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World Cup 2014: Switzerland ready to show why they are big cheeses against Ecuador

The Swiss are currently ranked sixth in the Fifa world rankings

Steve Douglas
Friday 13 June 2014 20:38 BST
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The experienced Switerland coach, Ottmar Hitzfeld, believes his team has the ability to qualify out of the group stage in Brazil
The experienced Switerland coach, Ottmar Hitzfeld, believes his team has the ability to qualify out of the group stage in Brazil (EPA)

Casual football fans scrolling down the Fifa rankings will no doubt pause when they reach No 6. Switzerland. Really?

Yet, the Swiss – with just one defeat in 18 matches over two years – are there on merit and will attempt to justify their top-seed status when they open their World Cup campaign against Ecuador in Brasilia tomorrow.

Coached by the wily and experienced German Ottmar Hitzfeld, Switzerland have been transformed into a bold European power driven on by blossoming players who have shone at youth tournaments since 2009.

Hitzfeld’s side are favoured – along with France – to advance from Group E at the expense of Honduras and Ecuador. “We do have the potential to qualify for the round of 16,” Hitzfeld said. “That is our goal. Then there are no limits.”

Ecuador, ranked 26th in the world, have deficiencies in defence – long-serving centre-halves Ivan Hurtado and Giovanny Espinoza are no longer around – and they have a big hole up front after the sudden death of striker Christian Benitez last year.

The 27-year-old Benitez died of heart failure in Qatar in July, only three weeks after joining local team El Jaish. He was Ecuador’s star forward with 24 goals in 58 appearances.

The desire to honour Benitez – previously described as “practically irreplaceable” by Ecuador’s coach, Reinaldo Rueda – will drive the national team, but that may not be enough to help them progress beyond the group stage.

Another of Rueda’s top players will be missing in Brazil, too, after the experienced defensive midfielder Segundo Castillo was ruled out of the tournament on Monday with a knee injury sustained in a warm-up match against Mexico. Osvaldo Minda was called up as his replacement.

The star of the team is the Manchester United winger Antonio Valencia, the country’s most illustrious export, who showed he is fired up to be very competitive at the World Cup by getting sent off for grappling with England winger Raheem Sterling in a friendly last week. He will not be suspended for World Cup games, though, and should figure prominently on the right flank.

Ecuador should benefit from the tournament being held in South America, making them more suited to the playing conditions and potentially leaving the group wide open. But the Swiss, buoyed by wins over Brazil and Germany in friendlies in the past two years, boast a higher- quality squad.

Xherdan Shaqiri, a bit-part player at Bayern Munich but a key performer for his country, has the ability to produce moments of brilliance and feed Josep Drmic, who is likely to be the team’s lone striker in a 4-2-3-1 formation. Expect the tireless running and high-tempo game of central-midfield pairing Gokhan Inler and Valon Behrami to be a feature, too.

Switzerland scored 17 goals in 10 qualifiers and Ecuador just 20 in 16 matches – so the first match in the Brazilian capital’s Estadio Nacional seems unlikely to be a high-scoring encounter.

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