Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Brazil vs Colombia World Cup 2014 preview: Fernandinho fears the threat of Colombia maestro James Rodriguez

The Manchester City midfielder says the 22-year-old must not be allowed any space when the two teams meet on Wednesday

Joe Krishnan
Wednesday 02 July 2014 07:49 BST
Comments
Fernandinho says Brazil must be wary of the threat posed by Colombia's James Rodriguez
Fernandinho says Brazil must be wary of the threat posed by Colombia's James Rodriguez (Getty images)

Brazil midfielder Fernandinho has warned Brazil that they must not allow Colombia's James Rodriguez any space - or risk being overrun by the playmaker.

Colombia have well and truly lived up to their tag of dark horses, finishing top of Group C and sealed their place in the quarter-finals with a 2-0 win over Uruguay to set up an enticing clash with Brazil.

But without their star man James Rodriguez, it may not have been possible. The Monaco midfielder has taken the World Cup by storm, scoring five goals in just four games to go top of the goalscoring charts, as well as providing his team-mates with two assists.

And Fernandinho, who played against Rodriguez when the Colombian was at FC Porto, believes they must stop the talented playmaker if they are to progress.

James Rodriguez has been one of the revelations of the 2014 World Cup (EPA)

"I played against him in the Champions League," the 28-year-old said. "It was at the start of his time in Europe and he wasn't yet a first-choice for Porto.

"Already in that game he showed his technical quality with his left foot. In this World Cup he is showing everyone that the money Monaco paid for him was well invested. The less space he gets against us, the better it will be for Brazil."

Ahead of the all-South American clash, Fernandinho dismissed any notion that Brazil are struggling to handle the pressure to win their sixth World Cup on home soil.

He added: "We have been preparing ever since we first got together on May 26. We have worked on the psychological side and there is no need to do any of that now. What matters now is to show what we can do on the pitch," he said.

"This is my opinion. We have a very big responsibility representing a country of 200 million people who hope for happiness and better days through football." He added: "We still kept our concentration at the decisive moment when it came to penalties."

Brazil face Colombia at the Arena de Corinthians in Sao Paulo on Wednesday.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in