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| Andrei Arshavin © Action Images |
Andrei Arshavin, Zlatan Ibrahomovic and Andriy Shevchenko are just three of the world's most prominent footballers who will be missing the World Cup.
Arshavin, 28, and his Russian teammates dazzled at Euro 2008 for
a place in the semifinals, but were caught out cold by Slovenia in
a World Cup play-off tie.
"I cannot say that this is the deciding moment in my career -
only after years will people usually realise it. But, in any case,
to stay out of the World Cup means to be on the sidelines of world
football for a time," Arshavin was quoted as saying when
elimination was already looming after the first game in Moscow.
As a result, the Arsenal forward Arshavin will not be in South
Africa, and neither will Barcelona striker Ibrahimovic, whose
Sweden team were eliminated as well.
The exit prompted Ibrahimovic, 28, one of the world's best paid
footballers, to reconsider his national team future.
Given his age of 32, Ukraine's Shavchenko will most likely never
appear on the global stage again as the next World Cup is not until
2014.
The former AC Milan and Chelsea forward only managed to qualify
for one big event, the 2006 World Cup, as Ukraine went out for the
fourth time in a big event play-off series.
The Ukrainian defeat against Greece also means that none of the
Euro 2012 hosts will be playing in South Africa as Poland missed
out in the group stage.
Also missing from the showpiece of international football are
African champions Egypt, who were beaten in a play-off by north
African rivals Algeria after they both finished their group equal
on points, goals scored and conceded.
2002 World Cup semifinalists Turkey and Croatia, who managed
the same feat in 1998 will also not be in South Africa.
The history of the World Cup is full of prominent players and
teams which have failed to qualify.
The best-known players are George Best, who starred for
Manchester United but failed to lift Northern Ireland to a big
event and George Weah, who won just about everything in an
illustrious club career, but had the bad luck of being born in
Liberia.
Big teams like England and Italy have missed out in the past as
well, and so did the Dutch who were the most prominent no-show at
the 2002 World Cup.
This time around the Dutch were the first European team to
qualify, while World Footballer Cristiano Ronaldo had to sweat
until the end before his Portugal side beat Bosnia-Herzegovina in
the playoffs.
The possible 2009 World Player Lionel Messi was also given a
fright before his Argentina team squeezed through.
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