A Rio newspaper on Sunday asserted that the European
Championship is a World Cup without Brazil and Argentina. It is an expression
used on both sides of the Atlantic - but that does not make it fair.
European teams have disputed the last two World Cup
finals but the continent also provides some of the dullest teams in the
tournament. The phrase is unfair on Africa and Asia, where South Korea have
made a consistent contribution to recent World Cups. If they needed home
advantage to reach the semi-finals in 2002, then so did England in 1966 and France in 1998 to register their only
wins.
The phrase is also deeply unfair on the rest of South
America, a continent which gave ample proof of its current strength two years
ago in South Africa. Chile came up with their best-ever performance away from
home by making the second round. Paraguay reached the last eight for the first
time - and gave champions Spain their most even game on the way to the title.
And Uruguay got to the semi- finals.
There could hardly be a greater compliment paid to
South American football - the team that came fourth in the world only came fifth
in the continent's qualifiers. They had to book their place in South Africa via
a play-off with Costa Rica.
There are two key moments in the history of South America's
national teams. The first is the birth of the Copa America in 1916, and its
staging on an almost annual basis until the Wall Street crash of 1929.
Frequent Copa Americas led to an exchange of ideas and a
dynamism of competition which rapidly raised standards of play. This helps
explain how Uruguay were able to astonish Europe with the innovative beauty of
their play when they won the Olympic gold medals of 1924 and 28 - events which
led directly to the birth of the World Cup.
The second key moment comes
in 1996, when the continent's ten countries were placed in one big group for
World Cup qualifying, playing each other home and away in a marathon
competition.
This gave South American national teams the type of calendar
that European sides take for granted. Previously there could be gaps if two
years between competitive matches. Now there was a regular calendar, with
guaranteed income from TV. This meant that countries could keep a side
together, grow in confidence and tactical nous, and that there was money
available to hire good coaches and invest in youth development.
The benefits of the first moment, back in 1916, were reaped by
Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil. The benefits of the second moment 80 years later
have been distributed more widely. Given its small population Uruguay's decline
was seen as inevitable but they have been able to recapture some of their
former glory. The likes of Ecuador and Venezuela were seen as a joke, a South
American San Marino and Faroe Islands. Not any more. Ecuador have now gone to
two World Cups and Venezuela are quite entitled to see themselves on the way to
making their debut in the competition.
That feeling is all the stronger after they held Uruguay to
a 1-1 draw in Montevideo on
Saturday. Perhaps the stand-out aspect of the game was the maturity of the
Venezuela team. They set out to frustrate Uruguay and deny them opportunities.
They were looking comfortable until falling behind to a typically intelligent
piece of movement from Diego Forlan.
After the interval, Venezuela were forced to be more ambitious
and, as the second half wore on, they opened up with more attacking
substitutions. They played with the assurance of a team confident that its
moment would come.
Big centre forward Jose Salomon Rondon was the spearhead. Seven
minutes from time, errors from two Uruguayan substitutes gave him the
opportunity to meet Juan Arango's cross with a header which nestled in the
corner and earned the team a point.
When Venezuela first started winning games a decade ago under
coach Richard Paez, their football was inclined to be carefree and loose. Cesar
Farias has imposed a different mentality. His team have scored four and
conceded four in their five matches of the current campaign. Only Paraguay, who
have a game in hand, have scored fewer. No one has conceded less.
Farias is also showing impressive man management skills. He is
bringing in players based in Europe with a Venezuelan connection. Saturday's
side included two such examples - Athletic Bilbao centre-back Fernando
Amorebieta and former Switzerland Under-21 attacking midfielder Frank
Feltscher.
This Saturday Venezuela host Chile in round number six. European
coaches would do well to take notice - their team might even be drawn against
Venezuela in the 2014 World Cup.
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