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There have been others hampered by injury. Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon played only half of a match in Italy's poorest World Cup showing since 1974, while Franck Ribery failed to follow in Zinedine Zidane's footsteps for France after an injury-blighted season at Bayern Munich.
Spain's Fernando Torres still has a chance. The 26-year-old striker has struggled since undergoing knee surgery in April, but his team has reached the semifinals. That's been largely due to the scoring prowess of David Villa, who leads the World Cup with five goals.
"It's been a difficult tournament for me because my fitness is bad, but I'm improving every game," Torres said.
Diego Forlan has also cemented his status among the world's best marksmen. He scored a vital free kick to keep Uruguay alive in the quarterfinals against Ghana before tucking away his penalty as his nation prevailed in a shootout.
Another striker who has starred is Miroslav Klose, who seemed washed up after a season on the substitutes' bench for Bayern Munich. The rest has done him well, as he's already scored one more goal in the World Cup -- four -- than he did all season in the Bundesliga.
A new group of talented youngsters have also made their mark on the world stage. The Netherlands has been aided by 22-year-old wingback Gregory van der Wiel, while 23-year-old striker Luis Suarez has scored three times in Uruguay's run to the semifinals.
Germany has probably the two best youngsters to emerge in Mesut Oezil, 21, and Thomas Mueller, 20.
What's most startling about Oezil is how composed he looks on the ball, slipping passes left and right with startling ease. Add to that his darting runs into the box and he looks like a young Kaka, a description few Germans familiar with their team's typically stoic play could have imagined a few years back.
Mueller may be the star of the tournament so far. After only one full season as a Bayern first-team player, the attacking midfielder has had a series of match-winning performances, scoring twice as Germany hammered England 4-1 and another in the quarterfinal win over Argentina.
Mueller will be suspended for the semifinal against Spain after picking up his second yellow card on Saturday.
"It will be a great loss," Germany coach Joachim Loew said.
Mueller might not possess Rooney's vigor, Ronaldo's flashiness or Messi's natural elegance on the pitch. But there's hardly been a more dangerous player in the tournament.
[Associated Press;
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