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Time waits for no man, not even Zidane who's praying for a win

Zinedine Zidane will celebrate his 34th birthday from the bench on Friday, hoping his team can extend his international career.

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world cup fifa 2006LEIPZIG: The memories of the greatest night in France’s football history are receding faster than Zinedine Zidane’s hairline. Nearly eight years on from a glorious World Cup final when they beat Brazil 3-0 at the Stade de France in Paris with Zidane scoring twice, the French are struggling to build a future as glorious as the days they are leaving behind.  That is not just their long-term future either — it is short-term too because, after allowing South Korea to score nine minutes from time in this Group G match to force a 1-1 draw, their immediate World Cup future is far from assured. Zidane may already, after the events at the Zentralstadion, be consigned to the history books.

Booked just before the end for a thoughtless shove on a Korean defender moments after Thierry Henry fluffed a chance that might have won the match, Zidane will be suspended for France’s last group match against Togo next Friday. If the French fail to win that match they will almost certainly be out of the tournament and a wonderful career will be over.

He has already announced his retirement and has played his last club match, having said goodbye to the Real Madrid fans who saw him at his best. The embers on his illustrious international career are also just flickering in the breeze now. There is no longer enough energy for him to go into the long night of retirement leaving a golden glow behind because Zidane has just gone on a little too long.

Coaches often say there is no room for sentiment in football but coach Raymond Domenech might have allowed a little to cloud his decision to include old faithfuls and not put his trust in younger players. Zidane no longer moves like he used to, no longer creates space for himself in his unique, magical way. His flicks and passes still find their man, of course, but often they are the safe option. The brilliant, telling pass, the vision that opened up the play in ways that few others saw or even knew was there are no longer in his armoury.

In 1998, Zidane missed two games at the World Cup after a foul almost as pointless as the one he committed here when he was sent off for stamping on a Saudi Arabian player with the game already won. France missed him in the next two games against Paraguay and Italy, but they came through to reach the semi-finals and went on to win the showpiece itself on home soil. Now his absence could be a blessing in disguise, with Domenech forced to re-shuffle his starting lineup to pep up his team.

Poignantly,  Zidane did not make it to the end on Sunday. Domenech replaced him with three minutes to go when the maestro walked off a pitch perhaps for the last time as a player in his 104th international. But perhaps there is still more to come. He at least deserves a better finale.

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