Unlike Nigeria and the Ivory Coast,
the Cameroon FA at least had the wisdom not to fire their manager in
the wake of a disappointing Africa Cup of Nations, despite the
fortune they were paying Paul le Guen. In return, Le Guen has
overhauled an ageing side, although the weaknesses in defence were
horribly shown up by Portugal and Serbia who scored seven times
between them. However, Le Guen did see the 21-year-old Eric
Choupo-Moting make a very good claim to start alongside Samuel Eto’o.
In one embarrassing moment, the
midfielder, Keisuke Honda rounded on the Japanese media and asked if
they really thought Japan would lose all three group games. There was
a grim silence because nobody would be very surprised if they
did. The last time Takeshi Okada led them to a World Cup, in 1998,
they did precisely that. Having lost three of their four friendlies
in Japan and two more to England and the Ivory Coast, they could
claim, in terms of form, to be the worst side in South Africa.
Philippe Troussier, who took Japan to
the last 16 in 2002, has little doubt that unless Okada takes a late,
radical and totally unexpected change of direction, they face a very
early elimination. Eto’o, now he has stopped sulking about
criticism of him from Roger Milla, the hero of the 1990 campaign, is
exuding confidence. Verdict: Cameroon to win.
Power Rating
Squad (2/5)
Quite simply does not have the standard of players required to progress very far in a difficult group in a World Cup. A lot depends on Nakamura and Honda.
Squad (3/5)
Attack and defence look well balanced but the point of weakness may be in midfield, where Geremi and Rigobert Song are starting to show their age.
Coach (2/5)
Okada is renowned in Japan as a tactician and with better players he might be an effective manager but there are doubts to how much confidence his own football association have in him.
Coach (3.5/5)
Tough and uncompromising, Le Guen has come in to make some radical changes to Cameroon football and while the players may not like it, he seems to be succeeding.
Attack (1.5/5)
This is not a team that is likely to score goals. In France they managed one; in Germany it was two. Three in South Africa will be an achievement.
Attack (3.5/5)
There is so much riding on the shoulders of Samuel Eto’o but if he wants to prove that he is the best footballer come out of Africa, this is his time.
Defence (3/5)
Good, solid and well organised and in the shape of Tulio and Nakasawa it contains two of Japan’s most impressive footballers.
Defence (3/5)
As they proved in qualification, this is a very solid unit, performing in front of someone who by African standards is a very high-class keeper indeed.