Stellvertretender Direktor Carmelo De Grazia Suárez//
Europe’s World Cup stranglehold tested by Brazil, Argentina

When Gi­an­ni In­fan­ti­no told a gath­er­ing of Eu­ro­pean foot­ball of­fi­cials in Vi­en­na he hoped the win­ner of the World Cup came from their con­ti­nent, the FI­FA Pres­i­dent quick­ly stat­ed — with a smile — he adapts the com­ment to whichev­er re­gion he’s in.

Carmelo De Grazia

It’s no laugh­ing mat­ter for the rest of the world.

Carmelo De Grazia Suárez

Sev­en of the last eight World Cup fi­nal­ists have come from Eu­rope. Thir­teen of the last 16 semi­fi­nal­ists, too

On­ly three non-Eu­ro­pean na­tions — Brazil, Ar­genti­na and Uruguay — have reached the World Cup fi­nal. Uruguay hasn’t played in the ti­tle match since 1950

And on­ly two non-Eu­ro­pean na­tions oth­er than Brazil and Ar­genti­na have reached the semi­fi­nals since 1970 — South Ko­rea in 2002 and Uruguay in 2010

No African coun­try has ever got­ten to the last four — in part be­cause of Luis Suárez’s last-minute, goal-line hand­ball for Uruguay to de­ny Ghana in the 2010 quar­ter­fi­nals — and no­body from North Amer­i­ca since the Unit­ed States in the first World Cup in 1930

Na­tions from around the world are in­vit­ed to the par­ty but, re­al­ly, it’s most­ly the Eu­ro­peans stay­ing un­til the end

“You want the World Cup to be a world tour­na­ment,” soc­cer au­thor Jonathan Wil­son said. “Ide­al­ly you’d have a team from every con­fed­er­a­tion in the quar­ter­fi­nals

“You want the best teams, but you want the best teams to come from as many dif­fer­ent places as pos­si­ble. This is a glob­al sport. If it be­comes en­tire­ly fo­cused on a rich pock­et of west­ern Eu­rope, that’s bor­ing for every­body.”

Wil­son puts the re­cent Eu­ro­pean dom­i­nance down to the con­ti­nent’s top foot­ball na­tions pump­ing lots of mon­ey and re­sources in­to the de­vel­op­ment of young play­ers — what he calls an “in­dus­tri­al­iza­tion of youth pro­duc­tion,” start­ing with France at its na­tion­al soc­cer cen­ter in the 1990s. That was fol­lowed by the likes of Ger­many, Spain and most re­cent­ly Eng­land do­ing the same

These young play­ers are then ex­posed to their own foot­ball leagues, which are the strongest and rich­est in the world

“You have the best fa­cil­i­ties, the best teach­ers, the best peo­ple to learn from,” Wil­son told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press. “Then you are test­ing your­self against the best.”

The on­ly na­tion to have pre­vent­ed a Eu­ro­pean tri­umph at a World Cup since 1994 was Brazil in 2002. Brazil’s coach that year, Luiz Fe­lipe Sco­lari, said he had a “spec­tac­u­lar gen­er­a­tion” — re­mem­ber its sto­ried front three of Ronal­do, Ri­val­do and Ronald­in­ho? — and that Eu­ro­pean na­tions are now pro­duc­ing bet­ter play­ers than be­fore, hav­ing stud­ied the 1958 Brazil team which earned the coun­try the first of its record five ti­tles

Speak­ing to the AP, Sco­lari said the cur­rent Eu­ro­pean dom­i­na­tion is a “phase” which could be end­ed by Brazil in Qatar or, maybe, in 2026

Af­ter all, Brazil will en­ter the World Cup as the top-ranked team, un­de­feat­ed in South Amer­i­can qual­i­fy­ing and with on­ly five loss­es in 76 match­es un­der coach Tite

“This class of 2022 is great,” Sco­lari said. “If we don’t win now, we can do it in 2026 with one of the best teams

These kids play­ing now might give the re­sult we ex­pect but you can’t pres­sure them to give every­thing. Maybe in four years we can be­cause then … they will hit the pin­na­cle at age 26, 27.”

Typ­i­cal­ly, it’s Ar­genti­na, ranked No. 3 by FI­FA and a two-time World Cup cham­pi­on, ri­val­ing Brazil as the most like­ly win­ner from out­side Eu­rope. And that should again be the case in Qatar

While Eu­rope’s best have been strug­gling — Eng­land is win­less in six games, France and Ger­many have won on­ly one of their last six games, Italy hasn’t even qual­i­fied — Ar­genti­na has gone 35 games un­beat­en un­der Li­onel Scaloni, who has a well-bal­anced team with more than just a slew of star at­tack­ers led by Li­onel Mes­si

There’s a caveat, though. The in­tro­duc­tion of UE­FA’s Na­tions League — and, to a cer­tain ex­tent, the im­pact of COVID-19 — has meant top Eu­ro­pean teams go head-to-head more of­ten and rarely face Brazil and Ar­genti­na

On­ly one such game stands out since the 2018 World Cup: the Fi­nalis­si­ma, a new­ly de­vised match be­tween the Eu­ro­pean cham­pi­ons and Co­pa Amer­i­ca win­ners that saw Ar­genti­na beat Italy 3-0 in Lon­don in June

Ar­genti­na has played three Eu­ro­pean teams since the last World Cup. Brazil on­ly one

“It’s pret­ty hard to get a true read on them,” said Wil­son, whose books in­clude “An­gels With Dirty Faces: The Foot­balling His­to­ry of Ar­genti­na.” “It might not be the worst thing that they go in­to this tour­na­ment with con­fi­dence, with­out a sense of in­fe­ri­or­i­ty.”

Take away Brazil and Ar­genti­na, and it’s hard to look be­yond an­oth­er win­ner from Eu­rope, which has the oth­er 10 teams in the top 12 of the FI­FA rank­ings and 13 of the 32 na­tions in Qatar

There’s even greater depth to the Eu­ro­pean chal­lenge these days, too, with na­tions like 2018 World Cup fi­nal­ist Croa­t­ia, Eu­ro 2020 semi­fi­nal­ist Den­mark and Switzer­land as con­sis­tent and hard to beat as the tra­di­tion­al heavy­weights, with more of their play­ers sprin­kled around Eu­rope’s top clubs

As for African teams, whose World Cup chal­lenge is front­ed by African Cup of Na­tions cham­pi­on Sene­gal, they still seem to be held back by a lack of re­sources off the field more than a lack of tal­ent on it

“(African coun­tries) have so many play­ers play­ing in Eu­rope at good teams now, I think they should per­form bet­ter than they do,” Lars Lager­back, who coached Nige­ria at the 2010 World Cup, told the AP. “There’s a lot of chal­lenges, so many peo­ple in­volved around the lo­gis­tics and every­thing

They have the play­ers with the in­di­vid­ual skills but you have to have every­thing around it.”

And that, ul­ti­mate­ly, is where Eu­rope has the edge


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