Ghana carry Africa’s prayers, Brazil face Dutch

JOHANNESBURG,  (Reuters) – Ghana’s “Black Stars” hope  to go where no African team has been before and reach the World  Cup semi-finals today while Brazil face Netherlands in the  day’s first and equally intriguing quarter-final.

After a two-day lull, the action restarts at Nelson Mandela  Bay Stadium in Port Elizabeth where five-times champions Brazil  take on a Netherlands who have failed to lift the trophy despite  fielding some of the most eye-catching teams ever.

Their four-out-of-four wins in South Africa so far have been  solid rather than spectacular. Yet with attacking talent like  Arjen Robben, Wesley Sneijder, Robin van Persie and Rafael van  der Vaart lurking, the Dutch could come alight any time.

“We play our better games against teams that want to play  football as well and on Friday, Brazil is not going to wait,”  winger Ryan Babel said.

For all their own attacking power, Brazil have also become  masters in defence under coach Dunga.

Despite criticism at home for abandoning some flair, Dunga  appears to have found a winning formula of impregnable,  European-style defence combined with the lightning-fast  counter-attack capacity of Robinho, Kaka and Luis Fabiano.

The notoriously grumpy Dunga, who captained Brazil to wins  over Netherlands in the 1994 and 1998 World Cups, seemed more  worried about accommodation arrangements and a new training  venue than his in-form opponents on the eve.

“It interferes with things. We will have to share a hotel  with more people, there will be more confusion, and we will have  to overcome this situation,” he said.

Ghana have already equalled the best African showing at a  World Cup by reaching the quarter-finals.

Cameroon did the same in 1990 and Senegal in 2002.

To chart new territory and cheer millions around Africa,  Ghana need to beat a mean-looking Uruguay side, who are one of  an unprecedented four South American teams in the quarters. “It is a match of destiny which places an onerous  responsbility on the Black Stars,” Ghana’s former president John  Kufuor told Reuters.