BRAZIL BEAT: MLB players catch World Cup fever
By Associated Press
Jun 13, 2014 4:38 PM CDT
10ThingstoSeeSports - Aerial view of the Maracana stadium is seen during sunset in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, June 8, 2014. The Word Cup soccer tournament is set to begin in just a few days, with the opening match on June 12 and Maracana stadium will host the World Cup Final match on July 13. (AP...   (Associated Press)

DETROIT (AP) — World Cup fever spread before the Detroit Tigers hosted the Minnesota Twins in a Major League Baseball game.

Players in both clubhouses were riveted to TVs as the Netherlands routed Spain 5-1 on Friday, when oohs and ahhs could be heard every few minutes.

Two-time American League MVP Miguel Cabrera loves to watch the game, but said he was not much of a player while growing up in Venezuela.

"I played until I was about 14 years old and was not very good," Cabrera said. "I played defense and only scored one goal in four years."

Cabrera and teammate Victor Martinez, a fellow Venezuelan, were talking about the World Cup a few hours before they played the Twins.

"Victor is the soccer expert in here," Cabrera said.

Martinez predicts the host Brazilians will win the tournament.

"Venezuela has never been in the World Cup," Martinez said. "So, Brazil is my team because they are our neighbors."

— By Larry Lage — www.twitter.com/LarryLage

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ANIMAL ORACLES

BERLIN (AP) — Germany is awash in animal oracles.

Four years after Paul the Octopus correctly predicted the outcome of all seven of the country's World Cup games, some new creatures are making their picks. Suspiciously, though, they both went with Germany.

Regina, a young octopus living in a tank inside the Sea Life aquarium in Berlin, apparently expects the Germans to defeat Portugal in their World Cup opener Monday. The 15-month-old cephalopod prognosticated by opening the lid of one of two boxes installed at a small football goal wall that was dropped into the tank — each containing the same food (parts of two sardines) and covered with a team flag.

Paul, from Oberhausen, died of natural causes in October 2010.

At the zoo in Muenster, an armadillo named Norman quickly rushed through his enclosure toward one of the three small footballs, which was marked with a German national flag. An armadillo is the World Cup mascot.

On Tuesday, a loggerhead turtle named Big Head in Praia Do Forte, Brazil, also made a homer pick — it proved correct, though, when the hosts went on to beat Croatia in the World Cup opener.

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FLOOD FEAR ABATE

SAO PAULO (AP) — Fears that flooding could affect games in Brazil's southern city of Curitiba have abated.

Adriana Kreush, a spokeswoman for Curitiba's City Halls, said Friday the Arena da Baixada stadium, hotels and tourist sites are far away from the rivers that overflowed their banks and that "nothing is stopping the games from being held there as scheduled."

Forecasters have said rain is not expected when the stadium hosts its first World Cup match June 16, with Iran facing Nigeria.

Earlier this week, the floods caused the water flow of world-renowned Iguazu Fall on the border of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay to increase nearly 30-fold, from 1,500 cubic meters per second to 43,000 meters per second, topping the previous record of 36,000 set in 1992.

— By Stan Lehman

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DOWN UNDER

CUIABA, Brazil (AP) — About 15,000 Australia fans have made the 9,000-mile trip to Brazil to cheer on their country in the World Cup, despite grisly predictions that the team — the lowest-ranked in the tournament — will lose all three group matches against Spain, the Netherlands and Chile.

The streets around the Arena Pantanal in Cuiaba were awash with Australian green and gold Thursday hours before the Socceroos' opening game against Chile. It was quite a sight, especially with Brazil football fans wearing the same colors also joining in the pre-match party.

"That's their colors, too?" joked Australia fan Craig Bellamy, 50, whose journey from Newcastle, Sydney, comprised two 14-hour flights. "I just thought they were supporting Australia!"

Holding an Australia flag behind his shoulders and with fireworks exploding in the distance, Bellamy said: "It's unreal. It's been a trip of a lifetime — so far."

— By Steve Douglas — www.twitter.com/sdouglas80

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CANADA SIGHTING

SALVADOR, Brazil (AP) — Canada had rare representation at the World Cup in Friday's rematch between the Netherlands and Spain.

Toronto-born midfielder Jonathan de Guzman was in the starting lineup for the Dutch, one of coach Louis van Gaal's key components for trying to stymie the title holder's quick-touch possession game.

The Canadian national team has appeared just once at the World Cup — in 1986, when it lost all three of its group matches against the Soviet Union, France and Hungary without scoring a goal.

At Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova, several Canadian flags could even be spotted amid the orange jerseys of the Dutch fans.

De Guzman is also familiar with Spain's players, having played at Spanish clubs Mallorca and Villarreal previously.

— By Paul Logothetis — www.twitter.com/PaulLogoAP

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COVERING UP

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Directly across the street from Rio's famed Maracana Stadium, the owner of Rio Bebidas, a store selling beer by Brazilian beverage giant Ambev, ordered his workers to cover up the store sign.

The employees weren't sure why, but they suspected it might have something to do with World Cup sponsorship rules — and the Coca-Cola sunshades that went up on the neighboring restaurants.

— By Jenny Barchfield — www.twitter.com/JennyBarchfield

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PLAYERS TURNED FANS

SAO PAULO (AP) — U.S. central defender Matt Besler made a point to move toward his hotel room window to witness the pandemonium.

He got a quick lesson on just how much soccer means to the fanatical Brazilians, who beat Croatia 3-1 on Thursday to kick off their home World Cup.

"I was up in my room for the second half and I had my window cracked open a little bit," Besler said Friday as the U.S. prepared to travel to Natal for its Monday opener against Ghana. "When Brazil scored those two goals in the second half and again on the final whistle, I heard the entire city of Sao Paulo roar. It gave me chills. It was just so cool. I was watching on my TV and I saw the ref blow the final whistle and then the two-second delay, I heard an eruption in the city. The energy of the country, it's finally here."

For one night, at least, most of the Americans allowed themselves to sit back and enjoy the game for the moment it was.

"Part of us were watching as soccer players and professionals trying to scout a little bit certain teams, but a lot of us, we were watching as fans," Besler said. "We really felt like this whole thing kicked off, because it did."

— By Janie McCauley — www.twitter.com/JanieMcCAP

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Associated Press reporters will be filing dispatches about happenings in and around Brazil during the 2014 World Cup. Follow AP journalists covering the World Cup on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Sports/world-cup-2014

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