney leads an English squad with expectations high
This team is so stacked that a quarterfinal finish is not satisfactory as it is for most other qualifiers. England looks to avenge a crushing quarterfinal loss in PKs to Portugal with a loaded roster that includes names like Crouch, Gerrard, Lampard, Rooney, Wright-Phillips, and Cole (Joe and Ashley). Every player on this roster plays in the best league in the world, the English Premier League, and there is again no excuse for this team losing early.





2. United States

I've said it before: this team thrives when the expectations deflate. Entering 2006 Germany, this team was soaring with swagger and a FIFA ranking of 5th. To everyone's shock and horror, the Americans were eliminated in the group stage.
The U.S. hopes rest largely on Jozy Altidore's tender ankle
To be fair, they drew the famed Group of Death that included Italy, Ghana, and the Czech Republic. Four years later, the ranking has fallen to a still respectable 14th, and the grassroots soccer movement has progressed. Talent pumps through the veins of the U.S. Soccer program, and it appears that there is finally enough talent to compete on the world stage. The knock on the Americans, as always, is that the technical skills are lacking. The draw this time around is weaker, and the Red, White, and Blue should advance.

3. Slovenia
4. Algeria


GROUP D

1. Germany

The Germans are a traditional power with the arguable most decorated World Cup history. Three Cups, four times runners-up, quarterfinals or better in 14 straight tournaments. There might be no team with better chemistry than these guys, with 8 players from the the club team Bayern Munich, three from Werder Bremen, and three from Stuttgart. The fact that the players know each other's tendencies will be an advantageous factor. Noticeably absent is the legendary Michael Ballack, who was left off the roster because of an ankle injury. The 33 year old's leadership is unquestioned, but the German roster is more than talented enough to withstand the loss and still win.

2. Serbia

Serbia is back after a disappointing last place finish in the 2006 Cup, Serbia went 7-1-2 in qualifying, winning a pot that included France. If nothing else, this team has proven that it can play with the powers, having drawn France in that qualifying stage.

3. Australia

The "Socceroos" are playing in just their third World Cup, having entered their best soccer stretch in national team history. The advancement to the Round of 16 was a huge confidence booster for this team, and they were competitive every step of the way in the 2006 tournament. A 1-0 loss to Brazil is all that kept this team from being the headline story for the entire event. Opposite the Germans, a splintered roster of players from all over the club soccer world keeps this team from experiencing familiarity. The second advancer from this group may come down to the match between Serbia and Australia.

4. Ghana

Ghana looks to build on its impressive showing in the 2006 Group of Death, in which it made the Round of 16. Not an established soccer power in Africa, Ghana would love to break into that conversation with Egypt, Cameroon, and the Ivory Coast. It is possible that Ghana could advance past Serbia and Australia, because Group D seems very muddled after the titan Germany.


GROUP E

1. Netherlands

I love the alternate solid Orange kit that the Dutch sport. My favorite jerseys in the world, and one of the main reasons why the Netherlands was my team of choice to play with in EA Sports FIFA World Cup 2006. This team has lost twice in the Final, but has a surprisingly short World Cup history behind it. Names like van Bommel, van Persie, and Robben give this team a great chance to advance far into the tournament. The best Round of 16 game in 2006 was this team vs. Portugal, which was a tough luck match up for the Dutch. They're out for blood this time.

2. Cameroon

"The Indomitable Lions" haven't advanced through the group stage since a quarterfinal finish 20 years ago in Italy. Supremacy in Africa is on the line for this team as it fights to stay on top. Advancing through this stage should be no problem.

3. Denmark
4. Japan


GROUP F

1. Italy

One of the world's best teams leads the Cup's worst group into competition. The 2006 Champion may not have to flip the switch until the Round of 16 with the way this group shapes up. This team's defense is its defining characteristic, having allowed just two goals in 2006. Names like Cannavaro, Zambrotta, Gattuso, Pirlo, and Camoronesi return from the 2006 team to occupy the back and midfield, leaving the Italians in a great spot for the Knockout round.

2. Paraguay

Not a lot to expect from this team, but it did have a great qualifying, beating Argentina, Peru, Brazil, and Uruguay en route to third place in South America. That indicates to me that either (a) those teams were taking it easy in qualifying, or (b) Paraguay has some legit upset potential.

3. Slovakia
4. New Zealand


GROUP G

1. Brazil

The world's best team leads the Cup's most competitive group, where one team that is skilled enough to make the top 16 will not make it. Brazil will not be that team. With a record 5 World Cup titles, Brazil's success is deep and unprecedented in this tournament. Expect them to play into the second week of July somewhere past the semifinals.

2. Portugal

I almost put Portugal to win this group over Brazil. They'll both beat the other two teams, so it really comes down to their head-to-head match,
which is far and away the best group stage game in the tournament. Portugal looks a little younger than Brazil and had a markedly better run in the months before South Africa. Another big factor is that one of the world's 3 best players, Cristiano Ronaldo, wears the Portuguese uniform. His presence alone could be the difference between first and second in this group.


3. Ivory Coast

This team got a tough luck draw with two of the 3 best teams in the world.
Amazingly, Drogba might play in Ivory Coast's opener
Remarkably, Drogba is being considered for the team's opening match against Portugal just 12 days after the injury, according to a USA Today report Adding injury to insult, Côte d'Ivoire's best player, forward Didier Drogba, broke his arm in a friendly just 6 days ago. The Ivory Coast is going to need Drogba if it wants to advance, and they're going to need him playing at his best, whether 100% healthy or not.

4. North Korea

Making its 2nd qualification ever, the North Korean team faces a daunting task. As the lowest ranked team at 105, this team has little chance of challenging any of the three great teams in the group.


GROUP H

1. Spain

I was wrong. This is the best group in the tournament, with no team ranked worse than 38th. Spain is the prohibitive favorite to win the group and quite possibly the entire tournament. The Round of 16 loss to France was just one more in a frustrating sequence of eliminations in Spain's quest for that first World Cup title. The team has qualified for the Cup 8 straight times and has moved into the quarterfinal another handful of times, but never into the title game. The Spanish are in the midst of a mindnumbing streak of success: since winning a friendly against England in February 2007, the national team has lost one time in 47 matches. This streak encompasses wins against several of the world's top 10 teams in 2-0 or 3-0 fashion. When we talk about dominance in sport, this is the kind of streak that we're talking about. This team has it flowing like no national team ever has before, and many think that it will carry on through to Spain's first World Cup title. The one loss during that streak? To the United States in 2009's Confederation's Cup. Possible foreshadowing? Probably not.

2. Chile

One of the premier South American teams draws a very competitive group after a good qualifying session. If Chile can survive the group stage, I'm considering them a primary darkhorse to steal the show in Knockout. This team doesn't lose to inferior teams, and knows how to put teams away when ahead. The roster is one of the freshest and youngest in the tournament, which is high risk/high reward in my opinion. However, all bets are off in the World Cup with the experience argument, because of how delicate every run, every foul, and every corner is. One bounce can make or break a team's chances to advance. Essentially, every team is high risk in that kind of setting, so I'll take the young and explosive roster over other teams who have more experience.

3. Switzerland

The only team is 2006 to not allow a regulation goal, the Swiss are back to make their mark on the Round of 16. Another young roster bodes well in a tourney full of grizzled vets. A more informed soccer fan could tell you the differences between Chile and this team and who has a better chance to advance, but I can't. My qualifier is that any of the bottom 3 teams in this draw could take the 2nd spot and belong in the Round of 16.

4. Honduras

This is one of the 3 best teams in the CONCACAF region making its 2nd World Cup appearance. Let's put it this way, when Honduras is the 4th best team in your group, your group is stacked. This team could finish second in many of the other groups, and could conceivably do so here. It will be an uphill battle for Los Catrachos, but I won't be surprised if they move on.


The group stage has a lot of promise and will be riveting to watch. As we advance into the later stages, I'll come back with a little bigger body of soccer knowledge and reset the stage. Enjoy the futbol!
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There Is Hope for Soccer




The UEFA Champion's League concluded Saturday with Inter Milan taking the title in victory over Bayern Munich.

Usually this event would go off without so much as a ripple in the stream of U.S. sports consciousness while being one of Europe's most popular events. For as long as anyone can remember, Americans have not cared about soccer. This shows up in youth leagues, sales, TV coverage, and more.

This collective apathy might be on its way out. That the Champion's League final occurred is not as newsworthy as the fact that it was televised nationally in the U.S. FOX, whose coverage of anything aside from MLB and NFL is lackluster, did a satisfactory job carrying the event. Many thought the match would carry a rating of at least 2.0, as compared to the 2008 match on ESPN that carried a minuscule 0.8. The ratings have not been released yet, but the predictions and weekend time slot are indicators that Americans are hungry for soccer.

What's causing this change in appetite? Why is it happening now? These are questions that I cannot answer intelligently, but I do have some ideas.

First, our culture of instant gratification, ushered in by technology and electronic communication, has contributed to mass A.D.D (if A.D.D. is even real). The average attention span is much, much shorter now than in recent decades. Need proof? Hang out with anyone between the ages of 13-30 for five minutes and you'll see. Concurrent with this lack of attention are drawn out televised sporting events. You'll be hard pressed to watch any pro game on TV that elapses in less than 2 1/2-3 hours. Games are getting longer, and our attention is getting shorter. Enter soccer! Played at a non-stop pace in faster time, it is better suited to the American culture than baseball and football, which take 45 seconds off between 5-7 second discrete plays.

Second, there is gobs of money in soccer that companies and rich Americans want a part of. Between 2003 and 2005, Malcolm Glazer, owner of the NFL's Tampa Bay Bucs, gradually gained controlling interest of Europe's premier soccer franchise, Manchester United. The purchase was valued at $1.47 billion. Soccer salaries in Europe are as bloated as NBA and MLB salaries, if not more. The global fixation on soccer is something that MLB, NBA, and the NFL have been chasing for 20 years. The reason that soccer hasn't gone corporate in America is because the interest has been lacking; companies don't throw big money at something until there is a market for it. They don't create the demand, they meet it when it arrives. If soccer starts to take off in the U.S., you can bet the money, attention, and sponsorship will come with it.

Third, soccer (especially in Europe) has major star power. Ronaldinho, Messi, Zidane, Van Nistelrooy, Xavi, Ballack, Christiano Ronaldo, Eto'o. If there's one distinguishing attribute about American culture, its that we are celebrity-obsessed. This could be a major driving force to the soccer movement. I don't think it would take much for these names to explode in American fame. The problem is, America doesn't have any homegrown players on level with Europe's best. We saw that the David Beckham experiment did not work out very well on the pitch, but the notoriety and revenue that the LA Galaxy gained was noticeable. Becks walked off the beaten path by leaving the most competitive leagues in the world to play in the lowly MLS.

Fourth, we're getting better at soccer.
Jozy Altidore gives Americans cause for optimism
The U.S. national team has been ranked in the world top 20 for a year and a half straight, and is currently ranked 14th. The team is budding with talent like never before, with guys like Jozy Altidore, Michael Bradley, DeMarcus Beasley, Clint Dempsey, Landon Donovan, Eddie Johnson, and Oguchi Onyewu. This team disappointed in the 2006 World Cup, but played with talent, chemistry, and passion in last year's Confederation's Cup, finishing as runner-up to Brazil. On their way to a well-played 3-2 defeat in the final, the U.S. excelled in beating highly ranked Spain and showing that it could be a major player in the international soccer scene. As recently as 8 years ago, the national team finished in the top 8 of the World Cup in Cinderella fashion, proving that this team has tasted success.


There is hope anew for soccer in America. The World Cup craze in 2006 is sure to be replicated, and most likely exceeded by next month's version. But let's not give our boys too much hype or bank on them too much; this team underachieves when expectations run high, as I've written before. I'm excited for the World Cup and hopeful about our chance of success, but wary of how much impact the World Cup outcome will have on the trajectory of the world's sport in its crucial stage in the United States.
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Modern Day Miracle Pt. 2



I never imagined I'd be posting about soccer, let alone multiple times in a matter of days. Soccer is a game I never played and never really liked, but team USA's incredible run through the Confederations Cup demands my attention and appreciation.

In shocking upset fashion, Team USA knocked out world #1 ranked Spain 2-0 in Wednesday's semifinal of the tournament, snapping Spain's 15 match win streak and 35 match unbeaten streak in international competition. To describe this as a typical upset would be a terrible understatement. That's the most accurate portrait I can paint to capture the magnitude of this result.

Here's the thing with this USA team. When there are no expectations, the team thrives. As an underdog, it thrives. Case in point: a surprise run to the final 8 in the 2002 World Cup which seemed to put the team back on the map. Fast forward to 2006. Ranked as high as 5th in the world before the World Cup, and considered one of the world's best teams, the US suddenly found itself under pressure from elevated expectations. The result? An 0-1-2 showing in Group E (nicknamed the Group of Death), and early exit from the Cup.

Placed in a group with Italy, Brazil, and Egypt at this year's Confederations Cup, expectations and hope were again depressed. Two years of continual disappointment dictated this. A gritty, if unsuccessful, performance in group play, couple with some fortunate circumstances, allowed the US to escape another very competitive group of teams.

The US rode a tidal wave of momentum into the semis against Spain and the familiar stage was set. The US, clearly overmatched in talent, played careful and disciplined defense for a complete 90 minutes. Spain dominated possession and spent most of the game in American territory, firing deflected shot after deflected shot toward keeper Tim Howard. The US defenders were tireless in throwing their bodies in front of Spain's tries in order to make Howard's job easier.

The US didn't go for the big play; the team just played within itself and stuck to its gameplan in clogging up the front of Spain's net. The US had only 4 shots all game, but was very opportunistic, capitalizing on its chances to score twice. Howard himself was brilliant, stopping 6 shots, a few of which were game-savers. With all the time Spain spent weaving in and out of US players, it was clear to me that it was momentum--not talent-- that propelled the Americans ahead. Spain is clearly a better team, one of the best. But the United States is earning a reputation as a giant killer on the world soccer scene.

I'm not going to be greedy. I don't want the US to be one of the best teams in the world. I think its clear that this team is better when they are overmatched, counted out, and have nobody believing, hoping, or expecting it. America, keep the expectations low, and the success will come.
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A Modern Day Miracle



There are many, many faithful followers of USA Soccer who suffer through every disappointing loss and underachieving performance. For years, this team has been like the brutal train wreck that we just can't look away from.

The beginning of last week's group play in the FIFA Confederations Cup looked like it would be a familiar fate for USA soccer fans, with the Americans drawing a monster of a group in perennial superpower Brazil, defending World Cup Champion Italy, and pesky Egypt. The U.S. kicked off group play with a 3-1 loss to Italy (which was much more competitive than the score indicates), followed by an increasingly-unimpressive 3-0 loss to Brazil. At 0-2 with a differential of -5, it was a virtual lock that the U.S. would not be advancing into this week's elimination round.

Then Sunday's miracle unraveled. Kicking off against 1-1 Egypt needing to win by at least 3 goals AND needing Brazil to beat Italy by 3, American fans were not holding their breath in the least. Italy-Brazil were facing off concurrently, so the American team could track their progress and reassess their chances while its game was going on.

By the statistics, Egypt and Italy both had better chances to advance than the U.S. All Italy needed to do was stay within 3 goals, and Egypt could complete its unlikely run into the semifinals by beating the winless Americans. U.S. coach Bob Bradley could have rested the vets, let the younger guys play, and try to get a game speed look at some different lineups and strategies, but he didn't.

A few hours after kickoff, the unlikeliest of scenarios in Group B had unraveled: the U.S. dominated Egypt with an impressive and courageous 3-0 effort. Most improbable, though, was Brazil's shocking blitz of the world champions by that same 3-0 score. The U.S. pulled into a 3-way tie for second place at 1-0-2, then won the tiebreaker with best goal differential. The heart and determination of the U.S. players paid off in their shocking advancement into the semis.

The recent developments from the Confederations Cup in South Africa have certainly piqued fan interest stateside and reignited the buzz about U.S. soccer that hasn't been heard since the lead up to the 2006 World Cup. Heading into the semis this week, it doesn't get any easier for the confident American team. They will be huge underdogs against tournament favorite Spain on Wednesday, who sliced through Group A without allowing a goal against Iraq, New Zealand, and host South Africa. Momentum will be vital for U.S.A. as they look to continue their run and close the gap between itself and the world's soccer elite.

Has the United States finally turned the corner and found the right equation to sustain success against the world's best? No one can be sure about this revitalized U.S. team until matches are played against Spain and beyond. One thing is for sure, though: the buzz about U.S.A. soccer has returned for the time being.
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Soccer: Pele Opens Exhibition In Brazil

Personal objects from Pele were used to inaugurate an exhibition on Wednesday 25th June, to celebrate Brazil’s 50th Anniversary of their first World Cup title in Sweden, in 1958. "The King's Marks" exhibition opened in Brasilia's National Museum remembering Brazil's victorious campaign.

Among the objects on display is the radio in which the young Pele and his father, Dondinho, listened eight years earlier to Brazil's disappointing loss to Uruguay in the 1950 World Cup final at Rio de Janeiro's Maracana Stadium. Pele made a bold prediction at the time.

"My father was sobbing listening to the match and I was just a kid and said 'Don't cry, I will win a World Cup to you'," Pele said.

He was only 17 years old when he helped Brazil claim its first world title in a 5-2 win over Sweden in Stockholm.

The exhibition, which will eventually go on a tour of Brazil and other countries, also includes a shoeshine box that Pele used as a kid to earn money to buy his first football boots.

In the inauguration, former Swedish midfielder Kurt Hamrin, who played in the 1958 final, gave Pele a jersey with the Swedish colours and the No. 58 on it.

Soccer Brazil Pele
Soccer Legend Pele

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Soccer: Germany Knocks Out Turkey

German defender Philipp Lahm’s 90th minute goal sealed a 3-2 win over an injury-plagued Turkey on Wednesday night. Three times European champions Germany are now assured of a spot in the finals in Vienna on Sunday.

Germany striker Miroslav Klose had nudged his side into the lead on 79 minutes after Bastian Schweinsteiger's first-half goal had cancelled out Ugur Boral's early strike as Turkey had taken a shock lead. This was Germany's first win over Turkey since May 1992 and Fatih Terim's battered side used their never-say-die spirit forced the Germans to work hard.

Having reached Basel's St Jakob-Park semi-final by forging a reputation as the tournament's come-back kings with last-gasp wins over Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Croatia, Turkey threatened Germany with the same treatment.

Coach Fatih Terim had said he wanted to put his team on the map and their battling spirit has reminded the footballing world again what Turkey can do having reached the 2002 World Cup semi-final.

Turkey were without the banned quartet of keeper Volkan Demirel, Middlesbrough's
Tuncay Sanli, Arda Turan who scored their last gasp winner against the Swiss,
and Emre Asik.
And captain Nihat Kahveci, whose pair of late goals sank the Czech Republic, was missing with a thigh injury.

In contrast, Germany had all 23-men fit and ready to go having responded to their shock 2-1 defeat by Croatia in the group stages by knocking-out much-fancied Portugal with an impressive 3-2 defeat here last Thursday.

Germany coach Joachim Loew played the same line-up and 4-5-1 formation he had used against Portugal for the semi-final, but it was the Turks who dominated the first-half chances with Kazim Kazim driving a shot against the bar on 14 minutes.

And Turkey took a deserved lead when Kazim again hit the cross-bar before Fenerbahce's Ugur Boral fired at Jens Lehmann who watched helplessly as the ball trickled over the line on 22 minutes.

Germany's reply was immediate as attacking midfielder Lukas Podolski slid in a cross which Portugal's tormentor Bastian Schweinsteiger flicked into the net on 26 minutes for his second goal in two games.

Lehmann was in action again as he punched clear Hamit Altintop's free-kick just after the half-hour mark one of nine first-half chances Turkey created compared to Germany's one. At the break Simon Rolfes made way for Torsten Frings in Germany's midfield and match-winner Lahm was unlucky not to have won a penalty when he was brought down on the edge of the area by Sabri Sarioglu on 52 minutes.

In a much-tighter second half, Turkey kept the pressure on with Altintop bossing the midfield against his Bayern Munich colleagues in Germany's ranks.

But the break through came in the 79th minute when Bayern striker Klose rose above three Turkish defenders and goalkeeper Recber Rustu to score his second goal in two games.

Turkey pulled a late goal out of the bag for the fourth time in succession when Semih slipped marker Per Mertesacker to stab home Sabri Sarioglu's cross on 86 minutes to equalise.

But Lahm put German fans in seventh heaven with his 90th minute strike to send his side to Vienna.

Soccer Germany Philipp Lahm
Philipp Lahm
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