Brazil vs. Germany (Semifinal I) | Kickoff: July 09, 01 30 IST | Stadium: Estadio Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
Four weeks after the World Cup kicked off, four of thirty-two teams are left – Brazil, Germany, the Netherlands, and Argentina. There can be little surprise at this eminent list of survivors, though some may have held fond hopes of others making it so far. By the previous stage of the tournament itself, the eight teams remaining were all those who had topped their groups.
For German fans, the upcoming semifinal against Brazil may be their most critical match of the tournament yet. The fixture is not just in their way to a record eighth World Cup final but it is against their bête noire, Brazil, who already have the home court advantage. In 21 meetings between the two footballing superpowers, Germany has won a mere four times against Brazil and drawn five times; Brazil has claimed the remaining dozen victories, scoring 39 goals against the Germans and conceding 24. The only time the two sides met in the World Cup was in 2002, when Brazil won comfortably with a 2:0 scoreline. In fact, Germany has never beaten Brazil in a tournament – not the World Cup (2002) nor the Confederations Cup (1999, 2005).
Germany’s last victory against Brazil, in a 2011 friendly, came after an 18-year wait. It came, as did all other German victories against Brazil, on German soil; the boys from Brazil have not been encumbered by any such geographical limitation and have defeated Germany on their own soil (5/12) as much as anywhere else (Brazil, Mexico, Uruguay, Japan). Interestingly, Germany seems to be the only European team that chokes against Brazil. Italy’s record of wins, losses, and draws against Brazil reads 5:7:2 and France has an even more enviable 5:4:4.
In a sea of depressing statistics, Germany can take solace in a couple of things. The first is that Brazil seem not to be performing at their highest level, drawing with Mexico in the group stages, escaping with Loki’s own luck past Chile in the second round, and struggling past Colombia in a very rough quarterfinals. Germany itself struggled a bit with Ghana in the group stage but otherwise had little trouble with either Algeria or France in the elimination rounds. However, teams of the calibre of either Brazil or Germany can ramp up their game at the drop of a hat and spectators may be in for a scintillating semifinal.
Of course, history is not everything or FIFA might as well invite only former champions to compete. Germany has already created a record of sorts by being the first country to reach four consecutive World Cup semifinals; if Germany were to manage to move past Brazil and go into the World Cup finals, it would meet the winner of the second semifinal between Argentina and the Netherlands. Die Mannschaft‘s record against either of these teams is significantly better than against the host nation. Head-to-head, Germany has won 7, lost 9, and drawn 4 matches against Argentina; the European side has bested the South American team in four of their six encounters in the World Cup and lost only once, in the 1986 final. Against the Netherlands, Germany’s record stands at 15:10:15, not one loss at a World Cup. Germany lost 3:1 the last time they played Argentina in August 2012 and drew against the Netherlands in November of the same year.
In the last few days of this World Cup, the greatest threat to a German triumph comes from Brazil. Argentina’s Lionel Messi may have won the hearts of millions and the Dutch trio of Arjen Robben, Wesley Sneijder, and Robin van Persie may indeed pose a problem for Joachim Löw’s boys but the psychological hurdle of defeating Brazil is far higher than any of Germany’s potential opponents in the finals. In fact, if Germany can win on July 08 (Brazil time), it may very well go on to win the World Cup.
Update:
Final score: Brazil 1 – 7 Germany
This post appeared on Daily News & Analysis on July 07, 2014.