Wednesday, June 23, 2010

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Fifa World Cup Icons

As much as most players insist that teamwork is the secret to success at the World Cup, certain players are given more chance to shine and leave the World Cup as heroes, or even icons, to their fans.


Consider the top 10 Fifa 2010 World Cup icons:

1 -- PELE
Edson Arantes do Nascimento came to world attention as a 17-year-old at the 1958 finals in Sweden, where he helped Brazil win the competition for the first time and become the first side to win away from their home continent.
He scored over 1 000 goals in a career spent almost entirely with Brazilian side Santos, but Pele was far more than a simple predator and created openings for others with his astonishing and audacious skills.
Injury curtailed his appearances in the 1962 and 1966 World Cups, but he returned at the peak of his powers in 1970, leading arguably the greatest football team ever assembled to a third global crown in Mexico.

2 -- DIEGO MARADONA
Maradona's promise was spotted in the slums of Buenos Aires and he became the undoubted star footballer of the 1980s with Argentina and with Italian side Napoli.
He hit his peak in the 1986 finals in Mexico, leading an otherwise average Argentina side to glory with his dazzling skill and will to win, plus a little help from the `Hand of God'.
Drug problems blighted his career thereafter but his talents as a playmaker were unrivalled. H will lead Argentina as coach in South Africa.

3 -- JOHAN CRUYFF
The lithe forward was the star attraction of Holland's 1974 World Cup team, a side so talented and versatile that their play spawned the phrase `Total Football'.
Inventive, original and most definitely a one-off, Cruyff was imperious as the Dutch cruised to the 1974 final. They were surprisingly beaten by hosts West Germany, denying Cruyff international honours to go alongside his incredible club achievements with Ajax and Barcelona.
He went on to manage the latter with spectacular results and is still highly influential in Catalonia.

4 -- FRANZ BECKENBAUER
He caught the eye at the 1966 World Cup as an all-action midfielder, but his finest hour was as West Germany's sweeper and skipper on home territory in 1974.
His commanding presence and leadership qualities earned him the nickname `Der Kaiser' and he also enjoyed great club success with Bayern Munich in the 1970s. He became the first man to win the World Cup as player and manager when he led his country to glory in 1990 and headed the organising committee for the 2006 finals in Germany.
Still a major player in international football politics, he may in the long term be a candidate to succeed current Fifa president Sepp Blatter.

5 -- DINO ZOFF
He is one of the great goalkeepers of all-time and the oldest player to win the World Cup at the age of 40 in 1982. He began his international career in glorious fashion too, as part of Italy's 1968 European Championship-winning side, but was dropped for the 1970 World Cup finals.
Upon regaining his place in the Azzurri line-up, he went 1 142 minutes without conceding a goal, with the run ending against Haiti, of all teams, in the 1974 finals. Zoff appeared again in 1978 and ended his international career on a high with victory over West Germany in the 1982 final in Spain.

6 -- BOBBY MOORE
Bobby Charlton, Geoff Hurst and Gary Lineker could all perhaps claim to be England World Cup greats, but Moore looked more at home than any of them on football's greatest stage.
He captained England to their one and only World Cup success in 1966 but, if anything, looked even better in the 1970 finals, putting in one of the greatest displays of defending ever seen in the 1-0 defeat to Brazil.
He famously swapped shirts with Pele at the end of that game, a sign of the mutual respect that existed between two of the all-time greats.
7 -- LOTHAR MATTHAUS
A tremendous all-round midfielder who appeared in five finals for West Germany and the unified Germany between 1982 and 1998.
He shone in the 1986 side before being given man-marking duties on Diego Maradona in the final, keeping his opponent relatively quiet until he played a killer through-ball late on to set up Jorge Burruchaga's winner.
Matthaus, who enjoyed great club success with Bayern Munich and Inter Milan, was at his dominant best in the 1990 finals, where he was one of few stand-out players in a disappointing tournament overall, and captained West Germany to a revenge victory over Argentina in the final.
As his pace dwindled, Matthaus dropped back into a sweeper role for the 1994 and 1998 finals.

8 -- ZINEDINE ZIDANE
Zidane remains one of the most talented performers to grace the World Cup stage, though there was little grace to the butt on Italy defender Marco Materazzi that earned him a red card in the 2006 final to bring an inglorious end to his career.
Zidane was arguably the leading light in a Real Madrid side packed with 'galacticos' and before his move to Spain he inspired France to their first-ever World Cup triumph on home soil in 1998.
He was blessed with fabulous technique, an almost limitless passing vision and an eye for goal, especially from set-pieces. Born in Marseille of Algerian descent, the 1998 victory was a triumph for the new, multi-racial France. His decision to come out of international retirement late in the qualifying campaign for 2006 was greeted with relief, though the tournament ended on the sourest of notes.

9 -- RONALDO
Denied the chance to match Pele's feats when he was confined to the bench in the 1994 finals in the USA as a 17-year-old, he also missed his chance to scale the World Cup summit when convulsions suffered on the day of the 1998 final meant he appeared a shadow of his former self, and should not really have even played.
World Cup success finally came his way in 2002, as his seven goals -- including both in the final against Germany -- took the buck-toothed striker to the very top.

10 -- FERENC PUSKAS
Nicknamed `The Galloping Major', the portly Hungarian hardly looked star material at first glance but, until the emergence of Pele, he and Real Madrid teammate Alfredo di Stefano were possibly the finest players the game had ever witnessed.
The creative pulse of the great `Magic Magyars' side of the 1950s, his team seemed set fair to win the World Cup in 1954, having humbled England at Wembley the previous year.
They thrashed West Germany 8-3 early on in the competition, but when the sides met again in the final, a half-fit Puskas was unable to exert his usual influence and the Magyars let a 2-0 lead slip to lose 3-2.

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