BRAZIL vs. FRANCE / HOW THEY MATCH UP
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GOALKEEPER
What was that about needing a great goalie to reach the World Cup final? Brazil’s Taffarel and France’s Fabien Barthez entered this tournament as resounding question marks--Taffarel derided as merely a teacher’s pet (Coach Mario Zagallo presiding over a Taffarel Fan Club of one), Barthez a lovable eccentric considerably more lovable when he isn’t France’s last line of World Cup defense. Yet, both have risen to the moment, somewhat surprisingly, with Taffarel saving Brazil in the semifinal penalty shootout with the Netherlands and Barthez earning top keeper of the tournament marks from the French sports daily L’Equipe. Now, that wouldn’t be a homer pick, would it?
EDGE: Brazil
DEFENSE
France had the best back line in the tournament, but that was before sweeper and stabilizer Laurent Blanc was red-carded in the semifinal against Croatia, rendering him ineligible today. Frank LeBoeuf fills in for Blanc. LeBoeuf fits the classic stereotype of the “cultured French defender”--which, translated, means pretty enough to look at, but somewhat lacking in the foxhole. Marcel Desailly and Lilian Thuram, who scored both goals against Croatia, have arguably been the two best defenders at this World Cup.
Defense is Brazil’s weakness--not so much for inability as impatience. Roberto Carlos is a game-breaking striker trapped inside the body of a left fullback; his charges down the wing into the attack frequently leave the backline vulnerable and Zagallo reaching for an antacid. Statistic worth noting: France has conceded one goal in six games, Brazil has yielded seven.
EDGE: France
MIDFIELD
Zinedine Zidane on this French team is like Michael Jordan on the 1980s pre-Pippen Bulls: So much talent wasted on a nondescript supporting cast. Zidane’s dribbling and passing were nothing short of phenomenal in the quarterfinal against Italy, but with France’s Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight turning those potential assists into punts into the crowd, the match was scoreless for 120 minutes. Captain Didier Deschamps and Emmanuel Petit do well with the dirty work.
Rivaldo and Cesar Sampaio have combined for a half-dozen goals in six games for Brazil, and Leonardo, a hard-running ball-winner, has had a strong tournament. But Brazil’s midfield--the entire team, in fact--hinges on the formidable fulcrum known as Dunga. The fiery Brazil captain, imposing to opponents and teammates alike, controls the pace of the match and fronts the backline, providing the anchor that keeps the rest of the show from spinning out of control.
EDGE: Brazil
FORWARDS
Brazil has Ronaldo, France has a bunch of guys named Youri and Thierry and Stephane.
That’s really all that needs to be said, but Brazil also offers Bebeto, slower but still cagey at 34, and super-sub Denilson. France has tried six players at striker and not one of them has scored since the conclusion of group play.
EDGE: Brazil
OUTLOOK
Brazil is here, as expected, and has yet to play a full 90 minutes up to its supposedly untouchable reputation. France has had a charmed path in this World Cup. Beside the home-field advantage and weak competition in Group C, France lucked into a second-round matchup against Paraguay (instead of either Spain or Nigeria) and a semifinal draw against Croatia (instead of Germany). The luck runs out here. BRAZIL, 2-0.
EDGE: Brazil
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)
BRAZIL
Coach: Mario Zagallo
No. PLAYER
1. Taffarel
2. Cafu
3. Aldair
4. Junior Baiano
5. Cesar Sampaio
6. Roberto Carlos
7. Giovanni
8. Dunga
9. Ronaldo
10. Rivaldo
11. Emerson
12. Carlos Germano
13. Ze Roberto
14. Goncalves
15. Alves Cruz
16. Ze Roberto
17. Doriva
18. Leonardo
19. Denilson
20. Bebeto
21. Edmundo
22. Dida
FRANCE
Coach: Aime Jacquet
No. PLAYER
1. Bernard Lama
2. Vincent Candela
3. Bixente Lizarazu
4. Patrick Vieira
6. Youri Djorkaeff
7. Didier Deschamps
8. Marcel Desailly
9. Stephane Guivarc’h
10. Zinedine Zidane
11. Robert Pires
12. Thierry Henry
13. Bernard Diomede
14. Alain Boghossian
15. Lilian Thuram
16. Fabien Barthez
17. Emmanuel Petit
18. Frank Leboeuf
19. Christian Karembeu
20. David Trezeguet
21. Christophe Dugarry
22. Lionel Charbonnier