Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Teams  





2 Standings  





3 Matches  



3.1  Colombia vs Greece  





3.2  Ivory Coast vs Japan  





3.3  Colombia vs Ivory Coast  





3.4  Japan vs Greece  





3.5  Japan vs Colombia  





3.6  Greece vs Ivory Coast  







4 See also  





5 References  





6 External links  














2014 FIFA World Cup Group C






العربية

Български
Bosanski
Català
Čeština
Deutsch
Ελληνικά
Español
Français
Galego

Հայերեն
Bahasa Indonesia

Latviešu
Magyar


Norsk bokmål
Oʻzbekcha / ўзбекча
Polski
Português
Română
Русский
Simple English
Svenska
Türkçe
Українська
اردو
Tiếng Vit

 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Group C of the 2014 FIFA World Cup consisted of Colombia, Greece, Ivory Coast, and Japan. Play began on 14 June and ended on 24 June 2014. The top two teams, Colombia and Greece, advanced to the round of 16.

Teams

[edit]
Draw position Team Confederation Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings
October 2013[nb 1] June 2014
C1 (seed)  Colombia CONMEBOL CONMEBOL 2nd runners-up 11 October 2013 5th 1998 Round of 16 (1990) 4 8
C2  Greece UEFA UEFA Play-off winners 19 November 2013 3rd 2010 Group stage (1994, 2010) 15 12
C3  Ivory Coast CAF CAF third round winners 16 November 2013 3rd 2010 Group stage (2006, 2010) 17 23
C4  Japan AFC AFC fourth round Group B 1st winners 4 June 2013 5th 2010 Round of 16 (2002, 2010) 44 46
Notes
  1. ^ The rankings of October 2013 were used for seeding for the final draw.

Standings

[edit]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Colombia 3 3 0 0 9 2 +7 9 Advance to knockout stage
2  Greece 3 1 1 1 2 4 −2 4
3  Ivory Coast 3 1 0 2 4 5 −1 3
4  Japan 3 0 1 2 2 6 −4 1
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Tie-breaking criteria

Matches

[edit]

Colombia vs Greece

[edit]

The two teams had met in one previous match, in a friendly in 1994, where Colombia won 2–0.[1] Colombia midfielder Fredy Guarín was suspended for the match, after being sent off in the team's final qualifier against Paraguay.[2]

Colombia took the lead within five minutes, Juan Cuadrado's cutback was converted by Pablo Armero via a deflection off Greek defender Kostas Manolas. Colombia extended the lead in the second half, when Abel Aguilar flicked on a corner kick from James Rodríguez and Teófilo Gutiérrez scored from close range.[3] Greece's best chance fell to Theofanis Gekas, who headed against the bar. In stoppage time, Cuadrado set up James to complete the scoring with a low shot.[4]

The 3–0 scoreline was Colombia's biggest win to date in the World Cup.[5]

13:00 BRT (UTC−3)
Colombia 3–0 Greece
  • Armero 5'
  • Gutiérrez 58'
  • Rodríguez 90+3'
  • Report

    Attendance: 57,174

    Referee: Mark Geiger (United States)[6]

    Colombia

    Greece

    GK 1 David Ospina
    RB 18 Juan Camilo Zúñiga
    CB 2 Cristián Zapata
    CB 3 Mario Yepes (c)
    LB 7 Pablo Armero downward-facing red arrow 74'
    CM 6 Carlos Sánchez Yellow card 26'
    CM 8 Abel Aguilar downward-facing red arrow 69'
    RW 11 Juan Cuadrado
    AM 10 James Rodríguez
    LW 14 Víctor Ibarbo
    CF 9 Teófilo Gutiérrez downward-facing red arrow 76'
    Substitutions:
    MF 15 Alexander Mejía upward-facing green arrow 69'
    DF 4 Santiago Arias upward-facing green arrow 74'
    FW 21 Jackson Martínez upward-facing green arrow 76'
    Manager:
    Argentina José Pékerman
    GK 1 Orestis Karnezis
    RB 15 Vasilis Torosidis
    CB 4 Kostas Manolas
    CB 19 Sokratis Papastathopoulos Yellow card 52'
    LB 20 José Holebas
    RM 14 Dimitris Salpingidis Yellow card 55' downward-facing red arrow 57'
    CM 2 Giannis Maniatis
    CM 21 Kostas Katsouranis (c)
    LM 8 Panagiotis Kone downward-facing red arrow 78'
    CF 7 Georgios Samaras
    CF 17 Theofanis Gekas downward-facing red arrow 64'
    Substitutions:
    MF 18 Giannis Fetfatzidis upward-facing green arrow 57'
    FW 9 Konstantinos Mitroglou upward-facing green arrow 64'
    MF 10 Giorgos Karagounis upward-facing green arrow 78'
    Manager:
    Portugal Fernando Santos

    Man of the Match:
    James Rodríguez (Colombia)

    Assistant referees:
    Mark Hurd (United States)
    Joe Fletcher (Canada)
    Fourth official:
    Alireza Faghani (Iran)
    Fifth official:
    Hassan Kamranifar (Iran)

    Ivory Coast vs Japan

    [edit]

    The two teams had met in three previous matches, all in friendlies, most recently in 2010.[7]

    Japan took the lead in the first half, when Keisuke Honda collected a pass from Yuto Nagatomo after a quick throw-in to strike home with his left foot high into the net.[8]

    However, Ivory Coast came back with two goals in two minutes in the second half, first Wilfried Bony headed in from Serge Aurier's cross from the right from six yards, followed by a Gervinho header from six yards from another cross from Aurier on the right.[9]

    With his goal, Honda became the first Japanese player to score in two World Cups, and also claimed sole possession of being the top Japanese scorer in World Cup history with three total goals.[10]

    22:00 BRT (UTC−3)
    Ivory Coast 2–1 Japan
  • Gervinho 66'
  • Report

    Attendance: 40,267

    Referee: Enrique Osses (Chile)[6]

    Ivory Coast

    Japan

    GK 1 Boubacar Barry
    RB 17 Serge Aurier
    CB 5 Didier Zokora Yellow card 58'
    CB 22 Sol Bamba Yellow card 54'
    LB 3 Arthur Boka downward-facing red arrow 75'
    CM 9 Cheick Tioté
    CM 20 Serey Die downward-facing red arrow 62'
    AM 19 Yaya Touré (c)
    RF 8 Salomon Kalou
    CF 12 Wilfried Bony downward-facing red arrow 78'
    LF 10 Gervinho
    Substitutions:
    FW 11 Didier Drogba upward-facing green arrow 62'
    DF 18 Constant Djakpa upward-facing green arrow 75'
    FW 13 Didier Ya Konan upward-facing green arrow 78'
    Manager:
    France Sabri Lamouchi
    GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
    RB 2 Atsuto Uchida
    CB 22 Maya Yoshida Yellow card 23'
    CB 6 Masato Morishige Yellow card 64'
    LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
    DM 16 Hotaru Yamaguchi
    DM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c) downward-facing red arrow 54'
    RW 9 Shinji Okazaki
    AM 4 Keisuke Honda
    LW 10 Shinji Kagawa downward-facing red arrow 86'
    CF 18 Yuya Osako downward-facing red arrow 67'
    Substitutions:
    MF 7 Yasuhito Endō upward-facing green arrow 54'
    FW 13 Yoshito Ōkubo upward-facing green arrow 67'
    MF 11 Yoichiro Kakitani upward-facing green arrow 86'
    Manager:
    Italy Alberto Zaccheroni

    Man of the Match:
    Yaya Touré (Ivory Coast)

    Assistant referees:
    Carlos Astroza (Chile)
    Sergio Román (Chile)
    Fourth official:
    Néant Alioum (Cameroon)
    Fifth official:
    Djibril Camara (Senegal)

    Colombia vs Ivory Coast

    [edit]

    The two teams had never met before.[11]

    After a goalless first half, Colombia scored first when James Rodríguez headed in Juan Cuadrado's corner.[12] The lead was extended six minutes later when Ivory Coast was caught in possession, and Teófilo Gutiérrez released substitute Juan Quintero to score. Ivory Coast reduced the deficit through Gervinho, who received a pass from Arthur Boka in the left wing, dribbled past three Colombian players and shot home.[13]

    The second goal of the tournament by James allowed him to join Bernardo Redín and Adolfo Valencia as the only Colombian players to score more than one goal in the World Cup.[14]

    13:00 BRT (UTC−3)
    Colombia 2–1 Ivory Coast
  • Quintero 70'
  • Report

    Attendance: 68,748

    Referee: Howard Webb (England)

    Colombia

    Ivory Coast

    GK 1 David Ospina
    RB 18 Juan Camilo Zúñiga
    CB 2 Cristián Zapata
    CB 3 Mario Yepes (c)
    LB 7 Pablo Armero downward-facing red arrow 72'
    CM 8 Abel Aguilar downward-facing red arrow 79'
    CM 6 Carlos Sánchez
    RW 11 Juan Cuadrado
    AM 10 James Rodríguez
    LW 14 Víctor Ibarbo downward-facing red arrow 53'
    CF 9 Teófilo Gutiérrez
    Substitutions:
    MF 20 Juan Quintero upward-facing green arrow 53'
    DF 4 Santiago Arias upward-facing green arrow 72'
    MF 15 Alexander Mejía upward-facing green arrow 79'
    Manager:
    Argentina José Pékerman
    GK 1 Boubacar Barry
    RB 17 Serge Aurier
    CB 5 Didier Zokora Yellow card 55'
    CB 22 Sol Bamba
    LB 3 Arthur Boka
    CM 20 Serey Die downward-facing red arrow 73'
    CM 9 Cheick Tioté Yellow card 90'
    RW 10 Gervinho
    AM 19 Yaya Touré (c)
    LW 15 Max Gradel downward-facing red arrow 67'
    CF 12 Wilfried Bony downward-facing red arrow 60'
    Substitutions:
    FW 11 Didier Drogba upward-facing green arrow 60'
    FW 8 Salomon Kalou upward-facing green arrow 67'
    MF 6 Mathis Bolly upward-facing green arrow 73'
    Manager:
    France Sabri Lamouchi

    Man of the Match:
    James Rodríguez (Colombia)

    Assistant referees:
    Michael Mullarkey (England)
    Darren Cann (England)
    Fourth official:
    Víctor Hugo Carrillo (Peru)
    Fifth official:
    Rodney Aquino (Paraguay)

    Japan vs Greece

    [edit]
    Arena das Dunas before the Japan x Greece match.

    The two teams had met in one previous match, in the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup group stage, won by Japan 1–0.[11]

    Greece was reduced to ten men in the first half when Kostas Katsouranis was booked twice in eleven minutes. In the second half, Greece had a Theofanis Gekas header saved, while Japan, which needed at least a point to stay alive in the competition, had chances to score through Yoshito Ōkubo and Atsuto Uchida, but the game finished goalless.[15] The result ensured Colombia's qualification to the knockout stage, their first since 1990.[16]

    This was the first clean sheet kept by Greece in World Cup history.[17]

    19:00 BRT (UTC−3)
    Japan 0–0 Greece
    Report

    Attendance: 39,485

    Referee: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)

    Japan

    Greece

    GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
    RB 2 Atsuto Uchida
    CB 22 Maya Yoshida
    CB 15 Yasuyuki Konno
    LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
    CM 16 Hotaru Yamaguchi
    CM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c) Yellow card 12' downward-facing red arrow 46'
    RW 9 Shinji Okazaki
    AM 4 Keisuke Honda
    LW 13 Yoshito Ōkubo
    CF 18 Yuya Osako downward-facing red arrow 57'
    Substitutions:
    MF 7 Yasuhito Endō upward-facing green arrow 46'
    MF 10 Shinji Kagawa upward-facing green arrow 57'
    Manager:
    Italy Alberto Zaccheroni
    GK 1 Orestis Karnezis
    RB 15 Vasilis Torosidis Yellow card 89'
    CB 4 Kostas Manolas
    CB 19 Sokratis Papastathopoulos
    LB 20 José Holebas
    DM 21 Kostas Katsouranis (c) Yellow card 27' Yellow-red card 38'
    CM 2 Giannis Maniatis
    CM 8 Panagiotis Kone downward-facing red arrow 81'
    RW 18 Giannis Fetfatzidis downward-facing red arrow 41'
    LW 7 Georgios Samaras Yellow card 55'
    CF 9 Kostas Mitroglou downward-facing red arrow 35'
    Substitutions:
    FW 17 Theofanis Gekas upward-facing green arrow 35'
    MF 10 Giorgos Karagounis upward-facing green arrow 41'
    FW 14 Dimitris Salpingidis upward-facing green arrow 81'
    Manager:
    Portugal Fernando Santos

    Man of the Match:
    Keisuke Honda (Japan)

    Assistant referees:
    William Torres (El Salvador)
    Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
    Fourth official:
    Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
    Fifth official:
    Aden Marwa (Kenya)

    Japan vs Colombia

    [edit]

    The two teams had met in two previous matches, most recently in a friendly in 2007, and also in the 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup group stage, won by Colombia 1–0.[18]

    Colombia took the lead mid-way through the first half, with Juan Cuadrado taking a penalty kick, shooting low down the middle after Japan centre back Yasuyuki Konno fouled Colombia striker Adrián Ramos in the box.[19] Japan then equalised through Shinji Okazaki's headed goal from a cross from Keisuke Honda on the right in first half stoppage time. Colombia's James Rodríguez was introduced after the half time break, and was credited for providing two assists for two goals scored by Jackson Martínez, on 55 minutes when he shot low to the net with his left foot, and 82 minutes when he curled the ball in from the right of the penalty area with his left foot, before finishing off the scoring with a strike of his own, assisted by Ramos, where he beat the last man before clipping the ball over the goalkeeper.[20] Colombia, which had already qualified for the knockout stage and would do so as group winners if either they didn't lose this match or Ivory Coast did not beat Greece in the other match, finished as group winners with a perfect record of three wins out of three, while Japan, which had to win the match to have any chance to qualify, were eliminated.

    Faryd Mondragón became the oldest player to make an appearance in the history of the World Cup, at the age of 43 years, 3 days, when he came on for the last five minutes of the match, breaking the record of Roger Milla, who played at the 1994 World Cup at the age of 42.[21] He also set the record for the longest time between World Cup appearances as 15 years and 363 days had passed since his last versus England at the 1998 World Cup, breaking Alfred Bickel's record of 12 years and 13 days between appearances (1938–1950).[22]

    16:00 AMT (UTC−4)
    Japan 1–4 Colombia
    Report
  • Martínez 55', 82'
  • Rodríguez 90'
  • Attendance: 40,340

    Referee: Pedro Proença (Portugal)

    Japan

    Colombia

    GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
    RB 2 Atsuto Uchida
    CB 22 Maya Yoshida
    CB 15 Yasuyuki Konno Yellow card 16'
    LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
    CM 14 Toshihiro Aoyama downward-facing red arrow 62'
    CM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c)
    RW 9 Shinji Okazaki downward-facing red arrow 69'
    AM 4 Keisuke Honda
    LW 10 Shinji Kagawa downward-facing red arrow 85'
    CF 13 Yoshito Ōkubo
    Substitutions:
    MF 16 Hotaru Yamaguchi upward-facing green arrow 62'
    FW 11 Yoichiro Kakitani upward-facing green arrow 69'
    MF 8 Hiroshi Kiyotake upward-facing green arrow 85'
    Manager:
    Italy Alberto Zaccheroni
    GK 1 David Ospina (c) downward-facing red arrow 85'
    RB 4 Santiago Arias
    CB 23 Carlos Valdés
    CB 16 Éder Balanta
    LB 7 Pablo Armero
    RM 11 Juan Cuadrado downward-facing red arrow 46'
    CM 15 Alexander Mejía
    CM 13 Fredy Guarín Yellow card 63'
    LM 20 Juan Quintero downward-facing red arrow 46'
    SS 19 Adrián Ramos
    CF 21 Jackson Martínez
    Substitutions:
    MF 5 Carlos Carbonero upward-facing green arrow 46'
    MF 10 James Rodríguez upward-facing green arrow 46'
    GK 22 Faryd Mondragón upward-facing green arrow 85'
    Manager:
    Argentina José Pékerman

    Man of the Match:
    Jackson Martínez (Colombia)

    Assistant referees:
    Bertino Cunha (Portugal)
    Tiago Trigo (Portugal)
    Fourth official:
    Roberto Moreno (Panama)
    Fifth official:
    Eric Boria (United States)

    Greece vs Ivory Coast

    [edit]

    The two teams had never met before.[18] Greece midfielder Kostas Katsouranis (red card in previous match) and Ivory Coast defender Didier Zokora (accumulation of yellow cards) were suspended for the match.[23][24]

    Greece, which had to win to have any chance to qualify for the knockout stage, went in front in the 42nd minute after Cheick Tioté's defensive mistake allowed substitute Andreas Samaris to steal the ball, play a one-two with Georgios Samaras, and run in on goal before shooting past the goalkeeper with his right foot. In the second half, substitute Wilfried Bony equalised with a low right foot finish after Gervinho's pass from the left. As Japan were losing to Colombia in the other match played at the same time, Ivory Coast only required a point to qualify for the knockout stage for the first time.[25] The game looked to be heading for a draw, until Greece won a penalty in injury time when Giovanni Sio tripped Samaras as he was about to strike the ball, and Samaras scored the penalty hitting the ball to the goalkeeper's left. The win meant Greece finished as the group runners-up, and put them into the knockout stage for the first time in its World Cup history (after unsuccessful campaigns in 1994 and 2010), while Ivory Coast were eliminated in the group stage for the third tournament in a row.[26]

    17:00 BRT (UTC−3)
    Greece 2–1 Ivory Coast
  • Samaras 90+3' (pen.)
  • Report

    Attendance: 59,095

    Referee: Carlos Vera (Ecuador)

    Greece

    Ivory Coast

    GK 1 Orestis Karnezis downward-facing red arrow 24'
    RB 15 Vasilis Torosidis
    CB 4 Kostas Manolas
    CB 19 Sokratis Papastathopoulos
    LB 20 José Holebas
    DM 10 Giorgos Karagounis (c) downward-facing red arrow 78'
    CM 2 Giannis Maniatis
    CM 16 Lazaros Christodoulopoulos
    RW 8 Panagiotis Kone downward-facing red arrow 12'
    LW 7 Georgios Samaras
    CF 14 Dimitris Salpingidis
    Substitutions:
    MF 22 Andreas Samaris upward-facing green arrow 12'
    GK 12 Panagiotis Glykos upward-facing green arrow 24'
    FW 17 Theofanis Gekas upward-facing green arrow 78'
    Manager:
    Portugal Fernando Santos
    GK 1 Boubacar Barry
    RB 17 Serge Aurier
    CB 4 Kolo Touré
    CB 22 Sol Bamba
    LB 3 Arthur Boka
    CM 9 Cheick Tioté downward-facing red arrow 61'
    CM 20 Serey Die Yellow card 70'
    RW 8 Salomon Kalou Yellow card 62'
    AM 19 Yaya Touré
    LW 10 Gervinho downward-facing red arrow 83'
    CF 11 Didier Drogba (c) Yellow card 37' downward-facing red arrow 78'
    Substitutions:
    FW 12 Wilfried Bony upward-facing green arrow 61'
    MF 14 Ismaël Diomandé upward-facing green arrow 78'
    FW 21 Giovanni Sio upward-facing green arrow 83'
    Manager:
    France Sabri Lamouchi

    Man of the Match:
    Georgios Samaras (Greece)

    Assistant referees:
    Christian Lescano (Ecuador)
    Byron Romero (Ecuador)
    Fourth official:
    Sandro Ricci (Brazil)
    Fifth official:
    Emerson de Carvalho (Brazil)

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 June 2014.
  • ^ "Match suspensions to be served at the final competition of the FIFA World Cup". FIFA.com. 24 February 2014. Archived from the original on 14 April 2014.
  • ^ "Greece play blame game following World Cup defeat by Colombia". The Guardian. 15 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • ^ "Colombia 3 Greece 0". BBC Sport. 14 June 2014.
  • ^ "World Cup - Colombia ease to win over Greece". Yahoo! Sport. 14 June 2014.
  • ^ a b "Referee designations for matches 5-8" (PDF). fifa.com. 12 June 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2014.
  • ^ "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 June 2014.
  • ^ "Ivory Coast stage World Cup fight back to see off Japan". The Guardian. 15 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • ^ "Ivory Coast 2 Japan 1". BBC Sport. 14 June 2014.
  • ^ "Japan beaten by Drogba-inspired Ivory Coast in World Cup opener". The Mainichi. 15 June 2014. Archived from the original on 18 June 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  • ^ a b "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 29. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 June 2014.
  • ^ "Colombia win again as Juan Quintero's winner sinks skilful Ivory Coast". The Guardian. 19 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • ^ "Colombia 2 Ivory Coast 1". BBC Sport. 19 June 2014.
  • ^ "James Rodríguez iguala a Bernardo Redín y Adolfo Valencia con dos goles" (in Spanish). Mundo Deportivo. 20 June 2014.
  • ^ "Japan 0 Greece 0". BBC Sport. 19 June 2014.
  • ^ "Greece keep Japan at bay after Kostas Katsouranis gets early red card". The Guardian. 20 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • ^ "World Cup - Ten-man Greece hang on for draw against Japan". Yahoo! Sport. 20 June 2014.
  • ^ a b "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 42. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 June 2014.
  • ^ "Colombia post their third group win to put Japan through the exit door". The Guardian. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • ^ "Japan 1 Colombia 4". BBC Sport. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  • ^ "Jackson Martínez scores twice as Carlos Valderrama's side top group to set up Uruguay tie". Daily Telegraph. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  • ^ "Late goals decisive on big day for keepers". FIFA.com. 25 June 2014. Archived from the original on 25 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  • ^ "Goalless Draw Keeps Japan And Greece Alive". The New Indian Express. 20 June 2014. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 22 June 2014.
  • ^ "Colombia edge Ivorians". Kickoff.com. 19 June 2014. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 22 June 2014.
  • ^ "Greece advance with last-gasp penalty to deny Ivory Coast progress". The Guardian. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  • ^ "Greece 2 Ivory Coast 1". BBC Sport. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2014_FIFA_World_Cup_Group_C&oldid=1232093797"

    Categories: 
    2014 FIFA World Cup
    Greece at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
    Colombia at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
    Japan at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
    Ivory Coast at the 2014 FIFA World Cup
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 Spanish-language sources (es)
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    EngvarB from July 2014
    Use dmy dates from July 2014
    Pages using football kit with incorrect pattern parameters
    Commons category link is on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 1 July 2024, at 22:35 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki