The duel that opens Group F
The Netherlands, a three-time finalist, will try to leave behind the history of lost finals. This Monday they face Japan, a team that has never missed a Cup since its debut in France 1998.
The Dutch have fallen in the finals in 1974, 1978 and 2010. Now, with Ronald Koeman in his second cycle as coach, they are looking for a solid start. Japan, for its part, arrives without its captain Wataru Endo, a 33-year-old Liverpool midfielder, who was injured and announced his withdrawal on social networks.
“From now on I will be another fan of a team of which I am proud to have been captain,” wrote Endo.
The Samurai lost only one of their 16 knockout matches, scoring 54 goals and conceding only three. Their consistency has taken them to the round of 16 in four of seven Cups.
Sweden and Tunisia will also collide in the same key. The day includes other duels: Germany against Curacao (debutant in the tournament), Ecuador against Ivory Coast, and Australia against Turkey. The United States, one of the hosts, already beat Paraguay 4-1 on Friday in Group D.
The Netherlands wants to revive the mythical “Clockwork Orange” that enchanted the world in the seventies. But the road begins with a rival who never gives up.




