£20 total FREE BET

1/4

Uruguay - Ghana
Argentina - Germany
Netherlands - Brazil
Paraguay - Spain

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1/8

Uruguay - Korea Republic
Argentina - Mexico
USA - Ghana
Germany - England
Netherlands - Slovakia
Paraguay - Japan
Brazil - Chile
Spain - Portugal

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South Africa - Mexico
Uruguay - France
South Africa - Uruguay
France - Mexico
France - South Africa
Mexico - Uruguay
Argentina - Nigeria
Korea Republic - Greece
Greece - Nigeria
Nigeria - Korea Republic
Greece - Argentina
Argentina - Korea Republic
England - USA
Algeria - Slovenia
Slovenia - USA
Algeria - England
Slovenia - England
USA - Algeria
Germany - Australia
Serbia - Ghana
Germany - Serbia
Australia - Ghana
Ghana - Germany
Australia - Serbia
Netherlands - Denmark
Japan - Cameroon
Netherlands - Japan
Cameroon - Denmark
Denmark - Japan
Cameroon - Netherlands
Italy - Paraguay
New Zealand - Slovakia
Slovakia - Paraguay
Italy - New Zealand
Slovakia - Italy
Paraguay - New Zealand
Côte d'Ivoire - Portugal
Brazil - Korea DPR
Brazil - Côte d'Ivoire
Portugal - Korea DPR
Portugal - Brazil
Korea DPR - Côte d'Ivoire
Honduras - Chile
Spain - Switzerland
Chile - Switzerland
Spain - Honduras
Chile - Spain
Switzerland - Honduras
Portugal
Korea DPR
Portugal - Nordkorea Portugal - Korea DPR Portugal - Corea del Norte Portugal - Corée du Nord Portogallo - Corea del Nord Portugalia - Korea Północna Portugal - Coreia do Norte Португалия - Северная Корея
60

Portugal

Portugal - National football team

The Portuguese national football team is governed by the Portuguese Football Federation, finishing 4th at the 2006 FIFA World Cup. The first appearance in the 1966 FIFA World Cup saw them reach the semifinal, losing 2–1 at Wembley to the eventual world champions England. Portugal finished in third place and Eusébio was considered the best player of the tournament. The next two times Portugal qualified for the World Cup were 1986 and 2002, with Portugal going out in the first round both times. In the 1986 tournament, players went on strike over prize-money and refused to train between their first and second games.

Portugal - Video

Portugal - News

Portugal - National football team

In 2003, the Portuguese Football Federation decided to hire Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Brazilian who had led the Brazil national football team to win the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Scolari led Portugal to the final of UEFA Euro 2004, where they lost to the Greek national team, and to their second World Cup semi-final in the 2006 World Cup. Scolari left after the Euro 2008 championships to manage Chelsea.Ex Man utd assistant coach Carlos Queiroz was appointed the new manager of Portugal in 2008, with whom Portugal qualified for the 2010 World Cup. Portugal participated in the qualifying stages with new manager Carlos Queiroz (who had already coached the team in older times), for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, which is due to take place in South Africa. The team had a qualifying campaign that almost turned disastrous and just sneaked into second place by a single point over Sweden, a group where Denmark finished first, one point ahead from Portugal. Portugal was drawn to play against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the european zone play-offs. With two wins (1–0 in the first leg, in Lisbon; and 1–0, in Zenica), the team gained its right to participate in the World Cup. Having qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the Selecção das Quinas had its most successful decade to date, having qualified for all the editions of the World Cup and Euro Cup (Euro 2000, World Cup 2002, Euro 2004, World Cup 2006, Euro 2008, and World Cup 2010), along with Spain, Italy, Germany, and France, the only other four teams to have done so. In the Final Draw, on 4th December 2009, Portugal was drawn in one of the toughest groups, the so called Group of Death where the Selecção das Quinas will be facing 5-time champions Brazil, Africa's top contenders Côte d'Ivoire and 1966 opponents North Korea. The Group of Death will be one of the most exciting groups to see in the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Portugal will first face Côte d'Ivoire on 15 June 2010 at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Port Elizabeth, followed by North Korea on 21 June 2010 at the Cape Town Stadium in Cape Town and the last group match will be played against Brazil on 25 June 2010 at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban..
24

Korea DPR

Korea DPR - National football team

The national football team of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (recognized as Korea DPR by FIFA) is the national team of North Korea and is managed by the DPR Korea Football Association. The team has qualified for the FIFA World Cup twice; in 1966, where they reached the quarter-finals, and for the forthcoming competition in 2010. Korea DPR have qualified for the AFC Asian Cup three times; in 1980, when they finished fourth, in 1992 and in 2011. The current team is composed of both native North Koreans and Zainichi Koreans born in Japan. Korea DPR had to enter the 2010 World Cup qualification from the first round, where they faced Mongolia.

Korea DPR - Video

Korea DPR - News

Korea DPR - National football team

On October 21, 2007 they beat the Mongolian opponents 4–1 in Ulan-Bator, with Pak Chol-Min scoring one goal and Jong Chol-Min adding a hat trick. One week later, on the 28th of October, the teams met again, this time at the Kim Il-Sung Stadium in Pyongyang. Korea DPR won the game with a score of 5–1. Pak Chol-Min opened the score after 3 minutes, Kim Kuk-Jin added another goal in the 10th minute. Jong Chol-Min, again Pak Chol-Min and Jong Kwang-Ik secured a 9–2 aggregate win for the DPRK to advance to the third round. At the third round, DPRK opened their campaign against Jordan in Amman. The visitors won the game 1–0 with Hong Yong-Jo scoring the winner after 44 minutes. The following matches, DPRK won against Jordan and Turkmenistan at home and tied Korea Republic both home and away to advance to the final round. The two Koreas faced each other in a 2010 FIFA World Cup 3rd round Asian Qualification match. It was originally planned to be held in Pyongyang on March 26, 2008. The North Korean government decided that the South's national anthem would not be played, nor would the DPRK allow the South's national flag to be displayed at the game. South Korea was outraged by the decision. After three failed negotiation attempts by the South Korean football association, South Korea turned to FIFA for the official ruling. After FIFA intervention, the match was played in Shanghai, China, on March 26, 2008, and it ended 0-0.[3] In the final round of qualifying, DPRK finished in second place in Group B behind leaders Korea Republic ahead of Iran, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. In their first match, DPRK scored a valuable away win against the UAE. Against the run of play, DPRK scored two goals with Choe Kum Chol scoring in the 72nd minute and An Chol Hyok clinching the win in the 80th minute. Basheer Saeed scored a consolation goal for the hosts in the 85th minute.[4] The second match was the third encounter in qualifying against Korea Republic at the neutral venue of Shanghai which ended in a 1–1 draw, the third time in a row that the match ended in a draw between the two teams. Hong Yong-Jo converted a penalty to put the North Koreans ahead in the 63rd minute, but Ki Sung-Yeung equalised for the visitors five minutes later. [5][6] DPRK's unbeaten record in the final qualification stage came to an end with an away loss to Iran. Mehdi Mahdavikia headed the hosts into a ninth-minute lead when he picked up a pass from Mojtaba Jabbari from outside the penalty area. Javad Nekonam doubled up in the 65th minute when he latched onto team-mate Masoud Shojaei's pass, this time from inside the penalty area. Korea DPR's consolation goal came from a 70th-minute header from Jong Tae-Se.[7] In their fourth match against Saudi Arabia, Korea DPR underlined their status as Asia's dark horses by upsetting Saudi Arabia. Mun In-Guk scored the only goal in the first half, much to the delight of the 70,000-plus home crowd.[8] The result moved the North Koreans up to second in Pool B with seven points from four matches. North Korea's next win was against UAE which made them leaders of the group with 10 points. On April 1, the stalemate between the two Koreas was broken when DPRK lost 1-0 to their southern neighbours in a match held in Seoul.[9] The North Korean coach later suggested during a news conference that the South Koreans poisoned their squad.[10] A draw against Iran in Pyongyang complicated matters for Korea DPR who had 11 points from 7 matches and one game left to play.[11] A win against Saudi Arabia would earn them direct qualification, as would a tie (due to goal differential versus Saudi Arabia) so long as Iran drew or lost their last match. A loss would have meant they were at the mercy of the result in the Iran-South Korea game. On 17 June 2009, North Korea qualified[12] for the 2010 World Cup by securing a draw with Saudi Arabia in Riyadh.[13] North Korea and Saudi Arabia finished level with 12 points each, but the North Koreans had a superior goal difference. On 4 December 2009, the World Cup 2010 draw put Korea DPR in a group with Brazil, Ivory Coast and Portugal.[14] This is North Korea's second World Cup finals, the first since 1966 where they reached the quarter-finals..