JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(By
Kevin Baxter, LAT)
June 22, 2010
The poet and essayist Octavio Paz,
perhaps the most thoughtful observer of the Mexican psyche, once
suggested that his people have long been weighed down by a feeling of
inferiority.
On Monday, Javier Aguirre, the country's philosophical soccer coach,
said there's no room for that kind of thinking on his team.
Not now.
Instead, Aguirre wants only positive thoughts going into Tuesday's
crucial World Cup match with Uruguay, Mexico's most important soccer
game in four years.
"If we go out there thinking that we can lose the game, fearful and full
of doubt, then we're inviting the loss," Aguirre said in Spanish. "I've
impressed on my players that we have to go out there intending to win."
That's because a win would not only qualify Mexico for the second round,
but make its route to the quarterfinals much easier. With a victory,
Mexico would advance as its group's top-seeded team, facing either South
Korea or Greece in the knockout round.
Otherwise, Mexico would probably face powerful Argentina, the country
that knocked it from the last World Cup in the second round. Still,
Aguirre insisted he's not thinking past Tuesday.
"We have to play against Uruguay, we have to try to impose our style,
protect our goal and score," he said. "We're second in our group with
one game left. We're looking for the three points, like we did against
South Africa and France."
And they'll be doing it short-handed because midfielder Efrain Juarez
will miss the game after picking up yellow cards in each of Mexico's
first two games, while striker Carlos Vela is out with a hamstring
injury.
Andres Guardado is a likely choice to replace Juarez but Aguirre faces a
much more difficult decision over who to use in Vela's spot. Javier
Hernandez has probably earned a start with his World Cup play but he's
provided such an important spark coming off the bench that Aguirre may
keep him there.
If he does, Pablo Barrera, who replaced Vela when he was hurt, will
probably play.
Two others who hope to play are Cuauhtemoc Blanco and Rafael Marquez,
who can tie goalkeeper Antonio Carvajal's 44-year-old record of 11 World
Cup appearances by a Mexico player if they play Tuesday.
But no matter who starts, expect Mexico to play with the same attacking
4-3-3 formation it used in its previous two matches.
Uruguay, however, remains confident.
"Mexico will be a difficult rival," defender Diego Godin said. "They
play good soccer, but we have the weapons to destroy their game and we
know how to cause them damage."
Chief among those weapons is forward Diego Forlan, who scored twice and
set up another goal in Uruguay's 3-0 win over South Africa. And few
managers are better acquainted with his strengths than Aguirre, who
coached him in Spain.
But while Aguirre respects Forlan and the rest of the Uruguayan team, he
doesn't fear them. And he hopes his team doesn't either.
"I don't want us to be afraid of success," he said. "We have a lot of
young players with a great mentality, a new generation. We have seven
illustrious veterans who have been infected with this mentality, this
winning spirit
"This game against Uruguay is one that can take us forward. Nothing
we've done before does us any good now."