
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Italy's Azzurri First Game of 2010
World Cup on Monday 2:30 p.m. EDT vs. Paraguay
With two teams
to advance from each of eight groups, Italy would seem fortunate to have
drawn drawn Paraguay, New Zealand, and Slovakia in Group F.
But the Azzurri seem to be putting
their faith in past pedigree rather than current talent, and are still
experimenting with their lineup, caused by injuries, and unfamiliarity
with each other, while Paraguay confidence is high after an impressive
qualifying campaign in which they finished second and beat Brazil and Argentina
along the way.
In-form Paraguay Hoping to Catch
Italy Cold
Reuters, By Mitch Phillips; Sat,
Jun 12 2010
CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - Holders Italy,
written off at home as no-hopers to retain their world title and traditionally
slow starters, are in danger of being caught napping by in-form Paraguay
in their Group F opener Monday (2:30 p.m. EDT).
Coach Marcello Lippi has kept faith
with the bulk of the team that triumphed in Berlin four years ago but local
media and Italian fans have not stopped complaining despite an unbeaten
qualifying campaign.
A draw with Switzerland and defeat
by Mexico in warm-up games added fuel to the fire and with Lippi seemingly
still unsure about his first-choice lineup there is a real fear his team
could be caught out.
With subsequent games against New
Zealand and Slovakia it remains unthinkable the four-times champions could
fail to advance but the Azzurri seem to be putting their faith in past
pedigree rather than current talent.
"We have our traditions, our characteristics.
If we put our army on the field we can compete with everyone," said captain
Fabio Cannavaro, outstanding in the 2006 campaign but at 36 now looking
past his sell-by date.
"The coach is trying lots of things
and he will decide the best team for us but it's right for a coach to try
things. Right now we don't know what he'll do."
All that experimentation means few
observers in Italy have a clue about Lippi's likely side for Monday.
Midfielder Andrea Pirlo is out with
a calf injury for the first two games while Daniele del Rossi missed Friday's
6-0 thrashing of the Gauteng All Stars with a similar problem.
STRIKE THREAT
Antonio Di Natale, with 29 goals for
Udinese as Serie A's top scorer this season, and Alberto Gilardino should
carry the strike threat and the vastly experienced Lippi, unsurprisingly,
is not concerned by the critics.
"No team comes to the World Cup knowing
exactly what they can do, you grow through the tournament," he said.
That is something Paraguay rarely
have the luxury of experiencing having never got past the second round
in their seven finals appearances, falling at the first hurdle four times.
This time, though, confidence is high
after an impressive qualifying campaign in which they finished second and
beat Brazil and Argentina along the way.
Despite losing their main striker
in qualifying, Salvador Cabanas, after he was shot in the head in Mexico
City, they have maintained that form in warm-ups, drawing with Ivory Coast,
losing narrowly to Ireland and beating North Korea and Greece.
Roque Santa Cruz remains their key
striker, despite barely getting a game in the Premier League with Manchester
City, but there is serious concern over fellow forward Oscar Cardozo.
The Benfica striker, who was joint
top scorer in the Portuguese league this season as his club won the title,
has an ankle injury and is almost certain to miss Monday's game.
Coach Gerardo Martino has a ready-made
replacement in tall Argentina-born Borussia Dortmund striker Lucas Barrios,
who has a Paraguayan mother and has scored three goals in three games since
becoming eligible to play for the country.
Despite Paraguay's previous failures
there is a real optimism about this campaign and a draw against Italy would
be seen as the ideal start ahead of two winnable matches.
"I'm happy to start against Italy,
I like the fact we're not defining anything against them," Martino told
World Soccer magazine. "Whether the group turns out to be easy or difficult
is up to us."
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