World Cup 2018 groups: First stage team guide and latest analysis GROUPE A
World Cup 2018 groups: First stage team guide and latest analysis
RUSSIA
When the
Russians launched their bid to host the World Cup for the first time, they were
on a high after reaching the semi-finals at the 2008 European
Championship. Times have changed.
Russia
go into the draw as the lowest-ranked of the 32 teams, having failed to
advance past the group stage of any tournament since 2008. Ambitious talk of
reaching the quarter-finals or even semi-finals has faded.
There are
off-field problems too, with reports of disputes between players and the coach.
Hooligan rampages at Euro 2016 tarnished Russia's image, with the country
threatened with expulsion from the tournament in France.
·
Key player: Igor Akinfeev (CSKA Moscow) - A talented goalkeeper
who captains the team, Akinfeev has tended to make mistakes in big games.
·
Coach: Stanislav Cherchesov - After experiments with
expensive foreign recruits like Fabio Capello and Guus Hiddink, Russia
go into the World Cup with a dour, defence-first former goalkeeper.
SAUDI ARABIA
Preparations for
Russia have been far from ideal since qualifying for a fifth World Cup, with
two coaches fired.
Edgardo Bauza
was dismissed nine days before the draw after only five friendlies in charge.
The team lost to Portugal and Bulgaria last month.
Bauza had been
appointed in September to replace Bert van Marwijk, who was fired despite
leading the team to their first World Cup since 2006.
Juan Antonio
Pizzi, who was only named on Tuesday as the new coach, will be tasked with
improving on Saudi Arabia's best-ever performance at World Cup - the
second-round exit to Sweden at the 1994 tournament in the United States.
·
Star player: Mohammad Al-Sahlawi (Al-Nassr) - The 30-year-old
striker was instrumental in helping the Saudis reach the tournament with 16
goals in qualifying.
·
Coach: Juan
Antonio Pizzi.
EGYPT
Egypt waited a
long time to be back at the World Cup. The record seven-time African champions
had to watch on the sidelines since last qualifying in 1990.
The team hit new
lows recently, failing to even qualify for the African Cup of Nations - a
tournament they once dominated - from 2012-15. They are back now,
reaching the final of this year's tournament and following that up with a
long-awaited World Cup return.
·
Key player: Mohamed Salah (Liverpool) - Delivered when it
counted with five goals in six games in the final round of qualifiers,
including the late penalty that took Egypt to the World Cup.
·
Coach: Hector Cuper - There have been murmurs of
discontent over the conservative style favored by the Argentine. His team
focuses on defence first and counter attacks when it can. There can be no
denying Cuper's tactics have been successful, though.
URUGUAY
Only Brazil had
a more solid performance in South American qualifying than Uruguay. Though some
of the team's stars started fading, new players have emerged for the World Cup.
Defender Diego
Godin (31) and strikers Edinson Cavani (30) and Luis Suarez (30) still trouble
opponents. But now youngsters like midfielders Federico Valverde (19) and
Nahitan Nandez (21) have become frequent starters. Coach Oscar Tabarez, who
leads Uruguay's recovery since 2006, believes a paced renovation will bear
fruit in 2022.
·
Key player: Edinson Cavani (Paris Saint-Germain) - Top
goalscorer of the South American qualifiers with 10 goals in 18 matches, Cavani
has been more deadly for Uruguay than Barcelona's Luis Suarez.
·
Coach: Oscar Tabarez - Will coach Uruguay for his fourth
World Cup, the third in a row. The 70-year-old Tabarez has used a wheelchair
since he was diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome in 2016.
Our group prediction: Uruguay and Egypt to go through
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