With the group stage done and dusted, the tournament now enters the knockout phase, with the first pair of Round of 16 matches to be played today. Before discussing the eight matches in this stage, a brief background on how the matches are set up.
- Each of the eight group winners will be regarded as the home team while each of the group runners-up will be the away team.
- The top half of the draw will contain the winners of groups A-C-E-G (Uruguay, USA, the Netherlands, and Brazil) taking on the runners-up of groups B-D-F-H (Korea Republic, Ghana, Slovakia, and Chile), while the bottom half of the draw sees the winners of groups B-D-F-H (Argentina, Germany, Paraguay, and Spain) taking on the runners-up of groups A-C-E-G (Mexico, England, Japan, and Portugal). This means, there is a possibility of an Argentina-Brazil final, but teams like Spain and Uruguay will now fancy their chances, given their potential path to glory.
- Since there were eight stadia that were designated to host the matches in this edition, each stadium will get to host one match in the Round of 16, thereby ensuring all eight stadia will cover all eight matches.
- In terms of zonal representation, UEFA leads the list with six representatives (Germany, England, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, and Spain) followed by CONMEBOL with all five representatives qualifying (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay), then CONCACAF and AFC with two apiece (CONCACAF - Mexico and USA; AFC - Japan and Korea Republic) with Ghana being the sole representative of CAF (Africa).
Here's a look at the encounters in the offing, from the middling to the truly mouth-watering:
This may be a tight affair, as both teams have a good defensive shape about them and neither side will hesitate to get stuck in (read, man-mark key players of the opposition and tackle them hard). It will also see former Manchester United flop, Diego Forlan come up against one of the current favorites of the Old Trafford faithful in Park Ji Sung. Both are in good form at the moment and will be key to unlocking defences. Forlan may have the edge with his greater experience, but expect the Koreans to stretch the South Americans to the absolute limit.
Prediction: 1-1 (normal time) 5-3 to Uruguay after penalties.
The USA and Ghana have met only once before, in a 2006 group match in Nuremberg, Germany which the Africans just about managed to edge it. Landon Donovan has categorically declared that he simply does not want history to repeat and will be dead keen to spur the Americans to a place in the quarters. Likewise, the Ghanaians will recall a humiliating lesson by a vastly under-performing Brazil four years ago and will look to carry the torch of African football further. However, young as they are, Ghana's current crop play with a relative sense of fearlessness and will look to take the game to the opposition. Their only danger could come if they lose concentration towards the closing stages of the match, where the USA have proved themselves to be lethal, squaring things against Slovenia and stealing a last-gasp victory against Algeria.
Prediction: 2-1 to USA in normal time
England vs Germany. The very phrase brings a cornucopia of classics between two nations that have a rich political, sporting, and cultural rivalry between them. England were shaky in the group stages and in terms of tactics, looked far from a genuinely threatening side. More often than not, Rooney ended up chasing ghosts in the park while Lampard was woefully out of touch. Capello's backup striking options aren't that great either, with Crouch and Defoe hardly making the opposition defences quake. In addition to this, there is the old English nightmare of penalty kicks. So apprehensive has Capello been of England's fickle nature from the spot that he has apparently nominated the five kick takers and ordered them to pick their spot while kicking and stick to it. Germany, on the other hand, have an abundance of youngsters who have been given the license to go for goal by their coach, Joachim Loew. Klose and Podolski were youngsters four years ago but now, they are the veterans who will be expected to guide the young guns. But, will they be able to cope with the pressure of a knockout match, to uphold Germany's legendary status on the World Cup?
Prediction: Germany to sneak this 3-2 in normal time
Maradona's men were like a runaway train during the group stages, tearing apart defences at will and dominating plays almost from kick-off. Mexico, meanwhile, were more sedate, forcing a point against the hosts on the opening day while dispatching a disjointed French side before losing to Uruguay. In a repeat of a clash at the same stage four years ago, these two sides will look to exploit other's weakness, with Argentina looking a bit dodgy at the back in their final group game against Greece while Mexico were rather flat in a defensive formation against Uruguay. Either way, they will not have lack of support as an excuse, since they are playing in the largest-capacity stadium (88,460).
Prediction: Argentina to edge this match in normal time, 3-1.
A surprising statistic: all-time head-to-head meetings between the two are 6-2 in favor of Slovakia (albeit as the erstwhile Czechoslovakia). However, that will not be worrying the Dutch one bit as they have a renewed sense of confidence about them, evident in the way they eventually bore down a resilient Japanese defence in a 1-0 win. Additionally, the return of Robben is a huge boost for them, for he can cause havoc by running full pelt at defenders and taking shots from incredible angles (and even scoring them). The Slovak goalkeeper Jan Mucha is going to have his hands full so expect plenty of goal mouth action.
Prediction: Netherlands with a comfortable 3-0 victory
I really envy residents of Johannesburg. This will be the sixth match that Johannesburg is hosting of either Brazil or Argentina (Soccer City Stadium hosted the Argentina-Korea Republic and Brazil-Cote d'Ivoire matches and will host Argentina-Mexico quarterfinal clash; Ellis Park hosted Argentina's opening match against Nigeria and Brazil-Korea DPR encounter). Jealous feelings aside, this all-South American clash will provide a feast of attacking football, since Marcelo Bielsa's side have been positive during the group stages while Brazil know only one way to win matches. If Kaka rediscovers his magic touch, Brazil will be simply irresistible.
Prediction: Brazil 4-2 in normal time
This is probably the least expected match-up in the Round of 16, simply because Italy were the favorites to top Group F and either Cameroon or Denmark were expected to finish behind the Netherlands in Group E. As the aforementioned teams are all out, we are left with Paraguay's defensive steel against Japan's clever movement and lethal dead ball skills. For either team, this will be a watershed moment, since they have never progressed to the quarterfinals of a World Cup before. Unfortunately for a neutral spectator, the pressure of the occasion will probably tell on the players and will result in a dreary, safety-first match.
Prediction: Japan 2-1 in extra time
There will be open secrets aplenty in this Iberian clash, as most of Portugal's stars ply their trade in Spain's La Liga, with Cristiano Ronaldo, Pepe (both Real Madrid), Simao, and Tiago (both Atletico Madrid) playing for capital clubs. While Spain have the edge in midfield and attack, Portugal's defence have not let in a goal this tournament. Also, the last time these two teams met in a competition, Spain lost to Portugal 0-1 in the final group match of Euro 2004 and crashed out of the tournament at the group stage. Six years may be a long time in football, but Spain's supremely gifted footballers will be reminded of that painful loss and will be eager to make amends. Interesting fact: Cape Town is the ancient outcrop of land that Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias mentioned for the first time when Europe was seeking trade with the Far East. And just a week ago, Cape Town was the venue where Portugal recorded their biggest ever World Cup win by comprehensively dismantling Korea DPR 7-0. Will it prove to a lucky venue for them again? I think yes.
Prediction: 2-2 after normal time and extra time, 5-4 to Portugal on penalties