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Copa America semifinals: Pressure on Brazil and Argentina, while Chile and Peru play with house money


RIO DE JANEIRO -- The Gods of Football gifted us two bona fide rivalries in the Copa America semifinals.
Headlining is Brazil vs. Argentina (Tuesday, 8:30 p.m. ET; ESPN+), the "SuperClasico de las Americas" and, in terms of pedigree, one of the few international matchups that lives up to the hype, usually in terms of quality and almost always in terms of incident.
But the "Pacific derby" -- Chile vs. Peru (Wednesday, 8:30 p.m. ET; ESPN+) -- is an intriguing understudy, rich in a rivalry that often transcends football and not just over the paternity of the "Pisco Sour."
Copa America semifinals: Pressure on Brazil and Argentina, while Chile and Peru play with house money

Indeed, one of the twists is that no matter what happens, Chile and Peru are playing with house money, whereas Brazil and Argentina are pretty much assured inquests, pulling of hair and gnashing of teeth if they stumble at this hurdle.
Let's start with the big one. Brazil and Argentina have faced off for more than 100 years and reached 12 World Cup finals between them, winning seven. They have produced three unquestioned GOAT candidates -- Pele, Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi -- spawned oodles of sociological treaties about the importance of futbol/futebol to their national psyches and generally have been the yin to each other's yang.
In 105 previous meetings, there have been 41 wins for Brazil, with 38 for Argentina and 26 draws. If you discount friendlies, then Argentina are ahead, 18 to 17.
Not that too many encounters have been very friendly; from pitch invasions (1925), to Brazil walking off (1937), to Argentina walking off and Brazil scoring the winning penalty into an empty goal (1939), to police invading the pitch to stop the teams fighting (1946), to the "Battle of Rosario" (1978), to Maradona's horror tackle and red card at the World Cup (1982), to Maradona's genius right-footed pass for Claudio Caniggia and subsequent "holy water" controversy(1990), to five players getting sent off in the Copa America (1991) to Tulio's "hand of the devil" goal (1995), this rivalry has had plenty of controversy.
The last time they squared off in the Copa America was back in the 2007 final. Twelve years later, two of the protagonists are still around: Dani Alves, who came on and scored in a 3-0 Brazil win, and Messi, who had just turned 20 at the time.
Some reckon Tuesday's clash will be different, since many players are teammates in their day jobs. Messi is at Barcelona with Philippe Coutinho and Arthur. Gabriel Jesus lines up with Nicolas Otamendi and Sergio Aguero at Manchester City. Leandro Paredes and Angel Di Maria share a dressing room with Marquinhos; and Thiago Silva and Dani Alves at Paris Saint-Germain. Paulo Dybala and Alex Sandro break bread at Juventus.
Yeah, right. And the Easter Bunny loves hiding those eggs ...
The fact is, globalization, commercialization and, yeah, cold hard cash might have turned these guys into colleagues and maybe even friends, but this is different. This is international football. This is playing for your country.
And the usual pressure and stakes are ratcheted up further by circumstances. Brazil are still scarred by the aftereffects of the Mineirazo, the 7-1 World Cup semifinal defeat against Germany in 2014 that induced a one-way ticket to "The Twilight Zone." (Yes, they return to the scene of the crime for this game.)
It will take time to expiate, and another major trophy might accelerate the process, but the 2015 Copa America went off the rails when Neymar was banned and ended with a penalty shootout exit against Paraguay in the quarterfinals. A year later, Brazil failed to get out of their Copa America Centenario group.
Hopes were high for a fresh start at World Cup in Russia and plenty jumped on the Tite bandwagon, only for it to be derailed by Roberto Martinez and Belgium in the last eight. It is 12 years and counting since the Selecao's last major tournament win, not including a pair of Confederations Cup triumphs in 2009 and 2013.
There is still plenty of faith in Tite, and the major mitigating factor of Neymar's absence this time around weighs heavily in a rational assessment of the tournament. But this is Brazil and this is home soil, which means reason will quickly go through the power shredder should things go awry against the old enemy.

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