The Malta Independent 26 April 2024, Friday
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World Cup: Netherlands hoping to end winless streak

Malta Independent Thursday, 24 April 2014, 10:00 Last update: about 11 years ago

The Netherlands will head to Brazil hoping — again — to shake off the tag of best team never to win a World Cup.

But the runners-up in 1974, 1978 and 2010 seem to have a squad with less sparkle than any of those teams and could be reliant on a handful of veterans who are surely on their last World Cup legs.

Netherlands coach Louis van Gaal does not appear to have settled on a first-choice goalkeeper, while his midfield is in flux and missing its strongest performer through injury. The country's top international scorer, Robin van Persie, is also under an injury cloud and has yet to deliver on any of football's greatest stages.

Inspired by midfield playmaker Wesley Sneijder and backed up by an uncompromising defense, the Netherlands reached the 2010 final in Johannesburg only to lose to Spain 1-0 in extra time of an ugly final.

The two teams get a chance to make amends for the disappointing final when they meet again on June 13 at the Arena Fonte Nova in Salvador for their first Group B match.

"It's special that we start the World Cup against the opponent we faced in the final four years ago," Van Persie said. "It's beautiful that we immediately get the chance to put that (defeat) right."

After the mouth-watering opener against Spain — arguably the most-anticipated match of the first round — the Netherlands goes to Porto Alegre to face Australia and finishes group play against Chile in Sao Paulo.

The tournament is Van Gaal's international swan song. He has already announced his retirement from the national team after the World Cup and will be replaced by another veteran, Guus Hiddink.

Van Gaal succeeded Bert van Marwijk after the Dutch crashed out of the 2012 European Championship without winning a single point in group play. He immediately set about rebuilding the team and seeking to play more attractive attacking football.

It is a measure of the work Van Gaal has undertaken that he has handed international team debuts to 25 players — enough to form two complete teams and have a few reserves on the bench.

But his main front line remains unchanged from the last World Cup. Van Persie will spearhead the attack, if he has fully recovered from a sprained left knee he picked up after scoring a hat trick in Manchester United's 3-0 Champions League win over Olympiakos in March.

If fit, Van Persie will be hoping to finally show off his scoring prowess at a major tournament. He scored only one goal at the 2010 World Cup and matched that tally two years later at Euro 2012.

He will be supported by the pace of Arjen Robben, who has his own World Cup demons to bury after squandering a golden chance to score in regulation time in the 2010 World Cup final.

In one of the most serious injury losses for Van Gaal, Roma midfielder Kevin Strootman will definitely not be fit for Brazil after having reconstructive surgery on his left knee to repair injuries to his anterior cruciate ligament and medial and lateral meniscus.

Van Gaal called the powerful midfield dynamo's absence, a "blood-letting" for his squad.

It may well leave the 1988 European champions too anemic to finally win the World Cup.

 
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