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World Cup 2010: Slovenia v USA – live!

Hammer F5, click refresh or use our auto-refresher for the latest updates and send your comments to paul.doyle@guardian.co.uk 7 min: No quality on display from either side so far. “If every game in a group ended, let’s say, 1-1, leaving the entire group tied on points and GD, then by what method would Fifa decide who went through to the knockout stages?” asks Will Hayward. “Most reducers?” Lots would be drawn. 5 min: Bold burst by Bradley through the middle. He then slips the ball wide to Findley, who wins a corner taht Donovan wastes. “As a jealous Croatian neighbor I am praying for the Slovenians to lose in order to avoid eruptions of exuberance such as these ,” gnashes Zlatko Ceraj-Ceric. “Come to think of it, this may be a conversation stopper, just the opposite of what was called for.” 3 min: No sooner does play resume after that little ruckus than Ljubjankic concedes a freekick for a careless tackle in the American half. It’s a tetchy opening and no mistake. 1 min: It’s kicked off in more ways than one! After 15 seconds Ljubjankic goes down after copping an elbow from Dempsey. The outraged Slovenians converge on the ref, who, it seems, is not going to punish the American who, if I recall correctly, left John Terry with a broken cheekbone following a similar sort of clash a couple of season ago. Debate: “Now that Germany and Spain have a very good chance of finishing their groups in second place, what do the other teams do?” wonders Gadi Abraham. “Do Brazil and England try to lose points in the last game? Do the Netherlands? How can they go about doing it without the whole world going up in arms?” National anthems: Why do they stick a microphone in front of the players during this formality? It’s really not fair. Both sets of players are appalling singers and there’s no reason why they shouldn’t be. Do we ask Beyonce or Ingelbert Humperdink to do keepie-uppies before a concert, do we? 2:54pm: “Watch for Jose Torres in this match,” tips Matt Lucas. “His game is very similar to Xavi Hernandez and he really should have started against England.” I find that hard to believe but am open to being converrted. Bring it on, Jose. Preamble: For reasons that you wil not care about but may well be very grateful for, there is no time for a lengthy intro today. So let me just give you my prediction – USA 1-0 Slovenia – and a plea for one or more of you to suggest a motion for us to debate alongside the match commentary. Thanks. Teams: Slovenia: Samir Handanovic; Miso Brecko, Marko Suler, Bostjan Cesar, Bojan Jokic, Valter Birsa, Robert Koren, Aleksandar Radosavljevic, Andraz Kirm, Zlatan Ljubijankic, Milivoje Novakovic United States: Tim Howard; Steve Cherundolo, Jay DeMerit, Oguchi Onyewu, Carlos Bocanegra; Landon Donovan, Michael Bradley, Jose Torres, Clint Dempsey; Jozy Altidore, Robbie Findley. Referee: Koman Coulibaly (Mali) Stats that may or may not be relevant: • This will be the first ever meeting between Slovenia and USA • USA have kept only one clean sheet in 20 World Cup matches • Slovenia have won seven of their last eight matches • Eight of USA’s 10 goals in the last three World Cups have come in the first half • Landon Donovan was involved in six of USA’s 12 shots against England World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Slovenia USA Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Slovenia v USA – live!

World Cup Open Thread: Slovenia-United States [World Cuppage]

U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! More

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World Cup Open Thread: Slovenia-United States [World Cuppage]

FIFA World Cup 2010: Germany vs Serbia Live Stream

Watch Germany vs Serbia Football Live Streaming Online , the live event of your favorite Football Soccer Team of the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa soccer match between Germany and Serbia on their great match in Group D this June 18, exactly 13:30 local time and the game scheduled in Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Nelson Mandela Bay/Port Elizabeth. Stay tuned and feel free to watch this great match between the best teams here online. Don’t miss to watch the live event of 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa live coverage via satellite. A good and exciting game will be played by the two great teams of FIFA World Cup, the Germany vs Serbia. Watch it and enjoy, who’s gonna be the winner. FIFA World Cup 2010: Germany vs Serbia Live Stream FIFA World Cup 2010: Germany vs Serbia Live Stream is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Serbia Upsets 10-Man Germany

Filed under: FIFA World Cup , Germany , Serbia PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa (AP) — Milan Jovanovic scored one minute after Germany striker Miroslav Klose was sent off Friday, giving Serbia a 1-0 win over the three-time World Cup champions in Group D. Jovanovic side-footed a shot past Germany goalkeeper Manual Neuer in the 38th minute to leave both teams with three points in the group. The win was Serbia’s first in the World Cup win as an independent nation. Lukas Podolski had a chance to equalize in the 60th, but he missed a penalty, sending a weak shot to the left of Serbia goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic, who read it and stopped it. ADVERTISEMENT Manchester United defender Nemanja Vidic gave away the penalty in the 59th with a handball, the same needless move that cost Serbia the match against Ghana, when Zdravko Kuzmanovic did the same and Ghana scored for a 1-0 win.

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Serbia Upsets 10-Man Germany

USA vs. Slovenia 2010 World Cup Live Blog

Filed under: FIFA World Cup , Slovenia , United States FanHouse has a USA vs.Slovenia live blog for a World Cup 2010 Group C match in Johannesburg, South Africa on Friday. The Americans tied England 1-1 in its World Cup opener, and Slovenia defeated Algeria 1-0. More Live Blogs Friday: Germany vs. Serbia | England vs. Algeria More FanHouse UK: Injuries to Watch | Where Are They Now? | Full Coverage

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USA vs. Slovenia 2010 World Cup Live Blog

World Cup 2010: Ivory Coast’s Didier Drogba may start against Brazil

• Striker with broken arm came on in cast against Portugal • Sven-Goran Eriksson hints Didier Drogba may start Sven-Goran Eriksson has hinted that Didier Drogba may be fit to start for the Ivory Coast against Brazil on Sunday in Johannesburg despite a fractured arm. “Do not be surprised if Didier Drogba starts the next game against Brazil,” the Ivory Coast football federation’s website reported the Swedish coach saying ahead of his side’s second match in the World Cup’s Group G. “He [Drogba] made a valuable contribution in the 25 minutes he was on the pitch against Portugal,” Eriksson said. Drogba, following a speedy recovery, was cleared to play in Ivory Coast’s first World Cup game with a protective cast on the right arm he fractured during a friendly game against Japan. “He is an important player in the team … and his health has improved markedly,” Eriksson said. Following a goalless draw in their first match against Portugal, Ivory Coast face Brazil in their second game in a group that also includes North Korea. Eriksson said although he respected Brazil, he was not scared by the prospect of playing against the team ranked No1 in the world. “It is going to be a difficult game, but looking at what we did against Portugal, we are capable of creating a surprise against Brazil,” he said. Brazil top Group G with three points after scraping a 2-1 win over North Korea in their first game. England, coached by Eriksson, lost 2-1 to Brazil in the quarter-finals of the 2002 World Cup, which the South Americans went on to win. Ivory Coast World Cup 2010 Group G World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Ivory Coast’s Didier Drogba may start against Brazil

England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

• ‘Some won’t get a chance to play in a Test in Australia again’ • Defining moment for Martin Johnson’s World Cup planning One game should not define a season, but England know there are exceptions. A big defeat in the second and final Test will confirm the worst fears of those who suspect the coaches are flogging a dead horse. Victory, on the other hand, would allow the management to insist their World Cup plans are gathering momentum. There is hardly any middle ground still available for rent. Even a gallant loss would underline what the rugby world has come to believe: that England talk a better game than they play in terms of beating the southern hemisphere’s finest. Australia are a good side but their current scrum issues make them more vulnerable than they might be. If Martin Johnson’s squad wish to enjoy their holidays, it is important they erase the memory of their diffident display in Perth. Precisely that message will be repeated before kick-off by coaches and senior players alike. “We’ve got a chance to put the record straight,” said Nick Easter, the England No8 who, by his own admission, fell below the required standard last week. “You want to have a summer when you can look back and be pleased with your last performance, otherwise you’ll be stewing. We’ve got to go out and show a lot more than we did last Saturday.” Johnson has also reminded everyone that places in England’s 32-man elite squad to be named next month remain unbooked, well aware that Wednesday’s game against New Zealand Maoris in Napier is unlikely to supply much solace. A potential tour record of one scratchy win from five games will not rank as a great leap forward. “Some of the guys won’t get a chance to play in a Testmatch in Australia again,” he said. Barring a marked upturn, several are unlikely to be tackling the Wallabies at Twickenham this November either. At least the cheery mood during training at North Sydney Oval was encouraging. Maybe the sunshine helped, but the squad contains enough talent and enthusiasm to hint at better days ahead if the players can escape their current underachieving rut. Ben Youngs has the ability to match his contemporary Will Genia as a backline catalyst and his first Test start will be instructive. If the Leicester scrum-half shines, it might even persuade Johnson to start thinking like an Australian and blood the likes of Alex Goode on the enlightened basis that class is permanent and immaturity is temporary. It would also help if the French referee Romain Poite, as he surely will, takes a sadistic interest in the scrum engagements. At times last week England’s tight-head Dan Cole unquestionably used illegal tactics to destabilise his opponent Ben Daley, but he is good enough to make life difficult without resorting to the dark arts. Tim Payne, even so, has cautioned against assuming the Wallabies scrum will be minced again. “Without a shadow of a doubt, they’ll be better,” the loose-head said. “I’m sure they’ll have hit the scrum machine many times this week.” Either way, England crave a collective performance that is not entirely down to their scrummagers or the slowly fading veterans of the 2003 World Cup final triumph in the same arena. Australia remains mystified at Jonny Wilkinson’s non-selection, with the former Wallabies centre Tim Horan declaring it “a decision Martin Johnson is likely to regret”. The hosts should clinch a 2-0 win but the ghost in the white No10 jersey has yet to be exorcised Down Under. If Jonny rises off the bench and slots another winning drop-goal the groans will be audible from Canberra to Cape Tribulation. Sky Sports 1: kick-off 11am England rugby union team Australia rugby union team Martin Johnson Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

Algeria prepare for World Cup battle by watching The Battle of Algiers

Footballers aim to draw on spirit of Gillo Pontecorvo’s revolutionary classic ahead of tonight’s match with England When football players seek inspiration they normally opt for a round of golf. Not the Algerians, though. Ahead of their big match with England tonight, the north Africans have made a trip to the cinema to watch a screening of The Battle of Algiers. Gillo Pontecorvo’s 1966 classic is set during the Algerian war of the 1950s and details the emergence of the native resistance against the imperial French. It’s a gritty, troubling film that shows the moral compromises that war forces on all sides. It’s also over two hours long, but that doesn’t appear to have stopped the Algerians from being inspired. “I had never seen it before. It was very moving, and it was very moving to spend the time together. This is the kind of thing we need to do to feel together,” said Hassan Yebda, the 26-year-old midfielder who played in England last season with Portsmouth. The screening was arranged by Algeria’s coach, Rabah Saâdane, and Yebda believes it will help the side forge a new mentality after losing to Slovenia in their opening World Cup match last Sunday. Yebda compared their new attitude to that which helped Algeria qualify for the World Cup in a playoff with Egypt. “When we were in Sudan we had an obsession to win and that is what enabled us to beat Egypt. Had we lost that match, we would have been eliminated. The same goes for tomorrow. We must go on to the pitch with the same obsession to win.” Quite whether “an obsession to win” would be the message most viewers would take from The Battle of Algiers remains to be seen. Indeed, the movie’s history as an educational tool is a chequered one. It was also the subject of an infamous screening for Pentagon staff shortly after the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Algeria World Cup 2010 Algeria World Cup 2010 Group C Paul MacInnes guardian.co.uk

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Algeria prepare for World Cup battle by watching The Battle of Algiers

World Cup 2010: France quit on the job and end the Raymond Domenech era

The Gallas and Henry generation is over for France and Laurent Blanc will look to Benzema and Ribéry to lead the new one France’s enfeeblement at this World Cup is more chameleon than karma. In Dublin they laugh that Les Bleus are being punished for the double Thierry Henry handball that sent France to South Africa ahead of the Republic of Ireland, but the cause is less faith-based, unless you count Raymond Domenech’s astrological leanings. The chameleon Domenech has led this generation into the Seine with his oddball selectorial whims, tactical aberrations and confrontational modus operandi. Blindingly apparent in Thursday’s 2-0 defeat to Mexico was that these French players are desperate to reach the end of the Domenech era so they can start afresh under Laurent Blanc, even if that means withdrawing their labour during games. Professional footballers who hoist the white bedsheet while on national service take a grave risk, because the public are seldom inclined to support an insurrection that wrecks a major tournament campaign, but the side led by Patrice Evra have plainly had their fill of the great survivor, Domenench, who held on to the post despite France failing to progress beyond the group phase at Euro 2008. The French federation’s refusal to act on the coach’s deep unpopularity in the dressing room exhibited suicide loyalty. In 2006, in Germany, France drew with Switzerland and South Korea before beating Togo to set off on a winning run that was inspired by the senior players, almost in defiance of their leader. Persuading Zinedine Zidane to return from international retirement proved a masterstroke, but only because it gave the rest of the squad a hero to coalesce around, when the alternative was to quit on the job – which they appear to be doing now. A report now confirmed in reliable sections of the French press is that Domenech tried to make Chelsea’s Florent Malouda play in a defensive midfield position in the opening 0-0 draw with Uruguay to allow Yoann Gourcuff freedom to roam. Malouda, arguably the best attacking player in the Premier League after Wayne Rooney last season, objected and was left on the bench. Meanwhile William Gallas expressed his disgust at being overlooked for the captaincy by refusing to talk to the media. France claimed the title of the new Holland: a warring family determined to sabotage their own talent. In theory they could still advance if they beat South Africa and there is a positive result between Uruguay and Mexico but the game is already up, with L’Equipe calling this team ‘The Impostors’ and Zidane diagnosing that Domenech has lost control of the camp. The coach will not have to consult his star signs to know that old pronouncements will be thrown back at him like rotten Brie. Leos, he once said, were “show-offs” who made unreliable defenders. Robert Pires was handicapped by being a Scorpio. Naturally. So for the four years since they lost to Italy on penalties in the 2006 final, French football has been in a race to destruction. The only doubt was who would end up with the bulk of the blame: Domenech or his rebellious players. This mortification will pass, of course, and France will draw on its Clairefontaine academy system to produce new heirs to Zidane, and Blanc will reverse Domenech’s folly in leaving Samir Nasri and Karim Benzema at home. This is the end for the William Gallas-Thierry Henry-Nicolas Anelka generation and now Malouda, Nasri, Benzema, Lassana Diarra and Franck Ribéry, if he gets his mind right, will lead France from the mire in the spirit, Blanc will hope, of fraternité . France World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 Paul Hayward guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: France quit on the job and end the Raymond Domenech era

World Cup 2010 Day 8 Schedule, Preview, And Predictions: United States’ Chance To Build On England Result

Kevork Djansezian – Getty Images 5 days ago: RUSTENBURG, SOUTH AFRICA – JUNE 12: Clint Dempsey of the United States celebrates his goal with team mate Michael Bradley (R) during the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa Group C match between England and USA at the Royal Bafokeng Stadium on June 12, 2010 in Rustenburg, South Africa. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images) View full size photo

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World Cup 2010 Day 8 Schedule, Preview, And Predictions: United States’ Chance To Build On England Result