#COPADASCOPAS: Imprensa e turistas estrangeiros admiram-se do Brasil e já citam esta como a melhor copa de toda a história da FIFA

BRAZIL 2014: FOUR DAYS IN, AND ALREADY ON COURSE TO BE THE BEST WORLD CUP EVER

"Foram apenas quatro dias de Copa do Mundo, mas as pessoas já estão sugerindo que a copa 2014 no Brasil está a caminho de ser um dos maiores torneios de todos os tempos." explica colunista do Yahoo! Sport – UK & Ireland O site explica que apesar de alguns ainda manter o titulo de melhor copa com o México em 1970, EUA 1994 ou França em 1998, O Brasil tem potencial para eclipsar aos montes sobre eles.

O artigo mostra opiniões de internautas, torcedores e personalidades do esporte, além de mostrar dados e estatísticas para provar que essa vai ser a #COPADASCOPAS, veja o artigo na integra, em inglês.

Premature? Undoubtedly. Unjustified? Absolutely not. Here we present six reasons why it’s right to believe the hype.

1. GOALS, GOALS, GOALS

The goalfest in Brazil has come as a welcome change after a horribly sterile group stage in South Africa four years ago, which was mostly notable for France going on strike and defending champions Italy failing to win a game.

In fact, after eight games the 2014 World Cup had more than double the number of goals as its predecessor at the same stage.


Brazil 2014 is enjoying a remarkable three and a half goals per game – a figure which has not been bettered since 1958 in Sweden, a tournament when French striker Just Fontaine managed to plunder 13 goals, seven more than Pele.


This makes Brazil 2014 the most prolific tournament of the modern era, averaging as much as goal a game more than three of the past six finals. Italia 1990 remains the nadir with a paltry 2.21 goals per game.

2. SHOCK RESULTS


Has there ever been a better group stage game than Netherlands’ 5-1 rout of Spain? The margin of victory should not detract from the fact this was an all-time classic, filled with wonderful moments and one of the most iconic World Cup goals in Robin van Persie’s diving lob header. The pure thrill of watching Arjen Robben charge through the defending champions made this a stunning night of football.

And what about upsetting the odds? On Saturday night we saw Costa Rica engineer a massive shock in England’s group as they defeated Uruguay 3-1 with another thrilling performance. Joel Campbell was the star of the show in a result which blew open one of the toughest groups and sent seismic waves through an already pulsating tournament.

A reminder: this tournament is only four days old. And the first day only had one game.

3. NO DRAWS, AND TOPSY-TURVY GAMES


Not a single game has ended in a draw yet in Brazil; South Africa 2010 started with one. A cultural swing towards attacking tactics – and sublime counter-attacking – has made this an unforgettable start with teams looking to take all three points from the off rather than try and hold onto one.

As Rio Report said in its look at the Argentina match on Sunday night, we’re not sure if teams can’t, or won’t, defend. But we’re not complaining.

It’s not just the attacking football and number of goals, though – it’s the fact that the matches are exciting, and swinging to and fro with regularity as well.

4. THE BIG NAMES ARE PERFORMING


Just look at the top scorers’ list after three days: Robben, Van Persie and Neymar have two apiece and Alexis Sanchez has come to the party too with a goal and an assist from Chile. Andrea Pirlo put in another passing masterclass against England and Mario Balotelli took the man of the match award.

Even the famously World Cup-shy Lionel Messi is getting in on the act: he hadn’t scored at the World Cup since a late scoreline-enhancer in a 6-0 dead rubber group stage win back in 2006, but he put that right against Bosnia on Sunday with a goal so good that you’d have sworn he was wearing a Barcelona shirt to pull it off.

To a man, the big players are stepping up to the stage without fear. No one has personified this trait more than Neymar, who responded to all the pressure on his shoulders with a brace in Brazil’s 3-1 win over Croatia on the opening day.

5. IT’S IN BRAZIL


Forget the playing fields of public schools in England, Brazil is the real spiritual home of football. Against a backdrop of Rio’s Sugarloaf Mountain and the Amazon rainforest, this tournament has bounced along to the stereotypical Samba beat which is said to infect this glorious, gigantic country. If you can’t get up for a World Cup in Brazil – whether manager, player or fan – you need your pulse checking.

6. BECAUSE EVERYONE IS SAYING IT IS


It’s been decided. Do one Mexico 1970.

A copa das copas é nossa!!!!!!

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