World Cup: France not afraid of Germany – Coach Deschamps

Agence France-Presse

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World Cup: France not afraid of Germany – Coach Deschamps
France is regarded as the underdogs as they face Germany in the quarterfinals, but coach Didier Deschamps his squad is ready for the challenge

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – France coach Didier Deschamps insisted his team has no reason to fear Germany when the sides clash in the World Cup quarterfinals at the Maracana Stadium on Friday, July 4.

“There is no apprehension or fear. There is no reason for us to feel any. Germany is a solid side with lots of experience of this level but this game will be a pleasure for us and we are preparing ourselves as well as possible for it,” Deschamps told a press conference in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday.

The match will be the first competitive meeting of the nations since West Germany beat France 2-0 in the 1986 World Cup semifinals, four years after they also triumphed on penalties when the teams met at the same stage of the competition in Spain.

Friday’s match offers France the opportunity to gain revenge, though Deschamps says that Germany is the strongest side they have faced yet at these finals.

“We have no pressure on us, just excitement at being able to play a World Cup quarterfinal. We will have a new page of our history to write and we will try to make sure it is a beautiful one.”

France began the competition by scoring 8 goals in group wins over Honduras and Switzerland, while Germany started with a thumping 4-0 victory against Portugal.

However, Germany’s progress has been tougher since. Joachim Loew’s side needed extra time before beating Algeria 2-1 in the last 16.

That may explain why Germany’s general manager Oliver Bierhoff labelled France as the favorites to win Friday. But Deschamps rejected his comments.

“When people were picking out their favorites before the competition, Germany was among them,” he said.

“Their squad has been practically unchanged since the last two major tournaments. They always reach the latter stages.

“They are a solid side with excellent individual talents who like to have the ball and impose their game on the opposition,” added Deschamps, whose own side edged past Nigeria 2-0 in the last 16 on Monday.

“The level of adversity you face increases as the competition goes along. I have a lot of respect for Nigeria but Germany is a much better side, on paper at least.

“We have to keep doing what we have done well until now but the demands now will be greater and we need to be capable of dealing with that too.”

Sakho set to return

Meanwhile, goalkeeper and captain Hugo Lloris urged Les Bleus to seize their chance, mindful perhaps of France’s last appearance at this stage of a major tournament.

At the 2012 European Championships, with Laurent Blanc in charge, France was outclassed by Spain in the quarterfinals, and they have not reached the last four of any competition since the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

“Everyone is excited. We will play our game and do everything to come out of the match with as few regrets as possible,” said Lloris.

“There may be moments where they put us under pressure but we are capable of posing them problems too.”

Deschamps, whose side trained on the Maracana pitch on the eve of the game, is expected to welcome Liverpool centre-back Mamadou Sakho back into his starting lineup alongside Raphael Varane after a hamstring problem kept him out of the Nigeria game.

That would mean Laurent Koscielny returning to the bench. He may be joined by Arsenal colleague Olivier Giroud, who could make way in attack for Antoine Griezmann. – Rappler.com

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