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Holland’s football future is totally safe with rich crop of youngsters | Thomas Watt

There are some fine young players in the Netherlands to keep Holland among the leading powers beyond the World Cup The days of totaalvoetbal are long gone but have always cast a long shadow over the Oranje, never more so than when a tournament comes around. No other European side are expected to do more than just win their matches; the Dutch have a brand of football which the world expects to see. The dominant philosophy at this year’s tournament has been “win at all costs”, while the English have long had an attitude of “it isn’t enough to win, others must lose”. The Netherlands and Brazil are arguably the only remaining nations where the attitude is “win and win well”. Indeed, the great Uruguayan football philosopher Eduardo Galeano described the Oranje as “the Latin American team I like the best”, before going on to suggest that they were an “orange fire that flitted back and forth, fanned by an all-knowing breeze that sped it forward and pulled it back”. The class of 2010 may be more pragmatic, with slightly more emphasis on not conceding goals, but the spirit of ’74 remains part of the national make-up. They will always be one of the more entertaining sides, even in an era of more conservative football. Never has an international tournament had quite so many teams that fit Johan Cruyff’s description: “They can never beat you, but you can lose against them.” • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more To borrow a phrase, Holland in a World Cup are like the proverbial box of chocolates. Not only do you not know what you are going to get, but they are varied, luxurious, melt in the heat, and the orange one is everybody’s second favourite. The squad which Bert van Marwijk has assembled are no different; a temperamental, unpredictable, often flamboyant group of players, with more collective experience than any previous Dutch squad. What is clear is that this is the last chance for many of their number. Giovanni van Bronckhorst has already stated that he will retire after the finals. Andre Ooijer will likely play his final internationals before a move to Roda JC, while Mathijsen, Boulahrouz, Braafheid, Van Bommel and Kuyt will all be the wrong side of 30 by Brazil 2014. The Euro 2012 campaign may well see the changing of the guard, but the Dutch will not be hindered as their system remains loosely the same, and the nation produces like-for-like replacements to fit that system. There are, of course, quality reinforcements in the current squad (who may or may not have one eye on a British TV broadcasting job come World Cup 2026). Eljero Elia looked spritely against Denmark and were Van Marwijk a more adventurous coach the young Hamburg winger would certainly start against Japan on Saturday. Elia won the 2009 Johan Cruyff Prize (the Eredivisie Young Player of the Year) while at FC Twente, and earned himself a move to Hamburg last summer. The transfer to the Bundesliga looks to have settled him, as his form was so good it even earned him a place in the lucrative Honigstein Team of the Season . Ibrahim Afellay is a relative veteran at 24, not least because he has been playing regularly for PSV for the last six years. Equally capable on the wing or in the centre of the park, he is lightning quick, possesses amazing vision and has been attracting attention from Europe’s big guns for some years. Afellay is joined in South Africa by Gregory van der Wiel, Ajax’s marauding right-back and last season’s Eredivisie Young Player of the Year. At only 22, Van der Wiel has attracted favourable comparisons with Michael Reiziger (when he was good, not the jigsaw-kneed journeyman Middlesbrough fans got). Both Afellay and Van der Wiel are expected to follow Elia out of the Eredivisie this summer, with England a likely destination. The Eredivisie has been seen as a fertile feeding/breeding ground for English sides for some time, and there are a number of highly rated youngsters already with Premier League clubs. Chelsea will send the 18-year-old Jeffrey Bruma on loan next season (most likely to Twente), and his team-mate Patrick van Aanholt may well follow him. Arsenal look set to sign Kyle Ebecilio, Bruma’s 16-year-old cousin, to add to their own orange contingent. It is clear that the future Dutch stars will most likely move abroad, but who are the boys most likely become stars within the Netherlands? Jeremain Lens was in the provisional squad for the World Cup, and was unfortunate not to have made the final 23. After a successful season in which he managed 12 goals in 20 starts, Lens opted to move from AZ Alkmaar to PSV Eindhoven, where he is seen as the long-term replacement for Danko Lazovic. The Dutch may also find that they have a ready-made replacement for Mark van Bommel in the 23-year-old Twente midfielder Wout Brama, already on the fringes of the national side, or Groningen’s tough-tackling Danny Holla. Brama’s team-mate Luuk de Jong – younger brother of Ajax’s Siem – is expected to take over from Blaise Nkufo in leading the Twente line next season and both brothers are tipped to make an impact. The fate of the Dutch national side is perennially held in the hands of the two clubs with the finest youth systems in the land. Ajax and Feyenoord produced more than half of the 1974 World Cup squad and thirteen of the current squad owe some part of their education to one of the two Klassieker rivals. In the current Feyenoord squad there are two young players who will be lighting up a far bigger stage soon. Leroy Fer anchors the Rotterdam side’s midfield, and looks set to develop into an Edgar Davids-style box-to-box midfielder. Ferocious in the tackle, sensible with possession and capable of driving forward runs, the 20-year-old has been singled out by his captain, Van Bronckhorst, as one of the best players in the side. He is joined in midfield by Georginio Wijnaldum, named by Fifa as one of the 40 best young talents in the world. Wijnaldum was full-back tormentor-in-chief last season, and possesses a Bergkamp-sized bag of tricks, flicks and party pieces. The 19-year-old is also deceptively strong and direct, capable of riding challenges and holding off defenders. If words don’t do justice to his potential, see for yourselves. Although he has only featured in three games for the men from De club van Zuid , remember the name Luc Castaignos. As a quick and skilful striker Castaignos has been a revelation for the Dutch Under-17s squad, finishing top scorer at last year’s European Championship. In doing so, he broke the all-time goalscoring record for the Dutch at that level, overtaking the tally jointly held by Collins John and Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink. Of course, being a young talented Dutch striker, he has been scouted by Real Madrid, Liverpool, Manchester United, Internazionale, Arsenal, blah, blah, blah … but a couple of good seasons in the Eredivisie would surely be more beneficial than an early move abroad. Ajax continue their fine tradition of discovering and nurturing the finest young talent in the world. In Vurnon Anita they may have unearthed the long-term replacement for Van Bronckhorst. The young left-back has kept two internationals on the bench this season, and at only 21 he has five years of first-team experience. Although he was one of the unfortunates cut from the provisional squad for 2010, Anita will be hoping to be first-choice left-back in time for the 2012 European Championship. There are also high hopes that Daley Blind can replicate at least some of the success his father, Danny, had at club and country level, while the winger Jeffrey Sarpong has flirted with the first team and spent last year on loan at NEC. Arguably the finest prospect of all is Siem de Jong, an attack-minded midfielder in the Sneijder/Van der Vaart mould. De Jong managed 15 goals in 33 appearances in all competitions last year, a record which will not be without admirers. Of course the best result for the Netherlands could be that these youngsters stay where they are and learn their craft properly, rather than risk moving too early. Dutch football is always producing “the next big thing”, but such players as Nacer Barazite, Ryan Babel, Marvin Emnes, Vincent van den Berg and Quincy Owusu-Abeyie have risked football purgatory by moving abroad early in their careers. But, as the saying goes, the future is bright. The future is … Holland Eredivisie World Cup 2010 Group E World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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Holland’s football future is totally safe with rich crop of youngsters | Thomas Watt

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 2010: I am disgusted, says France’s captain Patrice Evra | Paul Wilson

With France now needing a miracle against South Africa, their captain admitted they took a big punch from Mexico and never saw it coming Thierry Henry walked out of the Peter Mokaba stadium in Polokwane without saying a word to anyone after watching the 2-0 defeat to Mexico as a non-playing substitute. Manchester United’s Patrice Evra, as France captain, did have something to say, but he gave the distinct impression a whole lot more would be said when this sorry World Cup campaign is finally over. Barring a miracle, and Evra specifically said he is not expecting one, that will be in only four days’ time. “I’m still in shock after such a loss, we have behaved like a small football nation,” Evra said. “We have received a big punch and I couldn’t see it coming. The first goal was very painful but I thought we would be able to react, but we were not able to. We will talk about it during the following days. There is a lot to say but I’m not going to say it in public yet. I am disgusted. We have to beat South Africa now, but as for the qualification, I don’t believe in miracles. We are not a great team.” France always seem to be at one end or the other of the World Cup spectrum, with little in between. After winning the event in their own country in 1998 they were a major disappointment in South Korea-Japan 2002, leaving the tournament early, then somewhat against expectation they reached the final in Germany four years ago, where they could conceivably have beaten Italy but for Zinedine Zidane’s aberration against Marco Materazzi. Reaching the final in 2006 silenced some of Raymond Domenech’s many doubters, effectively giving the France coach a stay of execution until the next tournament, though after the manner in which Les Bleus surrendered against Mexico and the likelihood of another early departure, it appears he has little room left for argument. After leaving Henry on the bench for the whole 90 minutes, witnessing another supine display from Nicolas Anelka and wholly ineffective ones from Franck Ribery and Florent Malouda, Domenech has some questions to answer. So, for that matter, has Evra, whose part in the decisive penalty that clinched Mexico’s win was not the one of a captain willing to fight for every inch. Evra more or less waved Pablo Barrera past on his way to the penalty area, where he was clumsily fouled by Eric Abidal, the whole episode suggesting a tired and demotivated team. For that, Domenech will ultimately have to answer. “For the moment I’m searching for words,” the coach said, wearing his habitual puzzled expression. That makes a change from searching the stars – he freely admits astrology has informed some of his decisions in the past – and a disappointed nation will be hoping the dictionary might contain more sense. “We still have a match to play and there is an infinitesimally small chance we can go through. I do reproach myself, yes. But that’s my own business. Perhaps we didn’t have quite the punch we needed but there was definitely a team playing, not just a collection of individuals. Initially we were fairly calm.” France World Cup 2010 Group A Mexico Thierry Henry Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: I am disgusted, says France’s captain Patrice Evra | Paul Wilson

World Cup players in Durban told to keep off the grass

• Holland and Japan forced to train in nearby township • Surface at stadium needs protection after heavy rain Holland and Japan had their traditional eve-of-match training sessions moved from the Moses Mabhida stadium on Friday because of concerns about the playing surface. The teams, who meet in their second Group E game on Saturday, were forced to train at the Princess Magogo Stadium in Kwamashu Township rather than at the new 62,000-seat area in the centre of Durban. “We had a heavy rainstorm last night and we’re just taking care of the pitch,” the Durban venue manager, Bongi Hlope, told Reuters. “We have three excellent training pitches around the city and so we’re using them to preserve the surface at the stadium. This will probably be the case for the remaining first-round games and then we’ll probably revert to the original plan from the round of 16.” The Moses Mabhida stadium will also host the Nigeria v South Korea and Brazil v Portugal group games, one round of 16 tie and a semi-final. The arena has hosted two matches so far, Germany’s 4-0 demolition of Australia and Switzerland’s 1-0 upset of pre-tournament favourites Spain. World Cup 2010 World Cup 2010 Group E Holland Japan guardian.co.uk

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World Cup players in Durban told to keep off the grass

Investment bankers views on the 2010 World Cup South Africa …

The J.P. Morgan report “A Quantitative Guide to the 2010 World Cup ” predicts that according to the forecasting algorithm used, England is likely to win the 2010 World Cup edition. Although the initial World Cup Model Score shows Brazil as the strongest team taking part at the tournament, further correlations with the fixture table give England as the World Cup winners, followed on the 2nd place by Spain and on the 3rd place by Netherlands. Source: J.P. Morgan 2010 – A …

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Investment bankers views on the 2010 World Cup South Africa …

2010 FIFA World Cup: From U.S.-England To Switzerland-Spain, Big D …

Spain was not only co-favorite with Brazil to win the 2010 World Cup ; it had never lost to Switzerland. The score your goal and then develop a fortress strategy was never more notably invoked than in this upset match in which a long …

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Spain vs Switzerland Time and Live Score: World Cup Football 2010

Live Score . To get the live score of the match, visit the following link: http://www.goalzz.com/main.aspx?wc=h. Alongside Brazil , Spain is one of the hot favorites to win the World Cup 2010 title. They have a plenty of top class …

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Spain vs Switzerland Time and Live Score: World Cup Football 2010

World Cup 2010: Brazil 2-1 North Korea | Twohundredpercent

A cursory glance at the squad that Dunga brought to the finals (and, just as significantly, those that he left behind) confirms that this is a squad that has been sculpted to win the World Cup rather than to excite the senses of the purists . … Those predicting a record-breaking score for Brazil this evening are missing a trick. The value of Brazil’s stock could go down as well as up with this particular match, against opposition about whom we know so little. …

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World Cup 2010: Brazil 2-1 North Korea | Twohundredpercent

Bad Korea Move for Brazil…Odds Lengthen. World Cup Betting Update

World Cup Betting Tips. World Cup – Brazil 2010 . It must be this ball? The only team to play very well so far are the German’s who have been playing with it since January. Another dull day of World Cup betting at the World Cup . Latest odds… … ‘Brazil’s win was bad news for us with some hefty bets at short odds for them to do so, but the N Korea goal made us plenty in the correct score market where most punters had banked on a Korean blank.’ said Hill’s spokesman Graham …

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Bad Korea Move for Brazil…Odds Lengthen. World Cup Betting Update

Ivory Coast Vs Portugal : FIFA World Cup 2010 Match Result &amp …

Ivory Coast Vs Portugal: FIFA World Cup 2010 Match Result, Live Score & Match Report: , Live Result Ivory Coast Vs Portugal. Final result For Ivory Coast Vs Portugal is 0-0. … June 15th, (Tazakhobor.com): Five-time World Cup winners Brazil opened their South Africa 2010 campaign with a workmanlike 2-1 win over Asian minnows North Korea on Tuesday. 15 June 2010 More Than 50 Died In landslides In Bangladesh; 15 June 2010 Asia Cup Cricket 2010 Result: Pakistan Vs Srilanka …

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Ivory Coast Vs Portugal : FIFA World Cup 2010 Match Result &amp …