Sibling rivals line up for different teams at World Cup

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June 8 : Four sets of brothers will compete at the World Cup, all for different countries in a reflection of how steady migration around the world has had an impact on football.

Desire Doue and his older brother Guela are French-born, but while Paris St Germain starlet Desire plays for Les Bleus, Guela is an overlapping fullback for the Ivory Coast from where their father hails.

The Williams brothers Inaki and Nico are both Basque-born, and the 23-year-old Nico was player of the match when Spain beat England in the European Championship final two years ago.

Older brother Inaki, who turns 32 next week, played once for Spain too, but only in a friendly, which qualified him after a hiatus to switch allegiance and declare for Ghana, the country from where his parents migrated.

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Also in the Ghana side is the 30-year-old Dutch-born defender Derrick Luckassen, who was added at the last minute to the World Cup squad as an injury replacement and joins his half-brother Brian Brobbey at the tournament.

Brobbey, 24, is a back-up striker for the Netherlands, going into the tournament in Canada, Mexico, and the United States on the back of a strong second half of the Premier League season with Sunderland. They share the same mother but have different fathers.

Australia selected Scottish-born centre-back Harry Souttar, 27, while his two-year-older brother John will be playing for Scotland. They were born in Aberdeen, but their mother is Australian, and Harry switched his allegiance seven years ago after being capped at junior level by the Scots.

In the opening stage of the tournament, there are no scheduled meetings between any of the siblings, but only last week, Desire watched from the stands in Nantes as Guela swept home the opening goal to help the Ivorians beat France 2-1 in a warm-up friendly.

BROTHERS TEASED BEFORE THE MATCH

"Sure, we teased each other a bit before the match,” Guela told reporters afterwards. "In the end, we're family and we're very happy for each other."

The two brothers, born in Angers in northwestern France, took their first steps together at Stade Rennais, but Guela, who is three years older, was overshadowed by his younger brother’s prodigious talent, which has seen him move to PSG and win back-to-back Champions League honours.

Migration to Europe over the last decades has opened a major pool of talent for African national teams who dip into the diaspora ranks for players. World Cup participants like Algeria, Cape Verde, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Morocco, Senegal, and Tunisia have more European-born players in their 26-man squad than those born at home.

There has been only one case of siblings squaring off against each other at the World Cup, and it happened in back-to-back tournaments.

Jerome Boateng was at the back for Germany against his older half-brother Kevin Prince, who suited up for Ghana, in a 1-0 win for the Germans in Johannesburg.

Four years later, the pair were at opposite ends again in Fortaleza when the group game ended 2-2.

“Of course, it was something special, but somehow it was also different four years later,” said Jerome Boateng.

“In 2010, it was truly something new, something extraordinary. I don't want to say it's become commonplace – because a World Cup is never commonplace. But we also played against each other quite a few times in the Bundesliga,” he added.

(Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Source: Reuters

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