Download Game Brazil X Germany 2014

Posted on by
Brazil's stand-in captain David Luiz was left in tears after his side was thrashed 7-1 in the semifinal by Germany. Brazil, hoping to win the tournament for a sixth time, trailed 5-0 at halftime. Coach Luiz Felipe Scolari said it was the worst day of his life.

Ecuador (Orlando) & Chile (Houston) - March 21 & 26, 2019. John Brooks, D, 6-4, 175, 1/28/93, Berlin, Germany, Wolfsburg (Germany), 36/. Goals in MNT history, putting back a rebound just 35 seconds into the game. Playing 41 minutes in a 1-1 draw on Oct. 10, 2014 in East Hartford, Conn. Peru & Brazil - Sept. 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™. Exclusive games, the chance to win cool football prizes and much, much more. Brazil 2014: Germany triumph. World Cup 2014, the game. Soccer World Cup Brazil. Goalkeeper Premier: Football Game. Goalkeeper Italian: Football Game. Tell us what you think about World Cup 2014. Leave a review or share a tip. You need to be signed in to post a comment! Join for free or sign in. Jul 9, 2014 - FullMatch FIFA World Cup 2014 Brazil vs Germany Semi Final, Full Match Replay World. For Quality 720p HD, download from Links we provide above. Watch Also: Patriots vs Falcons Super Bowl 51 Full Game Replay. 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™ - Matches - Brazil-Germany. Exclusive games, the chance to win cool football prizes and much, much more. Brazil 1-7 Germany (Brazil 2014) 08 Jul 2014. Germany Football The fallout when East & West Germany met. Read more on Jesus scores as Brazil beat Saudi Arabia. With all 20 episodes available to download now. Explore the BBC.

Flying Dutchman
Rodriguez rattled
Hail Cesart
Costa Rica's rampage
World Cup: The top 10 matches
<
2
4
6
8
10
>>
  • The 2014 World Cup consisted of 64 games
  • Brazil's 7-1 thrashing by Germany the highlight
  • Spain's 5-1 drubbing by Spain one to remember
  • Tim Howard's performance for Team USA a standout

(CNN) -- So that's it for another four years.

After 64 games, a record-equaling 171 goals and a month of drama, tension and entertainment, the World Cup is over.

It has been a thrilling ride, from Neymar inspiring Brazil to victory over Croatia in the opening game, the Netherlands smashing Spain, Costa Rica shocking the world on the way to the quarterfinals and Germany and Argentina providing the final chapter in an unforgettable episode.

We've put our heads together here at CNN to come up with our top-10 matches from the tournament -- but do you agree?

Download Game Brazil X Germany 2014 Roster

You can tweet us at @CNNFC with your answers and suggestions.

1) Brazil 1-7 Germany

It was the moment Brazil was supposed to book its place in the World Cup final and exorcize the ghosts of 1950.

A chance for the host nation to show it was ready to erase the pain and heartache of the 'Maracanazo' -- the day where it was beaten by Uruguay 64 years ago.

Not for 39 years had Brazil suffered defeat in a competitive home fixture -- but that record was well and truly shattered.

Without its influential captain Thiago Silva and injured talisman Neymar, Brazil was blown away in an incredible first half at Belo Horizonte's Mineraio Stadium.

Thomas Muller took advantage of some dire Brazilian defending to fire home the first after 11 minutes as Germany started at breakneck speed.

Miroslav Klose then added a second, making him the World Cup's leading scorer of all time with 16 as Brazil was left shell shocked.

That goal sparked six minutes of madness as Germany scored four times without reply. Gucci mane bricks mp3 download youtube.

Toni Kroos drove home a third from the edge of the penalty area before adding a fourth 120 seconds later.

Before Brazil even had time to draw its breath, Sami Khedira made it five -- leaving the German players unsure whether to celebrate or laugh out of embarrassment.

Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari might have hoped his side would at least show some pride in the second half -- but any hope of a fightback proved futile.

The Germans agreed to ease back following a halftime team-talk, but could have wracked up eight or nine such was their dominance.

In the end Joachim Low's team had to end with seven following two goals from substitute Andre Schurrle.

Oscar grabbed a late consolation for Brazil but even the most optimistic supporter would not have been able to enjoy such a moment.

'My message for the Brazilian people is this: Please excuse us for this performance,' Scolari told reporters after the game.

'I'm sorry that we weren't able to get to the final.'

2) Spain 1-5 Netherlands

It was the game everybody was looking forward to -- and ended up being a game nobody will ever forget, especially if you happen to be Spanish.

The defending champion arrived in Brazil with doubts over its ability to repeat its success of four years ago -- but nobody expected Spain to implode like it did.

It had all started so well. Xabi Alonso fired home a penalty to give Spain the lead and David Silva came close to adding a second only for Jasper Cillessen to make a fine save in the Dutch goal.

But just before the break it all began to go wrong.

Netherlands forward Robin van Persie scores against Spain.

There appeared little danger when Daley Blind took up possession on the left but his fine cross picked out Robin van Persie, who leaped like a flying salmon to head the ball over the stranded Iker Casillas and into the empty net.

It was a magnificent header, a goal worthy of winning any game, let alone an equalizer.

What followed was astonishing, as the Dutch blew their opponents away in one of the most one-sided halves of football the World Cup has ever seen.

Arjen Robben, who missed a golden chance to put the Netherlands ahead in the 2010 final, fired home a second before Stefan de Vrij made it 3-1.

Casillas then failed to control a backpass and van Persie took advantage to fire home his second.

There was still time for Robben to add a fifth as Spain's defense was left decimated -- and the dominant force in world football of recent times was on the road to an embarrassing group-stage exit from the tournament.

3) Australia 2-3 Netherlands

It was one of the most memorable moments of the tournament -- and it came from a man who will surely go down as one of Australia's greatest footballers.

Trailing 1-0 to the Dutch following Robben's strike, Tim Cahill equalized just minutes later with an incredible strike.

Ryan McGowan produced the perfect cross and Cahill met the cross first time with an exquisite volley which flew off the underside of the crossbar and into the net.

It was a goal which could be compared to Marco van Basten's magnificent strike at the 1988 European Championships which is still replayed over and over to this day.

Tim Cahill hammers #AUS level against the #NED in Porto Alegre. The best goal of #Brazil2014? #CNNWorldCuppic.twitter.com/D1pq9s4AHl

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) June 18, 2014

The 34-year-old Cahill has scored five goals across three World Cups -- the most by an Australian.

Academia

Australia, beaten in its opening game by Chile, then took a shock lead when Mile Jedinak fired home a hotly-contested penalty kick nine minutes after the break.

But the Dutch roared back with van Persie netting an equalizer before substitute Memphis Depay struck the winner.

4) Brazil 2-1 Colombia

It was billed as the battle between two golden boys -- Neymar against Colombia's James Rodriguez.

But it was heartbreak for both following a pulsating encounter in which the myth of Brazil's beautiful game was finally extinguished.

Thiago Silva's early goal gave Brazil the lead in the quarterfinal before a rasping free kick by the captain's central defensive partner David Luiz made it 2-0 to the host nation.

A nation sighs with relief as Brazil ends hopes of the neutrals' favorite team: http://t.co/CLOV660GY7#CNNWorldCuppic.twitter.com/lQn4TPplYz

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) July 4, 2014

Neymar, who had cut a peripheral figure for most of the night, was then forced off with a back injury following a foul by Carlos Zuniga.

The fractured vertebra would rule the home hero out of the rest of the tournament and deny Brazil any real chance of winning the title.

With Neymar off the field, Colombia hit back through Rodriguez -- whose penalty 10 minutes from time set up a tense finale and ultimately made him the tournament's top scorer with six in five games.

The 23-year-old, who had been kicked around all night by Brazilian defenders, tried to create an equalizer as his teammates piled forward.

But Brazil's physical approach managed to subdue the talents of Colombia, which had impressed in its first World Cup appearance since 1998.

5) Belgium 2-1 USA

Belgium entered the tournament as one of the 'dark horses' but its performances did little to inspire any confidence it would challenge for the title.

Having reached the last 16 with victories by one-goal margins over Algeria, Russia and South Korea, Belgium faced a U.S. side buoyant after progressing from a difficult group.

Jurgen Klinsmann's men had been unfortunate to lose 1-0 to Germany and earlier produced two fine performances to defeat Ghana and draw with Portugal -- a result which ultimately denied Cristiano Ronaldo any further chance to stake his claim as the world's best player.

And in Salvador it once again gave a performance to remember, with goalkeeper Tim Howard the hero.

OK RT @WithDrake: .@darth should really do something nice for @TimHowardGK.. Just to show our support. pic.twitter.com/n0Bz4ssSbC

— darth™ (@darth) July 1, 2014

Howard, who plays in England's Premier League with Everton, made a record 16 saves in an enthralling contest.

After a goalless 90 minutes, Belgium forged ahead through Kevin de Bruyne and then extended its advantage courtesy of substitute Romelu Lukaku's strike.

Two goals down at halftime of extra time, the Americans' brave effort looked dead and buried.

But from nowhere, teenage substitute Julian Green netted on his competitive debut to halve the deficit.

The U.S. threw everything at the Belgian defense, with Jermaine Jones firing agonizingly wide when he looked set to score.

Captain Clint Dempsey, so often the hero for Team USA, then went close with a clever free-kick routine -- but Belgium held out for a quarterfinal place.

6) Brazil 1-1 Chile (Brazil won 3-2 on penalties)

After an unconvincing run to winning Group A, Brazil came up against a Chile team which had defeated defending champion Spain in impressive fashion.

On the 26 occasions Chile had ventured onto Brazilian turf to face the host nation, it had lost 20 and drawn six -- not a record to inspire confidence ahead of a round of 16 clash.

But Jorge Sampaoli's side, led by the talented Arturo Vidal and Alexis Sanchez, arrived with a confidence derived from a series of impressive performances.

Even after falling behind to David Luiz's early strike, Chile refused to buckle and leveled through Sanchez before the break -- his 10th goal in 14 international appearances.

Brazil star Neymar breaks down in sheer relief after the win over Chile.

The second half consisted of both sides taking it in turns to try to find an elusive winner -- but it was Chile which came closest right at the end of extra time.

Substitute Mauricio Pinilla received the ball just outside the penalty area before swiveling sharply and smashing an audacious effort against the crossbar.

In the end, it was left to penalties to separate the sides, with goalkeeper Julio Cesar proving the hero.

Cesar, cast as the villain in South Africa four years ago after his error led to Brazil losing in the quarterfinals, saved two penalties in the shootout.

And when Gonzalo Jara's effort hit the inside of the post, Cesar ran away to celebrate a dramatic victory following a titanic tussle.

7) Ghana 1-2 USA

It was one of the most dramatic goals of the tournament and it came from a man wearing the red, white and blue of the U.S.

John Brooks scored an 84th-minute winner and then broke down on the pitch in shock as his goal secured victory over Ghana.

The U.S. had taken an early lead through captain Clint Dempsey but Ghana's 82nd minute equalizer looked to have denied the Americans victory.

A fast start and a dramatic finish. #USA opens with a last-gasp win over #GHA: http://t.co/Ppw02JJKwe#CNNWorldCuppic.twitter.com/b7fxCsCLeU

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) June 17, 2014

Beaten in the 2010 World Cup by Ghana, the U.S. was determined to gain revenge.

And substitute Brooks proved the hero, heading home from close range to seal an opening game victory.

8) Uruguay 1-3 Costa Rica

Nobody expected Costa Rica -- a nation of just under five million people -- to do anything but make up the numbers in Brazil.

Jorge Luis Pinto's side lined up in a group with three former world champions in Uruguay, Italy and England.

First up it faced Uruguay -- a team which finished fourth at the 2010 tournament and won the Copa America the following year.

Edinson Cavani's 24th-minute penalty gave Uruguay the advantage -- but that was only the start of the story.

Joel Campbell leads #CRC to shock win over #URU - and celebrates in style: http://t.co/AAnx7KglHL#CNNWorldCuppic.twitter.com/6KUyjbZBM3

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) June 14, 2014

Costa Rica hit back nine minutes after the break when Joel Campbell equalized, before Oscar Duarte added a shock second and Marcos Urena grabbed a third to seal a momentous victory.

'Los Ticos' then beat Italy and drew with England to top the group, and reached the quarterfinals for the first time after edging Greece on penalties.

9) Nigeria 2-3 Argentina

After toiling to a last-gasp 1-0 win over Iran, Argentina arrived in Porto Alegre to face a Nigeria team also aiming to qualify for the last 16.

In a game which thrilled from the moment Lionel Messi fired Argentina into a third-minute lead, both sides went all out for victory.

Nigeria hit back within 60 seconds through Ahmed Musa before Messi fired home a free kick on the stroke of halftime.

Lionel Messi stars as #ARG beats #NGA. Read our on the whistle report: http://t.co/SVWVFKSxli#CNNWorldCuppic.twitter.com/V6fnU7H05b

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) June 25, 2014

But the African champion refused to buckle and, within two minutes of the restart, Musa curled home a stunning effort to level again and become the first player from his country to score more than once in a World Cup match.

Nigeria, which had lost each of its three previous World Cup fixtures against Argentina, showed little sign of fear as it went chasing all three points.

But just three minutes after it had pulled level, poor defending allowed Marcos Rojo time and space to bundle home a winner.

However, Stephen Keshi's team still went through as group runner-up, reaching the last 16 for the first time since 1998.

So impressed with Messi was the Nigeria coach that he commented that the forward was from a different planet -- Jupiter.

10) Germany 2-2 Ghana

Germany had never lost to an African team -- and it wasn't about to start when Ghana showed up.

Having thrashed Portugal 4-0 in its opening game, the German juggernaut took a 1-0 lead through Mario Gotze early in the second half.

In the 'Group of Goals,' Miroslav Klose matches Ronaldo's record to save Germany: http://t.co/Pp2JReRoje#cnnworldcuppic.twitter.com/pyoxdKKE7F

— CNN Football Club (@CNNFC) June 21, 2014

But in the stifling heat of Fortaleza, Ghana produced a stunning comeback to lead 2-1 with two goals in nine minutes.

First, Andre Ayew equalized with a bullet header before Asamoah Gyan ran clear to lash the ball past Manuel Neuer.

Ghana was flying but within eight minutes it was brought down to earth with a bump as Klose poked home his 15th World Cup goal to equal former Brazil star Ronaldo's record.

Both teams had chances to win the game late on but a point apiece was a fair result following a cracking contest.

Top StoriesDownload game brazil x germany 2014 score
Top Stories
  • Construction and preparation for the 2018 World Cup have cost $11.8 billion for Russia.
  • The tournament comes amid allegations of corruption against FIFA, soccer's international governing body.
  • FIFA is expected to rake in about $6 billion in revenue from the 2018 World Cup, up 25 percent from the previous tournament.
Here's who gets rich off the World Cup

The 21st FIFA World Cup kicked off Thursday in Moscow, with billions of people expected to watch soccer's superstars play for national pride in the world's most prestigious tournament.

The World Cup is the most lucrative and costliest soccer event because those who pay for the tournament are not necessarily those who see its profits. FIFA, soccer's organizational leader around the world, rakes in billions of dollars in revenue every four years from the World Cup, while the nations that host the tournament foot a bill of $10 billion or more.

Twitter makes a push on video content with the FIFA World Cup

The 2018 tournament is being held in 11 Russian cities, beginning with 32 teams in a knockout tournament format. The winner is crowned July 15.

Construction and preparation for the tournament have handed an $11.8 billion bill to Russia, according to USA Today, with more than 70 percent coming from public funding.

Teams will win portions of the $400 million in total prize money up for grabs, according to FIFA, from $8 million per team for participating to $38 million for the winner.

Banks such as UBS and Goldman Sachs have run algorithms to predict the winner, with the former picking Germany and the latter choosing Brazil. The teams last faced in the semifinal of the 2014 World Cup, with Germany demolishing Brazil in a 7-1 victory.

What is FIFA?
Lionel Messi of Argentina drives the ball during a match between Argentina and Peru.

The International Federation of Association Football is the governing body of soccer, as well as the organizer for many of the sport's international tournaments. The association was created in the early 1900s to provide a single body to oversee soccer, as the sport's popularity and wealth rose during the turn of the 20th century.

Based in Zurich, FIFA is designated legally as a nonprofit association, even though it brings in profits upwards of hundreds of millions of dollars each year.

FIFA continues to face heavy scrutiny as the 2018 World Cup begins, after investigations in 2015 brought forward allegations of corruption and bribery against many of the highest-ranking FIFA officials. The U.S. Department of Justice in 2015 indicted 41 FIFA officials, government leaders — including the then-current or past presidents of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama — and corporate executives with charges of racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering, for being involved 'in a 24-year scheme to enrich themselves through the corruption of international soccer.' The FBI has continued to investigate FIFA for the past three years.

Part of the allegations against FIFA include awarding Russia with the 2018 World Cup and Qatar with the 2022 competition. The association completed an internal investigation in 2014, which it did not release despite declaring in a summary of the investigation that its findings exonerated FIFA. Those declarations were described by even the lead investigator hired by FIFA, U.S. federal prosecutor Michael Garcia, as 'materially incomplete.'

Criticism extends beyond Russia's shady bid for the World Cup to how it enriches its president, Vladimir Putin, and his friends. One example of corrupt leaders becoming tournament benefactors is Ramzan Kadyrov, the Chechen republic's autocratic leader and an ally of Putin. The New York Times and nonprofit Human Rights Watch looked closely at how the Egyptian national soccer team and its global superstar player, Mohamed Salah, were being used by Kadyrov to boost the latter's thuggish image.

The U.S. froze Kadyrov's assets in December, listing him in sanctions regarding human rights abuses. His rule of Chechnya is one 'where extrajudicial killings, torture, enforced disappearances are common,' Human Rights Watch said, and he exerts a 'near-total repression of critics, journalists and L.G.B.T. people.'

Download Game Brazil X Germany 2014 Score

When The New York Times asked FIFA about why a World Cup team would train in Chechnya, a FIFA representative told the newspaper in an email, that 'through its activities, FIFA does not legitimize any regimes.'

How much it costs the host country?
Getty Images

The nation that hosts the World Cup has its team automatically qualified for the tournament but that status comes with a heavy price on the host nation's economy.

In essence, FIFA requires bids to host the World Cup to include massive tax exemptions for the association. Germany offered FIFA an estimated $272 million in tax exemptions when it hosted the 2006 World Cup, with South Africa and Brazil following suit in 2010 and 2014, respectively. The agreements establish tax-free zones for the World Cup venues, with FIFA's corporate partners being exempt from income and sales taxes.

Download Game Brazil X Germany 2014 Full

Brazil spent an estimated $15 billion to build stadiums and transportation, among other infrastructure, for the 2014 World Cup. The most expensive of the stadiums, Mane Garrincha Stadium, cost $550 million and only served a handful of events in the months after the tournament — and it is now used a parking lot for buses.

Telemundo chairman on 2018 World Cup

Russia may not be spending quite the $51 billion it did for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi but costs have continued to rise, most recently to nearly $12 billion.

State officials in Russia claim the World Cup will add $26 billion to $31 billion to the national economy. Arkady Dvorkovich, Russia's former deputy prime minister, claimed that preparations have already added about $14 billion to the country's GDP — the equivalent of 1 percentage point — as well as about 220,000 jobs. The officials did not specify how contributions to the economy from the World Cup were counted separately, a point of dispute among critics of the state.

FIFA hauled in $4.8 billion in revenue from the 2014 World Cup, turning a $2.6 billion profit for the association. Broadcast revenue topped $2.43 billion, while sponsorships and ticket sales brought in $1.6 billion and $527 million, respectively.

Germany Brazil 2014 Score

The 2018 World Cup is expected to rake in about $6 billion in revenue for FIFA, up 25 percent from 2014. With as many as 3.2 billion people expected to watch the tournament, broadcast revenue is expected to rise to $3 billion.

WATCH: Veteran sportscaster Andres Cantor on World Cup hype
Veteran sportscaster Andres Cantor on World Cup hype