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Brazil 2014: Will World Cup redeem people's faith in

football?
Customers now have a good deal of variety within the internet sports betting marketplace. This
really is simply because of the assorted bookmakers all competing for a chunk of this multi million
dollar industry.
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
The price of the World Cup
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
The 2014 World Cup starts in Sao Paulo on Thursday
Host nation Brazil faces Croatia in opening game
32 teams from across the world competing at tournament
Final to be held in Rio de Janeiro on July 13
Join the World Cup conversation at CNN Facebook Pulse
(CNN) -- In Brazil, they use the expression "futbol arte" to describe the type of soccer which made
the country's world champion team of 1970 so easy on the eye.
But no longer -- football has changed, and Brazil has changed too.
When it won the World Cup in 1994, the national team's style of play was dubbed "futebol d
fora" -- a tougher, more pragmatic approach.
And, after a year of violent protests, rubber bullets and tear gas, the romantic ideal of Brazil often
portrayed in glossy travel magazines seems hard to imagine.
Thursday marks the start of an opportunity for Brazil to redefine itself after a difficult 12 months
preparing for arguably the world's largest and most popular event.
So no pressure, then, on Brazil's footballers, who take on Croatia in the tournament's opening game
in Sao Paulo, the recent epicenter of the unrest.
Will the host team's expected progress, led by current hero Neymar, help ease the sense of injustice
which has ingrained itself within the population?
As if that wasn't a great enough weight on the shoulders of coach Luiz Felipe Scolari's team, there is
the added pressure of Brazil's quest to exorcise the ghosts of 1950 -- which will begin 64 years after
what is known as the country's "Hiroshima."
When Uruguay defeated Brazil in the deciding match courtesy of Alcides Ghiggia's strike, it left an
indelible mark on a country whose first love has always been football.
And yet, after more than six decades of waiting for the tournament to return to their home country,
the Brazilian people are otherwise engaged.
Whereas football may still be a religion, its Brazilian congregation have slowly turned their backs on
their deity.
"This World Cup is not for the Brazilians," 59-year-old street vendor Maria Elza de Fatima told CNN.
"It is for the foreigners and FIFA friends."
While thousands of tourists flock to Brazil and media pack the streets to broadcast the action across
the world, Sao Paulo has been brought to a standstill by metro workers striking over wages -- the
latest in a series of protests against the government.
An estimated $11 billion of public money has been spent on hosting the tournament -- much to the
chagrin of the protesters, who argue that money might have been better spent on public services..
"I think the best moment to protest is at the end of the World Cup," says two-time World Cup winner
Cafu, Brazil's most-capped footballer, who was speaking to CNN to promote the Castrol Footkhana
skills challenge.
"This will be the moment we can show ourselves that we can fight for our rights -- better education,
better healthcare, better culture, better transportation," he told CNN.
"This is the moment we can show the world we are capable of staging a well-organized World Cup.
We will show we are a democratic country and (later) fight for our rights."
Once the football starts, nobody will be more relieved than FIFA and its under-fire president, Sepp
Blatter.
The 78-year-old, who has held the position since 1998, was told Tuesday that he should not stand for
a fifth four-year term by some of the organization's key European members within UEFA.
However, at Wednesday's FIFA Congress in Sao Paulo, he told delegates "my mission is not finished
... I am ready to accompany you in the future."
Just a fortnight after allegations of corruption during the 2022 World Cup vote was reported by
Britain's Sunday Times, Blatter has been forced to endure one of the
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/soccer/worldcup/2014/05/27/world-cup-brazil-protests-rio-de-j
aneiro/9616607/ most difficult periods of his tenure.
The newspaper claims to have unearthed millions of emails and other documentation which allege
Qatar's former FIFA Executive Committee member Mohamed Bin Hammam used a multimillion-
dollar slush fund to buy support for the bid.
The claims have been strenuously denied by Qatar organizers, who in a statement released to CNN
Sunday said they had been co-operating fully with U.S. lawyer Michael Garcia, who has been
appointed by FIFA to lead an investigation into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World
Cups, awarded to Russia and Qatar.
But president of the Dutch Football Association Michael Van Praag believes enough is enough.
"I then said at the microphone: 'I like you a lot, there is nothing personal here, but the reputation of
FIFA is today inextricably linked to corruption," recounted Praag of what transpired at Tuesday's
UEFA meeting.
"FIFA has a president. You are responsible, you should not stand again."
Despite the barbs, Blatter appeared in bullish mood Wednesday when speaking at the world
governing body's congress, insisting FIFA could be a force for positive change.
While European nations have gone public about their opposition to Blatter, African and Asian
members have backed the Swiss to continue in the role he has held since 1998.
"The answer is easy and simple ... we must lead by example and we must listen to all voices, we must
be responsible and upright in all that we do, we must do the right thing even if that comes at a cost,"
Blatter told the audience.
"It's not always very easy to live up to this principle. But it's our duty ... if we do not do it, who will?"
The bad news for Blatter is that the Sunday Times promises more revelations on Qatar, which
suggests football might continue to play second fiddle to politics for a while yet.
A successful World Cup and a Brazil victory might go some way to temporarily muffling the protests
of both the Brazilian people and FIFA's growing critics.
In Rio, the Christ Redeemer statue overlooks the Maracana stadium, where the World Cup final will
be staged on July 13.
In just over a month we will find out if Brazil 2014 has restored people's faith in football -- not just in
the host nation, but across the globe.
Read: Who does Brazil really belong to?
Are you looking forward to the World Cup? Have your say in the comments box below or continue
the conversation at @WorldSportCNN and on Facebook
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/06/11/sport/football/brazil-2014-world-cup-football/

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