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# Brazil are the most prolific team in World Cup history in terms of goals

scored, with 210 so far.


# Italy, the long-standing defending champions (winners in 1934 and 1938),
travelled by boat rather than plane to the 1950 World Cup, a journey of three
weeks from Naples to Santos.
# "Fuleco", the Official Mascot, a three-banded armadillo from the eastern
part of Brazil. He will be 14 years old by the time of the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
# Brazil's World Cup track record is impressive. They have five titles, the
most of any team: 1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002.
# Brazil are the only team to have featured in all 19 World Cups played so far.
# "Football for Hope" has supported over 250 football-based social
programmes in more than 60 countries.
# "Football for the Planet" is the official environmental protection programme
of the World Cup.
#The "adidas Brazuca" is the 12th official World Cup match ball since the
Telstar was introduced for the 1970 edition.
# "All in one rhythm" is the Official Slogan of the 2014 World Cup Brazil. #
Pele is the youngest goalscorer in FIFA World Cup history and the only player
to have won three FIFA World Cups.
# Number 9, the shirt number of Ronaldo, the top goalscorer in World Cup
history with 15 goals.
# The 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil will be the 20th time the event has been
held. It first took place in the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo, in 1930 and
included 13 countries from three continents. The decision to create the
tournament had been taken just two years before in Amsterdam on 26 May
1928.
# The first FIFA World Cup in Brazil in 1950 was an unrivalled success, with
nearly three times as many spectators as the FIFA World Cup in France in
1938. A total of 1,045,246 people watched the games in Brazil - a record that
would stand until England 1966. # All six cities that hosted the FIFA World
Cup in 1950 - Belo Horizonte, Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Recife, Rio de Janeiro and
Sao Paulo - will do so again in 2014, but only Rio's Maracana Stadium will
have been used for both events.
# In the 19 FIFA World Cups so far, six host countries have been crowned
champions: Uruguay (1930), Italy (1934), England (1966), Germany FR
(1974), Argentina (1978) and France (1998), much to the delight of their
home fans. Meanwhile, Brazil (1950) and Sweden (1958) both finished as

runners-up. Chile (1962), Italy (1990) and Germany (2006) all finished in third
place.
# A national team with a foreign coach has never won the FIFA World Cup.
The 18 winning coaches to date have all been in charge of their home nation.
Of these, Italy's Vittorio Pozzo is the only coach to have won the trophy twice,
guiding the Italians to the title in both 1934 and 1938
. # Only once in FIFA World Cup history has there been no European team in
the final, in 1930 when neighbours Argentina and Uruguay battled it out for
glory in Montevideo. Since then, there has always been a European
representative in the deciding game, including the last two which were both
all-European affairs: Italy against France in 2006, and Spain versus the
Netherlands in 2010. In the 1950 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, the final was not
held as a single game, but as four-way final round between Brazil, Uruguay,
Spain and Sweden.
# France has left its own marks on the history of the FIFA World Cup. The
French were involved in the first FIFA World Cup match, against Mexico in
1930; France's Lucien Laurent scored the first FIFA World Cup goal; Les Bleus
took part in the first match to go to extra time, against Austria in 1934;
France's Laurent Blanc scored the competition's first golden goal in 1998; and
Les Bleus were also in the first game to be decided on penalties, against West
Germany in the semi-finals of Spain 1982. The 1998 FIFA World Cup in France
also broke new ground as it featured 32 countries for the first time.
# Chosen to host the final of Brazil 2014, the Maracana will be only the
second stadium to have staged the final twice together with Mexico's Estadio
Azteca.
# Brazil were involved in the three FIFA World Cup finals with the biggest
winning margin, taking the trophy in two of them. In 1958, they defeated
Sweden 5-2 before beating Italy 4-1 in 1970 at the Estdio Azteca. However,
in 1998, A Selecao were on the flipside of the coin when they fell to a 3-0
defeat to a Zinedine Zidane-inspired France.
# Fifteen goals across three FIFA World Cups make Ronaldo the top scorer in
the competition's history. Still active, Miroslav Klose has hit the back of the
net 14 times, equalling the number scored by German compatriot Gerd
Muller.
# France 1998 holds the record for the most goals scored in a single
tournament with 171 goals in 64 games. But in terms of averages,
Switzerland 1954 still leads the way with 140 goals in just 26 matches: an
impressive average of 5.38 per game.
# To this day, 76 national sides have taken part in at least one FIFA World

Cup. Brazil is the only country to have been present at every edition, followed
by Germany and Italy - both of whom have taken part in 17 out of a possible
19 final tournaments.

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