Monday, May 31, 2010

Japan Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

JAPAN
Group E
Manager: Takeshi Okada
Star Player : Shunsuke Nakamura

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 3
Best result: 2nd round (2002)
All-time record: 10 games played, 2 wins, 2 draws, 6 losses
Goals for: 8, Goals against: 14
Biggest victory: 2-0 vs. Tunisia in 2002
Biggest defeat: 4-1 vs. Brazil in 2006
Top scorer: Junichi Inamoto (2 goals)
Most appearances: Hidetoshi Nakata (10 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 2002

LIVE STREAM  JAPAN MATCHES : 
 
June 14, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group E
Japan vs Cameroon
at Free State Stadium

June 19, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Netherlands vs Japan
at Moses Mabhida Stadium

June 24, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Denmark vs Japan
at Royal Bafokeng Stadium

Short Team History JAPAN:

FIFA member since: 1929
Team nickname: Nippon Daihyo
All-time caps leader: Masami Ihara (123)
All-time leading scorer: Kunishige Kamamoto (75 goals)
Notable achievements: Asian Cup Champions (1992, 2000, 2004)
Legendary Player: Kunishige Kamamoto helped Japan win the bronze medal at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico, finishing as the tournament's top scorer with seven goals. He scored a record 73 goals in 75 international matches for Japan.
Show your support for JAPAN
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a JAPAN World Cup Soccer Channel !
 

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi Goalkeeper 1.79m 75 kg August 15, 1975
- Eiji Kawashima Goalkeeper 1.85m 78 kg March 20, 1983
- Seigo Narazaki Goalkeeper 1.85m 76 kg April 15, 1976
- Daiki Iwamasa Defender 1.86m 82 kg January 30, 1982
- Yuichi Komano Defender 1.71m 71 kg July 25, 1981
- Yasuyuki Konno Defender 1.78m 73 kg January 25, 1983
- Yuto Nagatomo Defender 1.70m 65 kg September 12, 1986
- Yuji Nakazawa Defender 1.87m 78 kg February 25, 1978
- Marcus Tulio Tanaka Defender 1.85m 82 kg April 24, 1981
- Atsuto Uchida Defender 1.76m 62 kg March 27, 1988
- Yuki Abe Midfielder 1.78m 75 kg September 6, 1981
- Yasuhito Endo Midfielder 1.77m 70 kg January 28, 1980
- Makoto Hasebe Midfielder 1.77m 65 kg January 18, 1984
- Keisuke Honda Midfielder 1.81m 74 kg June 13, 1986
- Junichi Inamoto Midfielder 1.81m 75 kg September 18, 1979
- Daisuke Matsui Midfielder 1.70m 58 kg May 11, 1981
- Kengo Nakamura Midfielder 1.75m 66 kg October 31, 1980
- Shunsuke Nakamura Midfielder 1.78m 69 kg June 24, 1978
- Takayuki Morimoto Forward 1.80m 70 kg May 7, 1988
- Shinji Okazaki Forward 1.73m 70 kg April 16, 1986
- Yoshito Okubo Forward 1.68m 61 kg June 9, 1982
- Keiji Tamada Forward 1.73m 67 kg April 11, 1980
- Kisho Yano Forward 1.85m 74 kg April 5, 1985



Want to Know More About JAPAN !! Carry on :
Appearances at finals:
1998 - First round
2002 - Second round
2006 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 10, Won 2, Drawn 2, Lost 6.

Best performance: Second round in 2002.

Most appearances at finals: Hidetoshi Nakata (1998, 2002, 2006) - 10.

Most goals at finals: Junichi Inamoto (2002) - 2.

World Cup high: Junichi Inamoto's goal to fire Japan to a 1-0 victory over Russia in front of over 60,000 fans in their home tournament in 2002.

World Cup low: Crashing out at the hands of Turkey in the second round in 2002 while rivals and co-hosts South Korea went on to make the semi-finals.

World Cup legend: Hidetoshi Nakata played in every match for Japan at their first three World Cups and the iconic midfielder helped bring Japanese football onto the world stage.

The story so far: Japanese football underwent a renaissance in the early 90s with the launch of the professional J-League, and the national team came within one minute of qualifying for USA 1994. Despite that disappointment, Japanese football improved markedly on the back of the new league and Japan has competed in every World Cup finals since as a true powerhouse of the Asian confederation.

Wedged between first round exits in 1998 and 2006 came Japan's best result, a second round appearance on home soil as part of the 2002 tournament joint-hosted with South Korea.

Qualification: After coach Ivica Osim suffered a stroke in late 2007, the Japanese FA handed the reins to Takeshi Okada, the man who guided the team through France 1998. A more mature Okada led Japan to a fairly straightforward qualification, although he came in for criticism at times from an increasingly demanding Japanese media for the team's lack of goals. Being grouped with Australia in the final stage helped Japan, given the other three teams struggled to pick up points.


Qualifying record (final group stage): P8, W4, D3, L1, F11, A6, Pts15.

Most appearances: Marcus Tulio Tanaka (8).

Top goalscorer: Keiji Tamada, Marcus Tulio Tanaka, Shunsuke Nakamura (2).

TEAM PROFILE JAPAN:
Boasting one of the strongest squads in Asian football, Japan, winners of three of the last five editions of the AFC Asian Cup, have high hopes for the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™ - their fourth appearance at the global showpiece.

First on the agenda is an improvement on the disappointing showing at Germany 2006, when the Samurai Blue exited at the first hurdle after a 3-1 reverse against Australia, a 0-0 draw with Croatia and a resounding 4-1 defeat by Brazil. Japan will also be facing their first finals without iconic midfielder Hidetoshi Nakata. The former Roma schemer featured in each of the national side's games at France 1998, Korea/Japan 2002 and Germany 2006 before hanging up his boots after the latter event aged just 29.

The road to South Africa
Having comfortably reached the fourth and final stage of Asian Zone qualifying for South Africa 2010, Japan won four, drew three and lost just one of their eight matches in Group 1. A 2-1 reverse in Australia and a frustrating 0-0 at home against the same opponents were the lowlights of this final phase, though coach Takeshi Okada's charges still finished well clear of Bahrain, Qatar and Uzbekistan in the five-team section.

The star players
Japan's biggest star is former Celtic playmaker Shunsuke Nakamura, who in the summer 2009 made the switch from Glasgow to La Liga with Espanyol. Another European-based performer is young midfielder Keisuke Honda, at Eredivisie outfit VVV Venlo and like Nakamura a gifted left-footer. Leading from the back is 31-year-old defensive rock and captain Yuji Nakazawa, who with over 90 senior caps to his name is Japan's third-most capped player of all time.

The coach
National supremo Okada is widely considered to be one of the finest Japanese strategists around. He was at the helm during the Samurai Blue's first FIFA World Cup appearance at France 1998, having successfully negotiated a tricky play-off meeting with Iran, and later enjoyed spells at club level with Consadole Sapporo and Yokohama F Marinos.


The 53-year-old former international defender's time in Sapporo included taking the team from the second division into the top flight, while the tactician led Marinos to successive J.League titles in 2003 and 2004. Having stepped away from his role in Yokohama in 2006, he picked up the reins of the national team for a second time a year later - following the stroke suffered by previous incumbent Ivica Osim.

Previous FIFA World Cups
South Africa 2010 will be Japan's fourth FIFA World Cup finals, and their fourth in a row. Their best finish came as hosts at Korea/Japan 2002, when they topped Group H ahead of Belgium, Russia and Tunisia to advance to the knockout stages for the first and so far only time. Once in the Round of 16 they put in a brave fight only to go down 1-0 against eventual third-place finishers Turkey, the goal coming after 12 minutes from Umit Davala.

Records

    * At his first finals as Japan coach, back at France 1998, Okada's charges lost each of their three group games, scoring once and conceding four times in the process.
    * Masashi Nakayama scored Japan's first ever FIFA World Cup finals goal, netting in the 74th minute of the 2-1 reverse against Jamaicaon French soil.

What they said

"We are not going to change our tactics because when I set this team's basic tactical approach, it was already done with a view to winning against the world's biggest teams. Our main target in South Africa is to reach the semi-finals." Japan coach Takeshi Okada

Japan Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

JAPAN
Group E
Manager: Takeshi Okada
Star Player : Shunsuke Nakamura

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 3
Best result: 2nd round (2002)
All-time record: 10 games played, 2 wins, 2 draws, 6 losses
Goals for: 8, Goals against: 14
Biggest victory: 2-0 vs. Tunisia in 2002
Biggest defeat: 4-1 vs. Brazil in 2006
Top scorer: Junichi Inamoto (2 goals)
Most appearances: Hidetoshi Nakata (10 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 2002

LIVE STREAM  JAPAN MATCHES : 
 
June 14, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group E
Japan vs Cameroon
at Free State Stadium

June 19, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Netherlands vs Japan
at Moses Mabhida Stadium

June 24, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Denmark vs Japan
at Royal Bafokeng Stadium

Short Team History JAPAN:

FIFA member since: 1929
Team nickname: Nippon Daihyo
All-time caps leader: Masami Ihara (123)
All-time leading scorer: Kunishige Kamamoto (75 goals)
Notable achievements: Asian Cup Champions (1992, 2000, 2004)
Legendary Player: Kunishige Kamamoto helped Japan win the bronze medal at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico, finishing as the tournament's top scorer with seven goals. He scored a record 73 goals in 75 international matches for Japan.
Show your support for JAPAN
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a JAPAN World Cup Soccer Channel !
 

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi Goalkeeper 1.79m 75 kg August 15, 1975
- Eiji Kawashima Goalkeeper 1.85m 78 kg March 20, 1983
- Seigo Narazaki Goalkeeper 1.85m 76 kg April 15, 1976
- Daiki Iwamasa Defender 1.86m 82 kg January 30, 1982
- Yuichi Komano Defender 1.71m 71 kg July 25, 1981
- Yasuyuki Konno Defender 1.78m 73 kg January 25, 1983
- Yuto Nagatomo Defender 1.70m 65 kg September 12, 1986
- Yuji Nakazawa Defender 1.87m 78 kg February 25, 1978
- Marcus Tulio Tanaka Defender 1.85m 82 kg April 24, 1981
- Atsuto Uchida Defender 1.76m 62 kg March 27, 1988
- Yuki Abe Midfielder 1.78m 75 kg September 6, 1981
- Yasuhito Endo Midfielder 1.77m 70 kg January 28, 1980
- Makoto Hasebe Midfielder 1.77m 65 kg January 18, 1984
- Keisuke Honda Midfielder 1.81m 74 kg June 13, 1986
- Junichi Inamoto Midfielder 1.81m 75 kg September 18, 1979
- Daisuke Matsui Midfielder 1.70m 58 kg May 11, 1981
- Kengo Nakamura Midfielder 1.75m 66 kg October 31, 1980
- Shunsuke Nakamura Midfielder 1.78m 69 kg June 24, 1978
- Takayuki Morimoto Forward 1.80m 70 kg May 7, 1988
- Shinji Okazaki Forward 1.73m 70 kg April 16, 1986
- Yoshito Okubo Forward 1.68m 61 kg June 9, 1982
- Keiji Tamada Forward 1.73m 67 kg April 11, 1980
- Kisho Yano Forward 1.85m 74 kg April 5, 1985



Want to Know More About JAPAN !! Carry on :
Appearances at finals:
1998 - First round
2002 - Second round
2006 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 10, Won 2, Drawn 2, Lost 6.

Best performance: Second round in 2002.

Most appearances at finals: Hidetoshi Nakata (1998, 2002, 2006) - 10.

Most goals at finals: Junichi Inamoto (2002) - 2.

World Cup high: Junichi Inamoto's goal to fire Japan to a 1-0 victory over Russia in front of over 60,000 fans in their home tournament in 2002.

World Cup low: Crashing out at the hands of Turkey in the second round in 2002 while rivals and co-hosts South Korea went on to make the semi-finals.

World Cup legend: Hidetoshi Nakata played in every match for Japan at their first three World Cups and the iconic midfielder helped bring Japanese football onto the world stage.

The story so far: Japanese football underwent a renaissance in the early 90s with the launch of the professional J-League, and the national team came within one minute of qualifying for USA 1994. Despite that disappointment, Japanese football improved markedly on the back of the new league and Japan has competed in every World Cup finals since as a true powerhouse of the Asian confederation.

Wedged between first round exits in 1998 and 2006 came Japan's best result, a second round appearance on home soil as part of the 2002 tournament joint-hosted with South Korea.

Qualification: After coach Ivica Osim suffered a stroke in late 2007, the Japanese FA handed the reins to Takeshi Okada, the man who guided the team through France 1998. A more mature Okada led Japan to a fairly straightforward qualification, although he came in for criticism at times from an increasingly demanding Japanese media for the team's lack of goals. Being grouped with Australia in the final stage helped Japan, given the other three teams struggled to pick up points.


Qualifying record (final group stage): P8, W4, D3, L1, F11, A6, Pts15.

Most appearances: Marcus Tulio Tanaka (8).

Top goalscorer: Keiji Tamada, Marcus Tulio Tanaka, Shunsuke Nakamura (2).

TEAM PROFILE JAPAN:
Boasting one of the strongest squads in Asian football, Japan, winners of three of the last five editions of the AFC Asian Cup, have high hopes for the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™ - their fourth appearance at the global showpiece.

First on the agenda is an improvement on the disappointing showing at Germany 2006, when the Samurai Blue exited at the first hurdle after a 3-1 reverse against Australia, a 0-0 draw with Croatia and a resounding 4-1 defeat by Brazil. Japan will also be facing their first finals without iconic midfielder Hidetoshi Nakata. The former Roma schemer featured in each of the national side's games at France 1998, Korea/Japan 2002 and Germany 2006 before hanging up his boots after the latter event aged just 29.

The road to South Africa
Having comfortably reached the fourth and final stage of Asian Zone qualifying for South Africa 2010, Japan won four, drew three and lost just one of their eight matches in Group 1. A 2-1 reverse in Australia and a frustrating 0-0 at home against the same opponents were the lowlights of this final phase, though coach Takeshi Okada's charges still finished well clear of Bahrain, Qatar and Uzbekistan in the five-team section.

The star players
Japan's biggest star is former Celtic playmaker Shunsuke Nakamura, who in the summer 2009 made the switch from Glasgow to La Liga with Espanyol. Another European-based performer is young midfielder Keisuke Honda, at Eredivisie outfit VVV Venlo and like Nakamura a gifted left-footer. Leading from the back is 31-year-old defensive rock and captain Yuji Nakazawa, who with over 90 senior caps to his name is Japan's third-most capped player of all time.

The coach
National supremo Okada is widely considered to be one of the finest Japanese strategists around. He was at the helm during the Samurai Blue's first FIFA World Cup appearance at France 1998, having successfully negotiated a tricky play-off meeting with Iran, and later enjoyed spells at club level with Consadole Sapporo and Yokohama F Marinos.


The 53-year-old former international defender's time in Sapporo included taking the team from the second division into the top flight, while the tactician led Marinos to successive J.League titles in 2003 and 2004. Having stepped away from his role in Yokohama in 2006, he picked up the reins of the national team for a second time a year later - following the stroke suffered by previous incumbent Ivica Osim.

Previous FIFA World Cups
South Africa 2010 will be Japan's fourth FIFA World Cup finals, and their fourth in a row. Their best finish came as hosts at Korea/Japan 2002, when they topped Group H ahead of Belgium, Russia and Tunisia to advance to the knockout stages for the first and so far only time. Once in the Round of 16 they put in a brave fight only to go down 1-0 against eventual third-place finishers Turkey, the goal coming after 12 minutes from Umit Davala.

Records

    * At his first finals as Japan coach, back at France 1998, Okada's charges lost each of their three group games, scoring once and conceding four times in the process.
    * Masashi Nakayama scored Japan's first ever FIFA World Cup finals goal, netting in the 74th minute of the 2-1 reverse against Jamaicaon French soil.

What they said

"We are not going to change our tactics because when I set this team's basic tactical approach, it was already done with a view to winning against the world's biggest teams. Our main target in South Africa is to reach the semi-finals." Japan coach Takeshi Okada

Italy Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

ITALY
Group F
Manager: Marcello Lippi
Star Player : Gianluigi Buffon,Fabio Cannavaro

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 16
Best result: Champions (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
All-time record: 77 games played, 44 wins, 19 draws, 14 losses
Goals for: 122, Goals against: 69
Biggest victory: 7-1 vs. United States in 1934
Biggest defeat: 4-1 vs. Switzerland in 1954 and 4-1 vs. Brazil in 1970
Top scorer: Paolo Rossi, Roberto Baggio and Christian Vieri (9 goals)
Most appearances: Paolo Maldini (23 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 1934, 1990

LIVE STREAM  ITALY MATCHES : 


June 14, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group F
Italy vs Paraguay
at Cape Town Stadium

June 20, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group F
Italy vs New Zealand
at Mbombela Stadium

June 24, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group F
Slovakia vs Italy
at Ellis Park

Short Team History:
FIFA member since: 1905
Team nickname: Azzurri
All-time caps leader: Fabio Cannavaro (131)
All-time leading scorer: Luigi Riva (35 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (1968)
Legendary Player: The hero of the 1982 World Cup in Spain, Paolo Rossi was the top goal scorer in the tournament with six goals. His hat trick against Brazil in the quarter-finals sent the Azzurri on the way to capturing a third World Cup title. Voted European player of the year in 1982.
Show your support for ITALY
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a ITALY World Cup Soccer Channel !
 

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Gianluigi Buffon Goalkeeper 1.91m 83 kg January 28, 1978
- Morgan De Sanctis Goalkeeper 1.90m 80 kg March 26, 1977
- Federico Marchetti Goalkeeper 1.90m 83 kg February 7, 1983
- Salvatore Sirigu Goalkeeper 1.92m 80 kg January 12, 1987
- Salvatore Bocchetti Defender 1.78m 70 kg November 30, 1986
- Leonardo Bonucci Defender 1.90m 82 kg May 1, 1987
- Fabio Cannavaro Defender 1.76m 75 kg September 13, 1973
- Mattia Cassani Defender 1.84m 75 kg August 26, 1983
- Giorgio Chiellini Defender 1.86m 76 kg August 14, 1984
- Domenico Criscito Defender 1.83m 70 kg December 30, 1986
- Gianluca Zambrotta Defender 1.81m 79 kg February 19, 1977
- Mauro German Camoranesi Midfielder 1.74m 70 kg October 4, 1976
- Andrea Cossu Midfielder 1.71m 63 kg March 5, 1980
- Daniele De Rossi Midfielder 1.84m 83 kg July 24, 1983
- Ivan Gennaro Gattuso Midfielder 1.77m 77 kg January 9, 1978
- Cristian Maggio Midfielder 1.84m 79 kg February 11, 1982
- Claudio Marchisio Midfielder 1.80m 70 kg January 19, 1986
- Riccardo Montolivo Midfielder 1.81m 76 kg January 18, 1985
- Angelo Palombo Midfielder 1.77m 77 kg September 25, 1981
- Andrea Pirlo Midfielder 1.77m 68 kg May 19, 1979
- Marco Borriello Forward 1.80m 73 kg June 18, 1982
- Antonio Di Natale Forward 1.77m 70 kg October 13, 1977
- Alberto Gilardino Forward 1.84m 79 kg July 5, 1982
- Vincenzo Iaquinta Forward 1.89m 79 kg November 21, 1979
- Giampaolo Pazzini Forward 1.80m 77 kg August 2, 1984
- Simone Pepe Forward 1.78m 73 kg August 30, 1983
- Fabio Quagliarella Forward 1.82m 73 kg January 31, 1983
- Giuseppe Rossi Forward 1.73m 72 kg February 1, 1987

Wanna Know more about ITALY ? Read more !!
Appearances at finals:
1934 - Winners
1938 - Winners
1950 - First round
1954 - First round
1962 - First round
1966 - First round
1970 - Runners-up
1974 - First round
1978 - Fourth place
1982 - Winners
1986 - Second round
1990 - Third place
1994 - Runners-up
1998 - Quarter-final
2002 - Second round
2006 - Winners
Overall record at finals: Played 77, Won 44, Drawn 19, Lost 14.

Best performance: Winners in 1934, 1938, 1982 and 2006.

Most appearances at finals: Paolo Maldini (1990, 1994, 1998, 2002) - 23.

Most goals at finals: Roberto Baggio (1990, 1994, 1998), Paolo Rossi (1978, 1982, 1986) - 9.

World Cup high: Emerging from the disgrace of the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal to restore the honour of Italian football by winning the 2006 World Cup.

World Cup low: Following the tragic loss of 12 players following the 1949 Superga air disaster, Italy take the boat to Brazil for World Cup 1950 but, tired and shorn of talent, go out in the first round.

World Cup Legend: Giuseppe 'Peppino' Meazza. The 1930 and 1934 World Cup winner is still considered by many to be the greatest Italian player of all time, as well as the greatest Italian forward of all time.

The story so far: Italy have played more World Cup football than any other team and have won the tournament on four occasions, with only Brazil, on five, winning more. In the pre-war era, the Azzurri were almost untouchable as they won the 1934 trophy on their debut appearance and retained the title in 1938. Post-war, Italy lost their way and were repeatedly knocked out in the first round.

In 1978, a new generation, including legendary striker Paolo Rossi, emerged and, after reaching the semi-finals in Argentina, won the World Cup in Spain in 1982. Ever since, the Azzurri have been a force to be reckoned with, routinely reaching the latter stages, and they won it again in 2006.

Qualification: Republic of Ireland, led by experienced Italian coach Giovanni Trapattoni, proved to be the only real stumbling block in Group Eight. A 1-1 draw with Trapattoni's team at the San Nicola Stadium in Bari in April meant that the Italians could still be caught at the top of the group and, heading into their penultimate qualifier, at Ireland's Croke Park, could be condemend to the play-offs with a defeat. Ireland thought they had done enough when Sean St Ledger gave them a 2-1 lead in the 87th minute, but Alberto Gilardino scored a 90th-minute equaliser to book Italy's place at the World Cup finals.
Qualifying record: P10, W7, D3, L0, F18, A7, Pts24.

Most appearances: Fabio Cannavaro, Gianluca Zambrotta (9).

Top goalscorer: Alberto Gilardino (4).


Team Profile ITALY:
Defending champions Italy will naturally be one of the leading contenders to emerge triumphant at the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ South Africa. The only country along with Brazil to have won the tournament twice in succession, Marcello Lippi's men will be vying to match the performance of their pioneering predecessors in 1934 and 1938.

The road to South Africa
The Azzurri topped Group 8 thanks to their traditional efficiency and pragmatism, even if they failed to set the continent alight along the way. In total, they recorded seven wins and three draws, firing 18 goals and conceding seven.

Italy set the pace in their section right from the off with an opening-day 2-1 victory over Cyprus, and after that result took them to the summit they remained there. It nonetheless took them until their penultimate encounter to seal their passage. Intriguingly, the generations that claimed the world title in 1982 and 2006 also booked their tickets with one match to spare.

Alberto Gilardino finished top scorer for Lippi's team with four strikes to his name, including a stunning hat-trick in less than 15 minutes to down Cyprus 3-2 in their final outing.
The star players
Billed for a number of years now as one of the finest goalkeepers on the planet, at 31 Gianluigi Buffon remains one of the two pillars of the Italian defence. His spectacular reflexes to keep out a Zinedine Zidane header in extra time during the 2006 Final illustrated just why he has an undisputed claim on the gloves.

The other leader at the back is none other than evergreen captain Fabio Cannavaro. Now 36, the 2006 FIFA World Player of the Year continues to contribute his superb positioning sense and the vast experience of his 130 caps.

In midfield, tireless tackler Gennaro Gattuso no longer needs any introduction. The 31-year-old is still the motor, battler and all-round talent at the heart of the Azzurri line-up, the man who never admits defeat and whose hunger for victory inspires all those around him.

The coach
A veritable monarch in the field of coaching, 61-year-old Marcello Lippi is an expert at making changes that yield results, with no fewer than five of the 12 goals Italy registered at the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany coming from substitutes. The man with more than an air of Paul Newman has won everything in his career, which is precisely why he called time on his first stint as Italy trainer on 12 July 2006, having clinched the global crown. After the Azzurri floundered at UEFA EURO 2008, however, he did not need much persuasion to return to the role, and he immediately set about rebuilding the defence, remodelling the midfield and trying out a fresh crop of forwards. He puts little stock in his landmark 31 consecutive international matches without defeat, preferring to amass titles than statistics, and his natural feel for the game means his tactical decisions are never called into doubt. For the qualifiers, he called up a total of 36 players, with Cannavaro and full-back Gianluca Zambrotta the players most used (810 minutes each).


Previous FIFA World Cups
Italy have qualified for 16 of the 18 FIFA World Cup finals, failing to book themselves a place in 1958 and having not opted to take part in the first edition in 1930. They have won the competition on four occasions, in 1934, 1938, 1982 and four years ago in 2006. They also finished runners-up in 1970 and 1994 and claimed third place on home soil in 1990.

Honours

- 4 FIFA World Cups (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
- 1 UEFA European Championship (1968)
- 1 Olympic Football Tournament (1936)
What they said
"No team is superior to Italy. I don't want to say that we're better than everyone, but you might say that we're not inferior to any other team," Marcello Lippi, coach.

Italy Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

ITALY
Group F
Manager: Marcello Lippi
Star Player : Gianluigi Buffon,Fabio Cannavaro

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 16
Best result: Champions (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
All-time record: 77 games played, 44 wins, 19 draws, 14 losses
Goals for: 122, Goals against: 69
Biggest victory: 7-1 vs. United States in 1934
Biggest defeat: 4-1 vs. Switzerland in 1954 and 4-1 vs. Brazil in 1970
Top scorer: Paolo Rossi, Roberto Baggio and Christian Vieri (9 goals)
Most appearances: Paolo Maldini (23 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 1934, 1990

LIVE STREAM  ITALY MATCHES : 


June 14, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group F
Italy vs Paraguay
at Cape Town Stadium

June 20, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group F
Italy vs New Zealand
at Mbombela Stadium

June 24, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group F
Slovakia vs Italy
at Ellis Park

Short Team History:
FIFA member since: 1905
Team nickname: Azzurri
All-time caps leader: Fabio Cannavaro (131)
All-time leading scorer: Luigi Riva (35 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (1968)
Legendary Player: The hero of the 1982 World Cup in Spain, Paolo Rossi was the top goal scorer in the tournament with six goals. His hat trick against Brazil in the quarter-finals sent the Azzurri on the way to capturing a third World Cup title. Voted European player of the year in 1982.
Show your support for ITALY
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a ITALY World Cup Soccer Channel !
 

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Gianluigi Buffon Goalkeeper 1.91m 83 kg January 28, 1978
- Morgan De Sanctis Goalkeeper 1.90m 80 kg March 26, 1977
- Federico Marchetti Goalkeeper 1.90m 83 kg February 7, 1983
- Salvatore Sirigu Goalkeeper 1.92m 80 kg January 12, 1987
- Salvatore Bocchetti Defender 1.78m 70 kg November 30, 1986
- Leonardo Bonucci Defender 1.90m 82 kg May 1, 1987
- Fabio Cannavaro Defender 1.76m 75 kg September 13, 1973
- Mattia Cassani Defender 1.84m 75 kg August 26, 1983
- Giorgio Chiellini Defender 1.86m 76 kg August 14, 1984
- Domenico Criscito Defender 1.83m 70 kg December 30, 1986
- Gianluca Zambrotta Defender 1.81m 79 kg February 19, 1977
- Mauro German Camoranesi Midfielder 1.74m 70 kg October 4, 1976
- Andrea Cossu Midfielder 1.71m 63 kg March 5, 1980
- Daniele De Rossi Midfielder 1.84m 83 kg July 24, 1983
- Ivan Gennaro Gattuso Midfielder 1.77m 77 kg January 9, 1978
- Cristian Maggio Midfielder 1.84m 79 kg February 11, 1982
- Claudio Marchisio Midfielder 1.80m 70 kg January 19, 1986
- Riccardo Montolivo Midfielder 1.81m 76 kg January 18, 1985
- Angelo Palombo Midfielder 1.77m 77 kg September 25, 1981
- Andrea Pirlo Midfielder 1.77m 68 kg May 19, 1979
- Marco Borriello Forward 1.80m 73 kg June 18, 1982
- Antonio Di Natale Forward 1.77m 70 kg October 13, 1977
- Alberto Gilardino Forward 1.84m 79 kg July 5, 1982
- Vincenzo Iaquinta Forward 1.89m 79 kg November 21, 1979
- Giampaolo Pazzini Forward 1.80m 77 kg August 2, 1984
- Simone Pepe Forward 1.78m 73 kg August 30, 1983
- Fabio Quagliarella Forward 1.82m 73 kg January 31, 1983
- Giuseppe Rossi Forward 1.73m 72 kg February 1, 1987

Wanna Know more about ITALY ? Read more !!
Appearances at finals:
1934 - Winners
1938 - Winners
1950 - First round
1954 - First round
1962 - First round
1966 - First round
1970 - Runners-up
1974 - First round
1978 - Fourth place
1982 - Winners
1986 - Second round
1990 - Third place
1994 - Runners-up
1998 - Quarter-final
2002 - Second round
2006 - Winners
Overall record at finals: Played 77, Won 44, Drawn 19, Lost 14.

Best performance: Winners in 1934, 1938, 1982 and 2006.

Most appearances at finals: Paolo Maldini (1990, 1994, 1998, 2002) - 23.

Most goals at finals: Roberto Baggio (1990, 1994, 1998), Paolo Rossi (1978, 1982, 1986) - 9.

World Cup high: Emerging from the disgrace of the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal to restore the honour of Italian football by winning the 2006 World Cup.

World Cup low: Following the tragic loss of 12 players following the 1949 Superga air disaster, Italy take the boat to Brazil for World Cup 1950 but, tired and shorn of talent, go out in the first round.

World Cup Legend: Giuseppe 'Peppino' Meazza. The 1930 and 1934 World Cup winner is still considered by many to be the greatest Italian player of all time, as well as the greatest Italian forward of all time.

The story so far: Italy have played more World Cup football than any other team and have won the tournament on four occasions, with only Brazil, on five, winning more. In the pre-war era, the Azzurri were almost untouchable as they won the 1934 trophy on their debut appearance and retained the title in 1938. Post-war, Italy lost their way and were repeatedly knocked out in the first round.

In 1978, a new generation, including legendary striker Paolo Rossi, emerged and, after reaching the semi-finals in Argentina, won the World Cup in Spain in 1982. Ever since, the Azzurri have been a force to be reckoned with, routinely reaching the latter stages, and they won it again in 2006.

Qualification: Republic of Ireland, led by experienced Italian coach Giovanni Trapattoni, proved to be the only real stumbling block in Group Eight. A 1-1 draw with Trapattoni's team at the San Nicola Stadium in Bari in April meant that the Italians could still be caught at the top of the group and, heading into their penultimate qualifier, at Ireland's Croke Park, could be condemend to the play-offs with a defeat. Ireland thought they had done enough when Sean St Ledger gave them a 2-1 lead in the 87th minute, but Alberto Gilardino scored a 90th-minute equaliser to book Italy's place at the World Cup finals.
Qualifying record: P10, W7, D3, L0, F18, A7, Pts24.

Most appearances: Fabio Cannavaro, Gianluca Zambrotta (9).

Top goalscorer: Alberto Gilardino (4).


Team Profile ITALY:
Defending champions Italy will naturally be one of the leading contenders to emerge triumphant at the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ South Africa. The only country along with Brazil to have won the tournament twice in succession, Marcello Lippi's men will be vying to match the performance of their pioneering predecessors in 1934 and 1938.

The road to South Africa
The Azzurri topped Group 8 thanks to their traditional efficiency and pragmatism, even if they failed to set the continent alight along the way. In total, they recorded seven wins and three draws, firing 18 goals and conceding seven.

Italy set the pace in their section right from the off with an opening-day 2-1 victory over Cyprus, and after that result took them to the summit they remained there. It nonetheless took them until their penultimate encounter to seal their passage. Intriguingly, the generations that claimed the world title in 1982 and 2006 also booked their tickets with one match to spare.

Alberto Gilardino finished top scorer for Lippi's team with four strikes to his name, including a stunning hat-trick in less than 15 minutes to down Cyprus 3-2 in their final outing.
The star players
Billed for a number of years now as one of the finest goalkeepers on the planet, at 31 Gianluigi Buffon remains one of the two pillars of the Italian defence. His spectacular reflexes to keep out a Zinedine Zidane header in extra time during the 2006 Final illustrated just why he has an undisputed claim on the gloves.

The other leader at the back is none other than evergreen captain Fabio Cannavaro. Now 36, the 2006 FIFA World Player of the Year continues to contribute his superb positioning sense and the vast experience of his 130 caps.

In midfield, tireless tackler Gennaro Gattuso no longer needs any introduction. The 31-year-old is still the motor, battler and all-round talent at the heart of the Azzurri line-up, the man who never admits defeat and whose hunger for victory inspires all those around him.

The coach
A veritable monarch in the field of coaching, 61-year-old Marcello Lippi is an expert at making changes that yield results, with no fewer than five of the 12 goals Italy registered at the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany coming from substitutes. The man with more than an air of Paul Newman has won everything in his career, which is precisely why he called time on his first stint as Italy trainer on 12 July 2006, having clinched the global crown. After the Azzurri floundered at UEFA EURO 2008, however, he did not need much persuasion to return to the role, and he immediately set about rebuilding the defence, remodelling the midfield and trying out a fresh crop of forwards. He puts little stock in his landmark 31 consecutive international matches without defeat, preferring to amass titles than statistics, and his natural feel for the game means his tactical decisions are never called into doubt. For the qualifiers, he called up a total of 36 players, with Cannavaro and full-back Gianluca Zambrotta the players most used (810 minutes each).


Previous FIFA World Cups
Italy have qualified for 16 of the 18 FIFA World Cup finals, failing to book themselves a place in 1958 and having not opted to take part in the first edition in 1930. They have won the competition on four occasions, in 1934, 1938, 1982 and four years ago in 2006. They also finished runners-up in 1970 and 1994 and claimed third place on home soil in 1990.

Honours

- 4 FIFA World Cups (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006)
- 1 UEFA European Championship (1968)
- 1 Olympic Football Tournament (1936)
What they said
"No team is superior to Italy. I don't want to say that we're better than everyone, but you might say that we're not inferior to any other team," Marcello Lippi, coach.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Honduras Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

HONDURAS
Group H
Manager: Rueda
Star Player : Carlos Pavon


Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 1st round (1982)
All-time record: 3 games played, 0 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss
Goals for: 2, Goals against: 3
Biggest defeat: 1-0 vs. Yugoslavia in 1982
Top scorer: Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing (1 goal)
Most appearances: Several players (3 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  HONDURAS MATCHES :    

June 16, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Honduras vs Chile
at Mbombela Stadium

June 21, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Spain vs Honduras
at Ellis Park

June 25, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Switzerland vs Honduras
at Free State Stadium

Short Team Profile Honduras:
FIFA member since: 1946
Team nickname: Los Catrachos
All-time caps leader: Amado Guevara (130)
All-time leading scorer: Carlos Pavon (56)
Notable achievements: CONCACAF Championship (1981)
Legendary Player: Regarded as one his country's all-time great players, Gilberto Yearwood was a member of the Honduran team that played at the 1982 World Cup in Spain. Yearwood was the only player who earned a living outside of Honduras - the defensive midfielder played for Spanish side Real Valladolid at the time of the World Cup.
Show your support for HONDURAS
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a HONDURAS World Cup Soccer Channel !

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Ricardo Canales Goalkeeper 1.89m 87 kg May 30, 1982
- Donis Escober Goalkeeper 1.80m 78 kg February 3, 1981
- Noel Valladares Goalkeeper 1.79m 80 kg May 3, 1977
- Victor Bernardez Defender 1.84m 82 kg May 24, 1982
- Osman Chavez Defender 1.88m 86 kg July 29, 1984
- Maynor Figueroa Defender 1.80m 85 kg May 2, 1983
- Oscar Boniek García Defender 1.75m 72 kg September 4, 1984
- Emilio Izaguirre Defender 1.77m 73 kg May 10, 1986
- Sergio Mendoza Defender 1.84m 80 kg May 23, 1981
- Johnny Palacios Defender 1.82m 77 kg December 20, 1986
- Mauricio Sabillon Defender 1.80m 82 kg November 11, 1978
- Edgar Alvarez Midfielder 1.73m 75 kg January 9, 1980
- Roger Espinoza Midfielder 1.78m 74 kg October 25, 1986
- Amado Guevara Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg May 2, 1976
- Julio Leon Midfielder 1.74m 70 kg September 13, 1979
- Ramon Nunez Midfielder 1.69m 63 kg November 14, 1985
- Wilson Palacios Midfielder 1.78m 71 kg July 29, 1984
- Hendry Thomas Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg February 23, 1985
- Danilo Turcios Midfielder 1.64m 59 kg May 8, 1978
- Walter Martinez Forward 1.65m 67 kg March 28, 1982
- Carlos Pavon Forward 1.78m 76 kg October 30, 1973
- David Suazo Forward 1.82m 75 kg November 5, 1979
- Georgie Welcome Forward 1.78m 76 kg March 9, 1985
Want to Know More About Honduras ? Read More !!
Appearances at finals:
1982 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 3, Won 0, Drew 2, Lost 1.

Best performance: The first round of the 1982 World Cup in Spain.

Most appearances at finals: Gilberto Yearwood (1982) - 3.

Most goals at finals: Hector Zelaya, Antonio Laing (1982) - 1.

World Cup legend: Hector Ramon, nicknamed 'Eagle Chest', left his mark by scoring the country's first goal in a World Cup in 1982.

World Cup high: Drawing 1-1 with hosts Spain in the first round of the 1982 World Cup.

World Cup low: Defeat and subsequent elimination against Yugoslavia in the first round in 1982.

The story so far: After only one appearance in the World Cup, Honduras, wrapped in political turmoil during the past few months, are dreaming of a brighter future. Their sole appearance came in 1982 and they put up a creditable showing. They drew with hosts Spain and Northern Ireland, but a defeat to Yugoslavia in the final game cost Honduras a place in the second group stage.

However, the country's World Cup history will always be associated with a conflict that broke out with El Salvador in 1969. Relations had been tense due to immigration between the two neighbouring nations before rioting broke out during and after a qualifying game for Mexico 70 in San Salvador. The Salvadoran Army launched an offensive in Honduras and fighting raged on until a ceasefire was called six days later. Despite the problems running far deeper than sport, this has been labelled the 'Football War'.

Qualification: Honduras fought it out with Costa Rica to the last breath. Honduras had lost their second-to-last game against USA in the Honduran capital, and thus needed to defeat El Salvador in the final match and then hope that Costa Rica failed to earn three points on American soil.

Costa Rica had looked poised for victory after Brian Ruiz scored two goals in the first half, but the Ticos crumbled in the second half, and the game played in Washington ended in a draw, which, coupled with a 1-0 win against El Salvador, allowed Honduras to return to the World Cup by virtue of their better goal difference.

Qualifying record: GP10, W5, D1, L4, F17, A11, Pts16.

Most appearances: Noel Valladares (18).

Top goalscorer: Carlos Pavon (7).


TEAM PROFILE HONDURAS:

Honduras reached the finals of the FIFA World Cup™ for only the second time in dramatic fashion, an equaliser in the dying seconds of the USA's clash with Costa Rica triggering frantic celebrations from Los Catrachos' fans thousands of miles further south. Yet despite having squeezed into the finals, coach Reinaldo Rueda's talented team will not be going to South Africa just to make up the numbers.

The road to South Africa
Rueda's men dug deep from the off to oust Puerto Rico 6-2 on aggregate to progress to the penultimate round of North, Central America and Caribbean Zone qualifying. Once there they successfully negotiated a tricky section to qualifying for the final six-team Hexagonal round ahead of Mexico, Jamaica and Canada.

The decisive final phase could barely have got off to a worse start, however, with La Bicolor sinking to a 2-0 reverse away to fierce rivals Costa Rica. A 1-1 draw in Trinidad and Tobago and a 3-1 home win over mighty Mexico got their bid back on track, only for Honduras to suffer a narrow 2-1 defeat in the United States. A run which included wins over El Salvador (1-0), Costa Rica (4-0) and Trinidad and Tobago (4-1) and a 1-0 reverse on Mexican soil then gave Los Catrachos the opportunity to clinch their passage to South Africa in the penultimate round of qualifying against the USA.

Wasteful finishing and a resilient Stars and Stripes display contributed to a 3-2 reverse in San Pedro Sula, which meant that Honduras now had to win their final match in El Salvador and hope for a favourable result between United States-Costa Rica. And despite having clinched a 1-0 win in San Salvador, the Hondurans would have missed out on direct qualification had it not been for that last-gasp American equaliser.


The star players
Over and above the country's big-name stars plying their trade in the European game, Los Catrachos' key man in qualifying was evergreen 36-year-old forward Carlos Pavon. In typically clinical fashion, it was the well-travelled goalgetter who fired his side's winner in El Salvador to ensure their place at the African showpiece. Aided and abetted by the hugely talented David Suazo, Wilson Palacios, Julio Leon and Amado Guevara, Pavon would love nothing more than to crown his glorious international career with a goal-laden showing on the biggest stage of all.

The coach
For Honduras, qualifying phases for the FIFA World Cup qualifying had become something of a recurring nightmare. Always among the pre-event favourites, La Bicolor invariably contrived to fall short at key moments - that is until the arrival of 42-year-old Colombian strategist Rueda.

After taking the job in early 2007, his professionalism struck a chord with the powers that be in Honduran football, who gave him the time to work denied many of his predecessors. Rueda repaid that faith by guiding his adopted country to South Africa 2010 on the back of sparkling attacking football and a solid backline.

Previous FIFA World Cups
• Honduras return to global football's top table after 28 years away. Their only previous appearance at the finals came at Spain 1982.
• Under the watchful eye of then coach Jose de la Paz, Los Catrachos surprised the world by drawing 1-1 with the hosts and then with Northern Ireland, before exiting the tournament after conceding a late goal in a 1-0 defeat by the former Yugoslavia.
• On the scoresheet for Honduras at that FIFA World Cup were Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing, against Spain and Northern Ireland respectively.

Records
• Prior to the 3-2 defeat by the United States in San Pedro Sula, Honduras had racked up an eight-game unbeaten home run in South Africa 2010 qualifying.
• Honduras conceded just 11 goals in the final Hexagonal, the best defensive record in the section.
• Veteran sharpshooter Pavon was Los Catrachos' most prolific scorer in qualifying, helping himself to an impressive seven goals in nine appearances.

What they said
"Nobody could believe it. Our game ended and we were all dejected, then we saw the row the fans were making and we realised that the USA had equalised against Costa Rica. We're so happy to be going to South Africa and we're not going to let down all those people who believed in us." Honduras striker Carlos Pavon after his team booked their passage to the 2010 showpiece.

Honduras Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

HONDURAS
Group H
Manager: Rueda
Star Player : Carlos Pavon


Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 1st round (1982)
All-time record: 3 games played, 0 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss
Goals for: 2, Goals against: 3
Biggest defeat: 1-0 vs. Yugoslavia in 1982
Top scorer: Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing (1 goal)
Most appearances: Several players (3 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  HONDURAS MATCHES :    

June 16, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Honduras vs Chile
at Mbombela Stadium

June 21, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Spain vs Honduras
at Ellis Park

June 25, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Switzerland vs Honduras
at Free State Stadium

Short Team Profile Honduras:
FIFA member since: 1946
Team nickname: Los Catrachos
All-time caps leader: Amado Guevara (130)
All-time leading scorer: Carlos Pavon (56)
Notable achievements: CONCACAF Championship (1981)
Legendary Player: Regarded as one his country's all-time great players, Gilberto Yearwood was a member of the Honduran team that played at the 1982 World Cup in Spain. Yearwood was the only player who earned a living outside of Honduras - the defensive midfielder played for Spanish side Real Valladolid at the time of the World Cup.
Show your support for HONDURAS
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
Buy
a HONDURAS World Cup Soccer Channel !

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Ricardo Canales Goalkeeper 1.89m 87 kg May 30, 1982
- Donis Escober Goalkeeper 1.80m 78 kg February 3, 1981
- Noel Valladares Goalkeeper 1.79m 80 kg May 3, 1977
- Victor Bernardez Defender 1.84m 82 kg May 24, 1982
- Osman Chavez Defender 1.88m 86 kg July 29, 1984
- Maynor Figueroa Defender 1.80m 85 kg May 2, 1983
- Oscar Boniek García Defender 1.75m 72 kg September 4, 1984
- Emilio Izaguirre Defender 1.77m 73 kg May 10, 1986
- Sergio Mendoza Defender 1.84m 80 kg May 23, 1981
- Johnny Palacios Defender 1.82m 77 kg December 20, 1986
- Mauricio Sabillon Defender 1.80m 82 kg November 11, 1978
- Edgar Alvarez Midfielder 1.73m 75 kg January 9, 1980
- Roger Espinoza Midfielder 1.78m 74 kg October 25, 1986
- Amado Guevara Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg May 2, 1976
- Julio Leon Midfielder 1.74m 70 kg September 13, 1979
- Ramon Nunez Midfielder 1.69m 63 kg November 14, 1985
- Wilson Palacios Midfielder 1.78m 71 kg July 29, 1984
- Hendry Thomas Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg February 23, 1985
- Danilo Turcios Midfielder 1.64m 59 kg May 8, 1978
- Walter Martinez Forward 1.65m 67 kg March 28, 1982
- Carlos Pavon Forward 1.78m 76 kg October 30, 1973
- David Suazo Forward 1.82m 75 kg November 5, 1979
- Georgie Welcome Forward 1.78m 76 kg March 9, 1985
Want to Know More About Honduras ? Read More !!
Appearances at finals:
1982 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 3, Won 0, Drew 2, Lost 1.

Best performance: The first round of the 1982 World Cup in Spain.

Most appearances at finals: Gilberto Yearwood (1982) - 3.

Most goals at finals: Hector Zelaya, Antonio Laing (1982) - 1.

World Cup legend: Hector Ramon, nicknamed 'Eagle Chest', left his mark by scoring the country's first goal in a World Cup in 1982.

World Cup high: Drawing 1-1 with hosts Spain in the first round of the 1982 World Cup.

World Cup low: Defeat and subsequent elimination against Yugoslavia in the first round in 1982.

The story so far: After only one appearance in the World Cup, Honduras, wrapped in political turmoil during the past few months, are dreaming of a brighter future. Their sole appearance came in 1982 and they put up a creditable showing. They drew with hosts Spain and Northern Ireland, but a defeat to Yugoslavia in the final game cost Honduras a place in the second group stage.

However, the country's World Cup history will always be associated with a conflict that broke out with El Salvador in 1969. Relations had been tense due to immigration between the two neighbouring nations before rioting broke out during and after a qualifying game for Mexico 70 in San Salvador. The Salvadoran Army launched an offensive in Honduras and fighting raged on until a ceasefire was called six days later. Despite the problems running far deeper than sport, this has been labelled the 'Football War'.

Qualification: Honduras fought it out with Costa Rica to the last breath. Honduras had lost their second-to-last game against USA in the Honduran capital, and thus needed to defeat El Salvador in the final match and then hope that Costa Rica failed to earn three points on American soil.

Costa Rica had looked poised for victory after Brian Ruiz scored two goals in the first half, but the Ticos crumbled in the second half, and the game played in Washington ended in a draw, which, coupled with a 1-0 win against El Salvador, allowed Honduras to return to the World Cup by virtue of their better goal difference.

Qualifying record: GP10, W5, D1, L4, F17, A11, Pts16.

Most appearances: Noel Valladares (18).

Top goalscorer: Carlos Pavon (7).


TEAM PROFILE HONDURAS:

Honduras reached the finals of the FIFA World Cup™ for only the second time in dramatic fashion, an equaliser in the dying seconds of the USA's clash with Costa Rica triggering frantic celebrations from Los Catrachos' fans thousands of miles further south. Yet despite having squeezed into the finals, coach Reinaldo Rueda's talented team will not be going to South Africa just to make up the numbers.

The road to South Africa
Rueda's men dug deep from the off to oust Puerto Rico 6-2 on aggregate to progress to the penultimate round of North, Central America and Caribbean Zone qualifying. Once there they successfully negotiated a tricky section to qualifying for the final six-team Hexagonal round ahead of Mexico, Jamaica and Canada.

The decisive final phase could barely have got off to a worse start, however, with La Bicolor sinking to a 2-0 reverse away to fierce rivals Costa Rica. A 1-1 draw in Trinidad and Tobago and a 3-1 home win over mighty Mexico got their bid back on track, only for Honduras to suffer a narrow 2-1 defeat in the United States. A run which included wins over El Salvador (1-0), Costa Rica (4-0) and Trinidad and Tobago (4-1) and a 1-0 reverse on Mexican soil then gave Los Catrachos the opportunity to clinch their passage to South Africa in the penultimate round of qualifying against the USA.

Wasteful finishing and a resilient Stars and Stripes display contributed to a 3-2 reverse in San Pedro Sula, which meant that Honduras now had to win their final match in El Salvador and hope for a favourable result between United States-Costa Rica. And despite having clinched a 1-0 win in San Salvador, the Hondurans would have missed out on direct qualification had it not been for that last-gasp American equaliser.


The star players
Over and above the country's big-name stars plying their trade in the European game, Los Catrachos' key man in qualifying was evergreen 36-year-old forward Carlos Pavon. In typically clinical fashion, it was the well-travelled goalgetter who fired his side's winner in El Salvador to ensure their place at the African showpiece. Aided and abetted by the hugely talented David Suazo, Wilson Palacios, Julio Leon and Amado Guevara, Pavon would love nothing more than to crown his glorious international career with a goal-laden showing on the biggest stage of all.

The coach
For Honduras, qualifying phases for the FIFA World Cup qualifying had become something of a recurring nightmare. Always among the pre-event favourites, La Bicolor invariably contrived to fall short at key moments - that is until the arrival of 42-year-old Colombian strategist Rueda.

After taking the job in early 2007, his professionalism struck a chord with the powers that be in Honduran football, who gave him the time to work denied many of his predecessors. Rueda repaid that faith by guiding his adopted country to South Africa 2010 on the back of sparkling attacking football and a solid backline.

Previous FIFA World Cups
• Honduras return to global football's top table after 28 years away. Their only previous appearance at the finals came at Spain 1982.
• Under the watchful eye of then coach Jose de la Paz, Los Catrachos surprised the world by drawing 1-1 with the hosts and then with Northern Ireland, before exiting the tournament after conceding a late goal in a 1-0 defeat by the former Yugoslavia.
• On the scoresheet for Honduras at that FIFA World Cup were Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing, against Spain and Northern Ireland respectively.

Records
• Prior to the 3-2 defeat by the United States in San Pedro Sula, Honduras had racked up an eight-game unbeaten home run in South Africa 2010 qualifying.
• Honduras conceded just 11 goals in the final Hexagonal, the best defensive record in the section.
• Veteran sharpshooter Pavon was Los Catrachos' most prolific scorer in qualifying, helping himself to an impressive seven goals in nine appearances.

What they said
"Nobody could believe it. Our game ended and we were all dejected, then we saw the row the fans were making and we realised that the USA had equalised against Costa Rica. We're so happy to be going to South Africa and we're not going to let down all those people who believed in us." Honduras striker Carlos Pavon after his team booked their passage to the 2010 showpiece.

Greece Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

GREECE
Group B
Manager: Otto Rehhagel
Star Player : Sotirios Kyrgiakos

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 1st round (1994)
All-time record: 3 games played, 0 wins, 0 draws, 3 losses
Goals for: 0, Goals against: 10
Biggest defeat: 4-0 vs. Argentina and Bulgaria in 1994
Most appearances: Several players (3 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  GREECE MATCHES :   

June 12, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group B
South Korea vs Greece
at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium

June 17, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group B
Greece vs Nigeria
at Free State Stadium

June 22, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group B
Greece vs Argentina
at Peter Mokaba Stadium

Short History of GREECE:
FIFA member since: 1927
Team nickname: Ethniki
All-time caps leader: Theodoros Zagorakis (120)
All-time leading scorer: Nikos Anastopoulos (29 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (2004)
Legendary Player: Anthimos Kapsis was a Panathinaikos legend who led the Athens side to the 1971 European Cup final, a 2-0 loss to Ajax.
Show your support for GREECE
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
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A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Konstantinos Chalkias Goalkeeper 1.98m 82 kg May 30, 1974
- Michalis Sifakis Goalkeeper 1.85m 77 kg December 10, 1981
- Alexandros Tzorvas Goalkeeper 1.90m 79 kg August 12, 1982
- Giorgos Galitsios Defender 1.83m 76 kg July 6, 1986
- Sotirios Kyrgiakos Defender 1.93m 81 kg July 23, 1979
- Stilianos Malezas Defender 1.92m 81 kg March 11, 1985
- Kostas Manolas Defender 1.79m 67 kg June 14, 1991
- Stergos Marinos Defender 1.78m 70 kg September 17, 1987
- Vaggelis Moras Defender 1.93m 78 kg August 26, 1981
- Avraam Papadopoulos Defender 1.86m 79 kg December 3, 1984
- Sokratis Papastrathopoulos Defender 1.83m 82 kg June 9, 1988
- Giourkas Seitaridis Defender 1.88m 76 kg June 4, 1981
- Nikos Spyropoulos Defender 1.71m 66 kg October 10, 1983
- Vassilis Torosidis Defender 1.88m 80 kg June 10, 1985
- Giorgios Tzavellas Defender 1.83m 80 kg November 26, 1987
- Loukas Vintra Defender 1.84m 76 kg February 5, 1981
- Lazaros Christodoulopoulos Midfielder 1.82m 76 kg December 19, 1986
- Giorgias Karagounis Midfielder 1.75m 69 kg March 6, 1977
- Kostas Katsouranis Midfielder 1.83m 84 kg June 21, 1979
- Grigoris Makos Midfielder 1.73m 74 kg January 18, 1987
- Sotirios Ninis Midfielder 1.73m 69 kg April 3, 1990
- Christos Patsatzoglou Midfielder 1.83m 73 kg March 19, 1979
- Athanassios Prittas Midfielder 1.83m 78 kg January 9, 1979
- Alexandros Tziolis Midfielder 1.89m 84 kg February 13, 1985
- Angelos Charisteas Forward 1.90m 82 kg February 9, 1980
- Theofanis Gekas Forward 1.79m 76 kg May 23, 1980
- Pantelis Kapetanos Forward 1.90m 82 kg June 8, 1983
- Konstantinos Mitroglou Forward 1.88m 86 kg March 12, 1988
- Dimitrios Salpingidis Forward 1.77m 72 kg August 18, 1981
- Georgios Samaras Forward 1.93m 86 kg February 21, 1985
Want To Know More About GREECE ? Continue Reading ...
Appearances at finals:
1994 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 3, Won 0, Drawn 0, Lost 3.

Best performance: Reaching the group stage in 1994.

Most appearances at finals: Ioannis Kalitzakis (1994), Savvas Kofidis (1994), Nikos Nioplias (1994), Nikos Machlas (1994) - 3.

Most goals at finals: Greece have yet to score a World Cup goal.

World Cup high: Beating Ukraine away in their play-off second leg to seal their place at the 2010 World Cup.

World Cup low: Failing to score a single goal during their solitary appearance at the finals in 1994.

World Cup legend: None of the 1994 squad did anything to earn legendary status, but Theofanis Gekas contributed half their goals in qualification for South Africa and topped the UEFA scoring charts.

The story so far: Greece qualified for the 1994 World Cup by topping their qualification group ahead of Russia, and much was expected at their first ever finals. However, their debut ended in unmitigated disaster after they lost 4-0 to Argentina, 4-0 to Bulgaria and 2-0 to Nigeria, exiting without a point or even a goal scored.

Coach Alketas Panagoulias opted to stick with the same players who booked Greece's place at the World Cup rather than search out new talent, and he gave every member of the squad, including the three goalkeepers, a game at the tournament.

Qualification: Despite the exploits of star striker Theofanis Gekas, the top scorer in UEFA qualifying with 10 goals, Greece made hard work of a modest World Cup 2010 qualification group that included Israel, Switzerland, Moldova, Latvia and Luxembourg.

After losing home and away to group winners Switzerland, the Greeks were consigned to a play-off with Group Six runners-up Ukraine. Manager Otto Rehhagel stuck to the negative tactics that won Euro 2004 and, following a 0-0 draw in Athens, it looked like the Greeks were going out. But in Donetsk, Dimitrios Salpigidis scored a goal on the counter-attack and that was enough to send Greece to their second World Cup finals.

Qualifying record: P10, W6, D2, L2, F20, A10, Pts20.

Most appearances: Theofanis Gekas and Sotirios Kyrgiakos (11).

Top goalscorer: Theofanis Gekas (10).

TEAM PROFILE GREECE

After seemingly coming from nowhere to triumph at UEFA EURO 2004, Greece continue to defy the odds under wily coach Otto Rehhagel and have clinched qualification for only their second FIFA World Cup™ finals.

Though dismissing Rehhagel would have amounted to high treason, given the regal status ‘King Otto’ has enjoyed since victory on Portuguese soil, failure to reach Germany 2006 and a limp group-stage exit at EURO 2008 had ratcheted up the pressure on the German supremo. The Greek FA kept the faith, however, and were rewarded by qualification for their first global finals since USA 1994.

The road to South Africa
Greece kicked off South Africa 2010 qualifying in impressive fashion, picking up victories over Luxembourg, Latvia and Moldova, scoring eight times and conceding none in the process.

The 2004 European champions subsequently suffered their first loss in Group 2 when going down 2-1 at home to Switzerland, their clearest rivals for an automatic qualifying berth. After bouncing back with four points from their double-header against Israel, drawing 1-1 away and winning 2-1 at home, the Helvetians then undid the Greeks once more – this time triumphing 2-0 on Swiss soil.

Rehhagel’s troops then allowed Switzerland to extend their advantage in the standings by only drawing 1-1 in Moldova, a result that also brought Latvia back into the hunt for second. A thumping 5-2 victory over the latter in Greece’s penultimate group match virtually clinched a play-off spot, however, which was sealed by the final day 2-1 win against Luxembourg.

The European Zone play-off draw pitted captain Georgios Karagounis and Co against Ukraine, opponents who had taken four points from the Greeks in Group 2 of qualifying for Germany 2006. This time around, after a 0-0 draw in Athens, Greece grabbed a 1-0 second-leg success in Donetsk, the decisive goal coming from Dimitrios Salpingidis.

The star players
There will be no shortage of experience for the Greeks to call on come South Africa 2010. Chief among their veteran performers are defender Sotirios Kyrgiakos, who played more qualifying minutes than any other squad member, and former Inter Milan and Benfica midfielder Karagounis. Nor are they slouches going forward, boasting as they do ten-goal Theofanis Gekas - the top scorer in European Zone qualifying - and the physical presence of four-goal Angelos Charisteas, scorer of the winner in the final at EURO 2004.

The coach
South Africa 2010 will be coach Rehhagel’s first FIFA World Cup finals, where he is set to be the oldest strategist on show. After a glittering career in his homeland, the German boss has earned worldwide recognition for his achievements with the Greek national team since taking over in 2001.

With Greece having only reached one FIFA World Cup and one European Championship prior to his arrival, within three years of taking the post Rehhagel had guided the Greeks to EURO glory, before going on to clinch qualification for both EURO 2008 and South Africa 2010.


Records
• Greece will be determined to improve on their showing at USA 1994, where they sank to group-stage defeats against Argentina (4-0), Bulgaria (4-0) and Nigeria (2-0) and headed for home at the first hurdle.

• That competition on United States’ soil was the Greeks’ first and only previous appearance at the finals of a FIFA World Cup.

What they said
“The players have been rewarded for their incredible passion and competitive spirit. We said that before achieving success you need to have the Gods on your side.” Otto Rehhagel, Greece coach.