Portugal isn't exactly George Mason, though its soccer pedigree
isn't much stronger than what the Patriots brought to college
basketball's Final Four. Then again, surprise teams in the World
Cup semifinals are hardly a surprise.
Since 1982, the last time four European teams got this far --
West Germany, Italy and France made it, along with, unexpectedly,
Poland -- there was just one tournament when a relative outsider
didn't sneak into the semifinals.
Only in 1990, with Italy, Argentina, England and eventual
champion West Germany, did the status quo hold. Otherwise, there
have been the likes of Belgium (1986), Sweden and Bulgaria (1994),
Croatia (1998), South Korea and Turkey (2002).
Now, there are the Portuguese, who might finally be realizing
the promise of their "Golden Generation," even if nearly all those
players have given way to youngsters of the next generation. Luis
Figo is the only remaining member of the group that was expected to
carry Portugal to greatness in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Instead, the Portuguese disappointed, with the lowlight a
first-round elimination from the 2002 World Cup, including losses
to the Americans and Koreans. So finding them in the final four
after a rebuilding process is akin to George Mason's Colonial
Athletic Association team crashing the NCAA tournament's big
party.
"It's worth suffering for moments like this," said Eusebio,
Portugal's greatest player and the leader of the team that finished
third in 1966 -- the last time the nation had a significant impact
on the World Cup.
"It's been more difficult to reach a semifinal with Portugal
than the final with Brazil, because there are only 10 million
inhabitants in Portugal compared to 180 million in Brazil," said
Portugal coach Luiz Felipe Scolari, a Brazilian who led his
countrymen to the 2002 crown, Brazil's fifth overall. "Also, 50
percent of the players in Portugal are foreigners. Brazil's
traditions make certain games easier to win, too."
Not against France, of course, which is unbeaten in its last
four games against Brazil, starting with the 1998 World Cup final.
Yet, seeing the French in the semifinals is almost shocking
considering the disarray on this team entering the tournament.
Despite its tradition and wealth of talent -- Zinedine Zidane,
Thierry Henry, Patrick Vieira, Fabien Barthez -- France was within
one half of another first-round exit. Remember how the French
couldn't score in the World Cup? How they followed their
humiliating goal-less tournament four years ago with five
lackluster halves in Germany before putting away Togo 2-0 and
advancing.
Anyone who picked France to beat Spain and dominate Brazil in
the knockout rounds must have Les Bleus in the blood.
Or maybe the French were just building up to something special,
the way the Turks did in Japan and South Korea, or how the
Bulgarians rode star Hristo Stoitchkov in '94. France climbed on
the shoulders of Zidane, who has gone from average to extraordinary
in the last two matches.
"We've been saying among ourselves here all along that France
would get to the semifinals, despite their bad start," Portugal
goalkeeper Ricardo Pereira said Sunday. "Some said France wasn't
going to do anything, but it's not easy to beat Brazil."
Generally, the surprise semifinalists wind up in the third-place
match and not playing for the trophy. Indeed, not since
Czechoslovakia lost to Brazil in 1962 has an interloper even made
it to the championship game.
"It is another team, another story we have to live," France
coach Raymond Domenech said. "In the end, comparisons are
tiresome."
(AP via China Daily July 3, 2006)