OEHRINGEN - Emotions will be high when Australia and Croatia meet in a tantalising group F match that will almost certainly decide who join Brazil in the second round.
The advantage is with Australia, who are striving to get through to the second stage for the first time.
A victory will guarantee them a place in the final 16; they can also get through with a draw, so long as Japan do not beat Brazil by three goals.
The equation is even simpler for Croatia. Semifinalists in 1998 but no longer the force they were eight years ago, they must win to stay alive in the competition.
The match was looming as the decisive one in the group when the draw was announced and everything points to an even contest that could go either way.
They have similar personnel and styles of playing, and are bonded by ancestral links.
Seven of Australia's players, including captain Mark Viduka, have Croatian parents, while three of the Croats were raised in Aust-ralia.
"There's a lot of Australian-Croatian people that live in Australia and I think if we weren't playing against each other they'd be supporting Australia," said Australia's assistant coach Graham Arnold.
"I don't think you can get more mirror-imaged sides in the competition than us and Croatia.
"They've got similar-style players to us - big, physically strong, good technical players with a huge workrate. It's going to be a very intriguing game."
Croatia started the competition as favourites to go through with Brazil.
They beat Australia 7-0 when they last played, in 1998, although much has changed since then.
Croatia were hugely impressive in their opening match when they lost 1-0 to world champions Brazil but lost their way against Japan, finishing with a scoreless draw after blowing a series of chances, including a penalty.
Coach Zlatko Kranjcar has been forced to rearrange his defence after Robert Kovac was suspended, with Stjepan Tomas playing right back and Dario Simic shifting in.
"I'm satisfied with the team. We are well organised in defence, also in midfield," Kranjcar said.
"The only issue is that we haven't put away our chances. I have no doubt we have left a better impression than Australia, even though they have three points."
Australia have been impressive in their first two games. They came from behind to beat Japan 3-1, with all three goals coming in the last eight minutes, then gave as good as they got against Brazil before going down 2-0.
Their Dutch coach, Guus Hiddink, who took Netherlands then Korea to the semifinals of the last two World Cups, has again been a shrewd tactician, orchestrating moves like a grandmaster, flooding the midfield and ordering his players to attack in waves.
But, like the Croatians, Australia also have problems, even though the mood in the camp remains upbeat.
Defender Tony Popovic has been ruled out with a calf strain and winger Harry Kewell was lucky to escape a ban for verbally abusing German referee Markus Merk after the Brazil match.
"If you said to me before this competition started that going into the third game against Croatia we only needed a draw or a win to go through, then I would have signed off on that straight away," Arnold said.
"I envisioned before the competition started that it would get down to goal average or we would have to win and now we've got a 66 per cent chance instead of 50-50."
TV TIMES TOMORROW
2am: Czech Republic v Italy (group E) Hamburg SS1.
2am: Ghana v USA (group E) Nuremberg SS3.
7am: Croatia v Australia (group F) Stuttgart SS1.
7am: Japan v Brazil (group F) Dortmund SS3.
3.30pm-4.30pm and 11pm-1am: Highlights TV One.
- REUTERS
Soccer: Aussie-Croatia game all in the family
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