Group A - France
Arguably the favourites in the group, although South Africa are the top
seeds, Les Bleus boast some of the best goalkeeping talent at the 2010
tournament. The first choice glovesman is Hugo Lloris, the Olympique
Lyonnais player, and his performances for club and country over the
past few months have been notable to say the least. His stand-out
showings in the two legged play-off against Ireland in November went a
long way towards ensuring the French passage to the final tournament.
He is currently 54 in the Castrol Rankings, perhaps indicating that his
club side's defensive form has not been all it could be this season.
Among those clamouring to be his deputies are Cedric Carrasso (36) of
Bordeaux and Steve Mandanda (599) of Marseille. The form of Monaco's
Stephane Ruffier (50) also makes him an outside shot.
Group B - Argentina
While AZ's Sergio Romero seems to have finally convinced Diego Maradona
of his abilities, there is no second guessing what el Dieguito might do
ahead of the FIFA showpiece. Therefore, Mariano Andujar, the Catania
shot-stopper, may still usurp the long-haired keeper. Andujar is
certain to be on the plane to South Africa but may not command a
starting berth. Nonetheless, his five clean sheets for the Sicilians
since the turn of the year have helped him catapult up the Castrol
Rankings by more than 700 places. Andujar is currently at 448 in the
list.
Current Argentine shot-stopper of choice, Sergio Romero
Group C - England
The Fabio Capello-coached side have selection conundrums all over the
field but it is the dilemma over who keeps goal at South Africa 2010
which is currently unsettling English observers most. Robert Green
(197) of West Ham United and David James of FA Cup semi-finalists
Portsmouth (287) seem to be battling for the number one shirt, while
Capello remains dubious of the credentials of Birmingham's clean-sheet
specialist, Joe Hart. The on-loan Manchester City keeper is England's
top ranked player in his position at a lofty 42 in the Castrol
Rankings. Wigan's Chris Kirkland (267) is another contender but an
injury blighted season may ultimately count him out.
Group D - Germany
Rene Adler was thought to be in command of the starting shirt in
Joachim Loew's Germany team, but his far from convincing performance
against Argentina last week may have planted seeds of doubt in the
Bundestrainer's mind. Bayer Leverkusen, Adler's club side, have begun
to stutter too, so the man who weighs in at 438 in the Castrol Rankings
may yet be replaced. Dependable veteran Hans-Joerg Butt of Bayern
Munich is a few places behind at 477 whilst Werder Bremen's Tim Wiese
is further back at 485. The Nationalmannschaft's safest bet may be
Manuel Neuer of Schalke, who, thanks to his club's gritty and
workmanlike form, finds himself challenging for a Bundesliga title. His
displays have earned him 166th place in the latest rankings. Roman
Weidenfaller of Borussia Dortmund, ranked at 241, is unlikely to be
considered.
German contender Manuel Neuer
Group E - Netherlands
Going forward, there are few teams who would have the measure of the
Oranje. However, in the backline and in goal is where Bert van
Marwijk's side struggle for dominace. The likes of Maarten
Stekelenburg, Michel Worm and Piet Velthuizen lack the commanding
presence of Edwin van der Sar, who insists he will not be tempted,
again, out of international retirement. The Manchester United stopper
is still ranked just outside the top 10 of the Castrol Rankings, at 13
with 812 points.
Group F - Italy
Curiously, Gianluigi Buffon is routinely quoted as the outstanding
goalkeeper in the world, but on current form, the Juventus custodian is
well down the Italian order of shot stoppers. Leading the way is Morgan
De Sanctis of Napoli at 101, up 700 places from the last count, while
Sampdoria's Luca Castellazzi is one behind at 102. Coming in ahead of
Buffon, who, due to Juve's patchy Serie A form is down to 311, are
Bologna's Emiliano Viviano (161), Genoa's Marco Amelia (170), Stefano
Sorrentino of Chievo at 202, Cagliari's Federico Marchetti (229),
Andrea Consigli of Atalanta at 267 and Parma's Antonio Mirante at 307.
Palermo's Salvatore Sirigu is doing well at 401, a 600-place
improvement on his last ranking.
Group G - Brazil
Julio Cesar of Inter benefits from playing behind one of the tightest
defences around at club level, and, thanks to Dunga's relatively
cautious approach, at international level too. However, the former
Flamengo player has proven time and again his point-saving and
match-winning credentials. Currently 55th in the Castrol Rankings, the
30-year-old does not face the stiffest of competition for the gloves in
the Selecao set-up. Gaffe-prone Dida is 79th, though he has not played
for Brazil in four years. Elsewhere, Tottenham's Huerelho Gomes, a
squad member, is at 127.
Group H - Spain
The Spanish have some of the world's foremost goalkeeping talent,
including their captain and talisman, Iker Casillas. The Real Madrid
stopper checks in at 89 in the rankings, perhaps surprisingly not
heading the Iberian list of contenders. Diego Aranzubia of Deportivo
heads the standings at 45 with the likes of Pepe Reina (103) and Sergio
Asenjo (132) competing for squad berths. However, playing at Real
Madrid means that clean sheets do not come easily every week; despite
shipping goals, Casillas has reason to believe that he is one of the
globe's best.