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Portugal have the edge

Lisbon -
However things turn out in this most unexpected of European
Championship finals on Sunday (Monday morning in Brunei), the night
will end with at least a couple of pieces of history being made.
Regardless of whether it is in
Portugal or Greece that a night of raucous celebration is getting
underway, deep in the bowels of the beautifully reconstructed Stadium
of Light the name of a new country will be inscribed on the Henri
Delaunay trophy.
The Soviet Union (1960), Spain
(1964), Italy (1968), West Germany (1972, 1980, 1996 as Germany),
Czechoslovakia (1976), France (1984, 2000), the Netherlands (1988) and
Denmark (1992) are already there.
Whether it is the hosts or Greece who
join them will depend on the work of two men who, beyond the
occasional holiday, had virtually no contact with the two countries
when the last Euro finals were being played four years ago.
Greece's German coach Otto Rehhagel
and Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Brazilian in charge of Portugal, are
engaged in their own private battle to become the first foreigner to
mastermind the capture of Europe's biggest prize.
For both of them, the rewards for
victory will extend beyond the eternal gratitude of their adopted
nations.
In Rehhagel's case, it could be his
ticket back to Germany as the successor to Rudi Voeller, who stepped
down as coach of the national team in the wake of their first round
exit here. For Scolari, the man who led Brazil to their fifth World
Cup in Japan and South Korea two years ago, there is the prospect of
becoming the first man to lift world and European titles with
different countries, substantially enhancing his coaching credentials
in the process.
Those who suggest that coaching
Brazil is simply a matter of making sure Ronaldo and company get on
the team bus with a full set of matching socks will have difficulty
sustaining their argument if Scolari does deliver Portugal's first
major international trophy.
It is for that reason that Scolari
admits that winning on Sunday would mean even more to him than his
triumph in Yokohama two years ago.
"Brazil had already won four World
Cups," he said. "Portugal have never even reached a final before, so I
think this is more important, for my CV certainly."
On paper, Scolari's future job
prospects should be enhanced by a Portugal victory. The Portugal that
outclassed the Netherlands in the semifinal was a considerably more
threatening animal than the one that tamely surrendered to the Greeks
in a 2-1 defeat in the opening match.
With every match they have played
here, Scolari's side have got stronger while, for all their admirable
work-rate and organisation, Rehhagel's side have also enjoyed more
than their fair share of luck on their way to the final.
After squeezing through their group
by the narrowest of margins, Greece were fortunate to come up against
an almost unbelievably listless France in their quarterfinal.
The pattern of their extra-time
victory over the Czech Republic in Thursday's semifinal would also
surely have been different if Pavel Nedved had not been forced from
the field in the first half, at a time when the Czechs had the Greeks
on the rack.
Rehhagel
deservedly took much of the credit for both the quarter and semifinal
wins after getting his tactics exactly right, most notably by
deploying man markers to nullify the threat posed by France's Thierry
Henry and the Czech danger man Milan Baros.
It is not however a trick that will
be easily repeated against Portugal, whose attacking threat depends
largely on the ability of their wingers to go past defenders with the
ball. No marker, no matter how good their concentration, is likely to
stop Luis Figo or Cristiano Ronaldo for a full 90 minutes.
Portugal will almost certainly have
their chances. The key to realising the country's long cherished dream
of victory is likely to be whether they can take them.
Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
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