Italy vs Costa Rica World Cup 2014: Predictions, Preview, Odds to Win, Date, Time of Azzurri, Los Ticos Match

Italy and Costa Rica are set to go head-t0-head in a World Cup 2014 Group D match on Friday, June 20.
Italy vs Costa Rica World Cup 2014: Predictions, Preview, Odds to Win, Date, Time of Azzurri, Los Ticos Match
Italian head coach Cesare Prandelli (L) gesturing during the FIFA 2014 World Cup friendly football match Spain vs Italy at the Vicente Calderon stadium in Madrid on March 5, 2014 and Costa Rica's Colombian coach Jorge Luis Pinto (R) celebrating during a Group D football match between Uruguay and Costa Rica at the Castelao Stadium in Fortaleza during the 2014 FIFA World Cup on June 14, 2014. (DANI POZO/AFP/Getty Images)
6/18/2014
Updated:
6/18/2014

Italy and Costa Rica are set to go head-t0-head in a World Cup 2014 Group D match on Friday, June 20.

The game will kick-off at 12:00 p.m. EDT at Arena Pernambuco, Recife.

Here are some odds to win for the game.

Paddy Power

Italy: 1/2

Costa Rica: 6/1

Draw: 16/5

Bet 365

Italy: 4/7

Costa Rica: 11/2

Draw: 16/5

Sky Bet

Italy: 8/15

Costa Rica: 5/1

Draw: 14/5

Here is an Associated Press preview of the match.

Costa Rica Performance an ‘Alarm Bell’ for Italy

MANGARATIBA, Brazil (AP) — Costa Rica’s 3-1 impressive win over Uruguay was one of the biggest surprises in the opening matches of the World Cup.

It certainly got Italy’s attention.

“That alarm bell could be an advantage for us,” Azzurri midfielder Daniele De Rossi said. “It should help us enter prepared like we did against England. If they had lost 3-0 or 4-0 to Uruguay maybe we wouldn’t. But now I’m sure that won’t happen.”

Coming off an impressive 2-1 win over England, Italy faces Costa Rica on Friday at the Arena Pernambuco in Recife.

Costa Rica entered the World Cup ranked 28th and was expected to be the doormat squad in Group D alongside three former champions that have accounted for seven titles between them — four for Italy (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006), two for Uruguay (1930, 1950) and one for England (1966).

“It’s a squad that surprised everyone,” De Rossi added. “Nobody expected them to beat a big team like Uruguay so handily.”

Costa Rica and Italy each have three points but the central American side tops the group on goal differential. A win for either Italy or Costa Rica would just about assure a spot in the next round.

Italy will be wary of Costa Rica forward Joel Campbell, the 21-year-old who scored one goal and set up another against Uruguay.

“I faced Campbell with Olympiakos in the Champions League and he already impressed me then,” Italy goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu said.

While Sirigu performed admirably against England, he could return to the bench with captain Gianluigi Buffon working his way back from left ankle and knee injuries.

Italy coach Cesare Prandelli will also probably make a change in defense, with Giorgio Chiellini moving over from left back to take over for Gabriel Peletta in the center and Ignazio Abate coming on at fullback. In midfield, Brazilian-born Thiago Motta could replace De Rossi, who had neck pain after the England game.

The match will kick off at 1 p.m. local time (Noon EDT/1600 GMT) and — depending on the weather — that could mean playing under a scorching sun.

“Last year we played Japan in Recife at 9 p.m. and we were dying,” De Rossi said, recalling how the Azzurri struggled to overturn a two-goal deficit and beat Japan 4-3 in a wild Confederations Cup match. Costa Rica is “more accustomed to this climate but I think both squads would accept time outs.”

Italy was upset that time outs were not invoked during the England game in Manaus, although FIFA explained that the heat level wasn’t high enough to warrant breaks.

The Italians combated the heat in Amazon jungle city by relying on a high-percentage passing strategy and minimal running. Expect more of the same against Costa Rica, which also boasts PSV Eindhoven forward Bryan Ruiz at playmaker.

“Their forwards are very agile and physical like England’s,” De Rossi said. “We need to play a similar match to the one we played against England. They know how to defend in one unit and they have quality up front, especially at center forward.”

Indeed, Costa Rica conceded just seven goals in 10 matches of the final CONCACAF qualifying phase.

It’s only the second meeting between Italy and Costa Rica, with the Azzurri having won a friendly 1-0 before the 1994 World Cup. But helped by Costa Rica’s performance against Uruguay, Italy is studying its next opponent attentively.

Predictions

Epoch Times: 2-1 to Italy

Bloomberg Sports: 2-0 to Italy

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.