There are 32 teams chosen from various international FIFA futbol associations. Slots in the tournament are awarded to the associations and have nothing to do with FIFA's overall worldwide rankings of soccer clubs. Ergo, the 105th ranked North Korean team is one of the 32 teams in the tournament while the 10th ranked Croatian squad is watching the whole event in some bar in distant Zagreb.
From here the 32 teams are placed into 8 groups of 4 teams each. These 8 groups play an average of three matches a day for a round robin of games lasting nearly a month. In the end, all 4 teams in each group have competed against one another and the top 2 teams of each group form a single elimination play-off pyramid.

When you think about it, the whole process is one of the most meritorious and egalitarian on the planet. It both rewards excellence while putting out there the possibility of impossible chance--the basis of all HOPE.
This is why the plethora of ties matters so much in the first round of competition; especially, because so many of these 1 point 'victories' leave wide open the possibility of spoilers within any group advancing to the next level... i.e. HOPE. But such things also ratchet up the drama and excitement.

My novice's eyes are turning toward the Netherlands and Argentina, but clearly Brazil is the team to beat...the fact that 105th ranked North Korea even scored a single goal against them in round one play is enough to carry that medieval nation's self-esteem through the next 4 year's of austerity, repression, and self-delusion. And that's the power of the World Cup.
No comments:
Post a Comment