/ 4 July 2006

World Cup grind exacts its toll

The World Cup is soccer’s greatest spectacle. It’s also a month-long grind, and the fatigue is starting to show.

Games every few days, many played under a summer sun. Travel back and forth across Germany. Pressure that grows with every game. And that’s on top of the nine months — or more — that many players just spent with soccer’s best clubs.

”The World Cup is a special test,” said Portugal goalkeeper Ricardo Pereira, whose team plays France on Wednesday in the semifinals. ”No matter how hard you try, you can’t completely overcome that tiredness.”

Or the injuries. Or the mental exhaustion.

Some teams manage better than others. Semifinalists Germany, Italy, France and Portugal have outlasted the other 28 teams, and it’s not only because of skill, timing and luck.

Italy might be the strongest team mentally, able to ignore distractions from a corruption scandal that is rocking the domestic league. Despite several gruelling games, Portugal has managed to remain healthy. France looks fresher now than a month ago. And Germany is among the fittest teams after coach Juergen Klinsmann overhauled its training programme.

”Physical condition is very important, because in soccer these days, 95% of the time the team that runs more wins,” Italy defender Gianluca Zambrotta said. ”Compared to the past, soccer is much more athletic and the pace is much faster.”

When the tournament began in 1930, there were only 13 teams and it lasted two weeks. Now 32 teams play 64 games over four weeks, and qualifying begins two years before the tournament.

But that’s not all. Many national team players spend most of their time competing in Europe’s gruelling leagues and cup competitions. Training starts as early as August and the season runs until May.

Portugal playmaker Deco helped Barcelona win the Champions League title on May 17 — one day before the training camp for his national team opened.

And forget about getting a break afterwards. The French league opens on July 31, and Lyon held its first practice on Monday. Other big European leagues start play within six weeks of the World Cup final, and qualifying for the 2008 European Championship starts in August.

So don’t blame the players for trying to pace themselves, knowing they could be on the field for two hours, as was the case when Germany and Portugal won quarterfinal games on shoot-outs.

All the exertion takes a toll — on both body and spirit. Some players weren’t 100%fit when they arrived in Germany. Wayne Rooney broke a bone in his foot playing for Manchester United on April 29, missed England’s first game and was never at full strength. Ronaldo was still working himself back into shape when Brazil’s training camp opened.

”We needed a little more preparation, probably in terms of fitness and getting the team to play as a unit,” Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Parreira said after the pre-tournament favourite’s quarterfinal loss to France.

Other players have been hurt as the tournament went on. England’s Michael Owen tore up his right knee in the final group game and will miss at least six months. Italy’s Alessandro Nesta is expected to sit out the semifinal against Germany with a thigh injury that’s already forced him to miss two games.

There have been a slew of minor maladies, too. A dehydrated David Beckham threw up during England’s second-round game against Ecuador. Germany’s Michael Ballack came off the field several times against Argentina so trainers could work the cramps out of his legs.

”Their bodies are not machines,” Germany assistant coach Joachim Loew said.

Even if players stay healthy, keeping their minds fresh is another challenge. In the 1994 final near Los Angeles, Italy and Brazil looked exhausted and played dull, conservative soccer.

Brazil won in a penalty kick shoot-out after Roberto Baggio’s miss.

”I was very tired, my right leg was hurting,” Baggio said then. ”My mind was not clear.”

After a month-long grind, something’s bound to give. – Sapa-AP