Football Index: World Cup Finals: Brazil 2014: Group H.
Match reports from Group H Matches played during the 2014 World Cup Finals in Brazil between Algeria, Belgium, Russia and South Korea.
Algeria travelled between Belo Horizonte, Porto Alegre and Curitiba.
Belgium played in Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.
Russia visited Cuiaba, Rio de Janeiro and Curitiba.
South Korea journeyed to Cuiaba, Porto Alegre and Sao Paulo.
2014 World Cup Finals - Group H - Fixtures and Results
Group H | P | W | D | L | F/A | Dif | Pts |
Belgium | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 4/1 | +3 | 9 |
Algeria | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5/4 | +1 | 4 |
Russia | 3 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1/2 | -1 | 2 |
South Korea | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3/6 | -3 | 1 |
Tuesday, 17th June
Belgium 2 - Algeria 1 in Belo Horizonte.
Russia 1 - South Korea 1 in Cuiaba.
Sunday, 22nd June
Belgium 1 Russia 0 in Rio de Janeiro.
South Korea 2 - Algeria 4 in Porto Alegre.
Thursday, 26th June
Algeria 1 - Russia 1 in Curitiba.
South Korea 0 - Belgium 1 in Sao Paulo.
The top two teams in each group move on to the Knockout Stage.
Monday, 30th June
Germany vs Algeria in Porto Alegre.
Tuesday, 1st July
Group H World Cup Squads
Algeria
Coached by Vahid Halihodzic (Bosnia).
Goalkeepers:
1 Cedric Si Mohamed (CS Constantine), 16 Mohamed Zemmamouche (USM Alger), 23 Rais Mbolhi
(CSKA Sofia).
Defenders:
2 Madjid Bougherra (Lekhwiya), 3 Faouzi Ghoulam (Napoli), 4 Essaid Belkalem (Watford), 5
Rafik Halliche (Academica), 6 Djamel Mesbah (Livorno), 12 Carl Medjani (Valenciennes), 17
Liassine Cadamuro (Real Mallorca), 20 Aissa Mandi (Reims).
Midfielders:
7 Hassan Yebda (Udinese), 8 Medhi Lacen (Getafe), 11 Yacine Brahimi (Grenada), 14 Nabil
Bentaleb (Tottenham), 19 Saphir Taider (Inter Milan), 22 Mehdi Mostefa (Ajaccio).
Forwards:
9 Nabil Ghilas (Porto), 10 Sofiane Feghouli (Valencia), 13 Islam Slimani (Sporting
Lisbon), 15 El Arabi Soudani (Dinamo Zagreb), 18 Abdelmoumen Djabou (Club Africain), 21
Riyad Mahrez (Leicester).
Belgium
Coached by Marc Wilmots (Belgium).
Goalkeepers:
1 Thibaut Courtois (Chelsea), 12 Simon Mignolet (Liverpool), 13 Sammy Bossut
(Zulte-Waregem).
Defenders:
2 Toby Alderweireld (Atletico Madrid), 3 Thomas Vermaelen (Arsenal), 4 Vincent Kompany
(Manchester City), 5 Jan Vertonghen (Tottenham Hotspur), 15 Daniel Van Buyten (Bayern
Munich), 18 Nicolas Lombaerts (Zenit Saint Petersburg), 21 Anthony Vanden Borre
(Anderlecht), 23 Laurent Ciman (Standard Liege).
Midfielders:
6 Axel Witsel (Zenit Saint Petersburg), 7 Kevin De Bruyne (Wolfsburg), 8 Marouane Fellaini
(Manchester United), 10 Eden Hazard (Chelsea), 14 Dries Mertens (Napoli), 16 Steven Defour
(Porto), 19 Mousa Dembele (Tottenham Hotspur), 20 Adnan Januzaj (Manchester United), 22
Nacer Chadli (Tottenham Hotspur).
Forwards:
9 Romelu Lukaku (Chelsea), 11 Kevin Mirallas (Everton), 17 Divock Origi (Lille).
Russia
Coached by Fabio Capello (Italy).
Goalkeepers:
1 Igor Akinfeev (CSKA Moscow), 12 Yury Lodygin (Zenit St Petersburg), 16 Sergey Ryzhikov
(Rubin Kazan).
Defenders:
2 Aleksei Kozlov (Dynamo Moscow), 3 Georgiy Schennikov (CSKA Moscow), 4 Sergey Ignashevich
(CSKA Moscow), 5 Andrey Semenov (Terek Grozny), 13 Vladimir Granat (Dynamo Moscow), 14
Vasiliy Berezutskiy (CSKA Moscow), 22 Andrey Eschenko (Anzhi Makhachkala), 23 Dmitry
Kombarov (Spartak Moscow).
Midfielders:
7 Igor Denisov (Dynamo Moscow), 8 Denis Glushakov (Spartak Moscow), 10 Alan Dzagoev (CSKA
Moscow), 15 Pavel Mogilevetc (Rubin Kazan), 17 Oleg Shatov (Zenit St Petersburg), 20
Viktor Faizulin (Zenit St Petersburg).
Forwards:
6 Maksim Kanunnikov (Amkar Perm), 9 Alexander Kokorin (Dynamo Moscow), 11 Alexander
Kerzhakov (Zenit St Petersburg), 18 Yury Zhirkov (Dynamo Moscow), 19 Alexander Samedov
(Lokomotiv Moscow), 21 Alexey Ionov (Dynamo Moscow).
South Korea
Coached by Hong Myung-Bo (Korea Republic).
Goalkeepers:
1 Sung-ryong Jung (Suwon Bluewings), 21 Seung-gyu Kim (Ulsan Hyundai), 23 Bum-young Lee
(Busan I'Park).
Defenders:
2 Chang-soo Kim (Kashiwa Reysol), 3 Suk-young Yun (QPR), 4 Tae-Hwi Kwak (Al Hilal), 5
Young-gwon Kim (Guangzhou Evergrande), 6 Seo-ho Hwang (Sanfrecce Hiroshima), 12 Lee Yong
(Ulsan Hyundai), 20 Jeong-ho Hong (Augsburg), 22 Joo-ho Park (Mainz).
Midfielders:
7 Bo-kyung Kim (Cardiff City), 8 Dae-sung Ha (Beijing Guoan), 9 Heung-min Son (Bayer
Leverkusen), 14 Kook-young Han (Kashiwa Reysol), 15 Jong-woo Park (Guangzhou R&F), 16
Sung-yueng Ki (Swansea), 17 Chung-Yong Lee (Bolton Wanderers), 19 Dong-Won Ji (Augsburg).
Forwards:
10 Chu-Young Park (Arsenal), 11 Keun-Ho Lee (Sangju Sangmu), 13 Ja-Cheol Koo (Mainz), 18
Kim Shin-wook (Ulsan Hyundai).
The Road to Rio
2014 World Cup Finals - Knockout Stage.
Argentina vs Switzerland in Sao Paulo.
Brazil vs Chile in Belo Horizonte.
Colombia vs Uruguay in Rio de Janeiro.
Costa Rica vs Greece in Recife.
France vs Nigeria in Brasilia.
Germany vs Algeria in Porto Alegre.
Holland vs Mexico in Fortaleza.
Argentina vs Belgium in Brasilia.
Brazil vs Colombia in Fortaleza.
France vs Germany in Rio de Janeiro.
Holland vs Costa Rica in Salvador.
Brazil vs Germany in Belo Horizonte.
Holland vs Argentina in Sao Paulo.
Brazil vs Holland in Brasilia.
Germany vs Argentina in Rio de Janeiro.
World Cup Finals
Uruguay 1930:
Uruguay trailed Argentina at half-time (1:2) but replied with three goals in the second half; to win the first ever World Cup Final (4-2)
on July 30th, 1930.
Italy 1934:
Italy were one of the countries who missed out on the vote to host the first World Cup but managed to win the prestigious golden trophy
for the home fans.
France 1938:
The third World Cup was held in Europe for a second time, although Germany had annexed Austria, and Spain was in civil turmoil.
Brazil 1950:
Although no cup-final as such, Uruguay and Brazil went into their final game with the winner guaranteed to be champions; a draw would be enough for Brazil.
Switzerland 1954:
The fifth World Cup tournament produced a record number of goals, including a 7:5 encounter between Austria and Switzerland in Lausanne.
Sweden 1958:
Brazil presented a 17 year-old Pele to the world; who went on to claim a hat-trick in Brazil's 5:2 semi-final win over France and bag another two in the final.
Chile 1962:
Czechoslovakia overcame Hungary in the quarter-finals and Yugoslavia in the semis, while Brazil took care of England and the host nation, Chile.
England 1966:
Geoff Hurst scored a hat-trick, in the final against West Germany, as England triumphed in a thrilling game watched by Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II.
Mexico 1970:
1970 belonged to Pelé, who earned his third World Cup winners' medal when Brazil got their hands on the Jules Rimet Cup.... for keeps.
W. Germany 1974:
Johan Cruyff was the player of the tournament as total football became the buzzword of the day, even though Holland lost to West Germany in the 1974 final.
Argentina 1978:
Holland contested the 1978 World Cup Final, in Argentina, for the second time in a row. As in West Germany,
they again finished runners-up; to the hosts.
Spain 1982:
The Spain 82 World Cup finals increased to 24 teams and the format was changed to have two group stages, with four second-round groups of three.
Mexico 1986:
In 1986, Mexico became the first nation to stage the World Cup Finals for a second time; having only staged the competition sixteen years previously.
Italy 1990:
In 1990, Italy became the World Cup of stalemates. Both semi-finals were drawn out through penalty kicks. In the final itself, the only goal came from the spot.
USA 1994:
Once Team US had played a few games most of the nation began to understand they were hosting the greatest show on earth and how the game was played.
France 1998:
France became the sixth nation to win the World Cup on home soil. Thirty-two teams competed in the 16th World Cup; better known as France 98.
Korea-Japan 2002:
The 17th World Cup, held in Korea and Japan, was the first World Cup finals to be shared by two hosts and the first to be held in Asia.
Germany 2006:
The 2006 World Cup Finals ran from 9th June to 9th July; the opening
match in Munich and the final in Berlin. Munich and Dortmund hosted the
semi-finals.
South Africa 2010:
Eighty years after the First World Cup Finals in Uruguay, the world's most prestigious football competition was finally hosted on the African continent.
Brazil 2014:
Five times World Cup Champions, Brazil, get a second chance to hold the prestigious World Cup Finals; 64 years after they last hosted the tournament.
Russia 2018:
VAR made its World Cup debut and set out to change the course of a game with some crucial rule infringement watching and vital on the spot decisions.
Qatar 2022:
When FIFA executives met in Zurich to decide on who would host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup Finals, Qatar was probably the biggest surprise to many.
United 2026:
The 2026 FIFA World Cup Finals will be jointly hosted by Canada, Mexico
and the United States. The United Bid won the hosting rights ahead of
Morocco.
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