BBC Sport, 2 December 2009
Fifa World Cup draw: Cape Town, Friday 4 December. Coverage: BBC Two/online from 1715 GMT, Jonathan Pearce commentating

Fifa has confirmed England will be one of eight seeded teams when the World Cup draw takes place on Friday.
They will thus avoid favourites Spain and Brazil, who are two of the other seeded sides, in the group stage.
Argentina, Germany, Netherlands, holders Italy and hosts South Africa make up the remaining seeded nations.
The 32 qualifiers will be assembled into eight groups on Friday in Cape Town when the draw is made for next summer's tournament from 1745 GMT.
England are ranked only ninth in the Fifa world rankings, but their impressive qualification campaign has been rewarded.
Portugal, currently ranked fifth, and France (seventh) had problems making the big tournament in South Africa and have thus missed out on the seedings - which reflect October's positions in the official table rather than the November ones.
France, who controversially qualified in a play-off against Ireland with a Thierry Henry handball, won the tournament in 1998 and were beaten finalists last time in Germany.
Portugal eliminated England in their last two major tournaments, both times through penalty shoot-outs.
BBC Radio 5 live's sports news correspondent Gordon Farquhar said: "Portugal and France are the dangerous floaters in Friday's draw."
The eight seeds will all be in pot one, with the remaining three pots drawn on regional boundaries.
Each will face one team in pot three - a team from Asia, north or central America, or Oceania - one team from pot three - which has five African and three South American sides - and one from the exclusively European pot four.
A worst case scenario on Friday would arguably see Fabio Capello's side take on France, Ivory Coast and the USA, while a far easier proposition on paper would have England facing Slovenia, Algeria and New Zealand.
Fifa said in a statement: "Hosts South Africa will be automatically positioned as A1, the other seeded teams will be drawn into the other groups B-H, but will always be in position "1" of their group.
"Groups will be drawn from A to H and the positions in the group will be drawn for pots two to four.
"Geographical criteria will also be respected, meaning that no two teams from the same confederation will be drawn in the same group (except European teams, where a maximum of two will be in a group).
The feeling was the October rankings most closely represented the best teams in the tournament
Jerome Valcke, FIFA general secretary
"For example, South Africa cannot play the African teams from pot three and Argentina and Brazil cannot be drawn against the three remaining South American teams."
FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke said there was no agenda against France as a result of the play-off controversy from their game with the Republic of Ireland.
Valcke said: "In the past the seedings have been determined by a mixture of world rankings and performances in past World Cups but this time the feeling was the October rankings most closely represented the best teams in the tournament."
Had the November rankings been used then England would have missed out and France been seeded.
Valcke added: "We made the decision last month that the October rankings would be used because they were fairer - countries who had been involved in the play-offs would have had an unfair advantages because they would have played more games and that affects their rankings.
"This is not a case of wanting Holland to be seeded in France, just that the feeling was the October seedings represented the best teams."
The draw for the finals, being staged from June 11 to July 11, will be made in a 90-minute television spectacular shown in the UK on BBC Two.
Pots for Friday's draw: eight groups of four countries to be drawn, each group containing one country from each pot.
Pot 1 (seeds): South Africa, Brazil, Spain, Holland, Italy, Germany, Argentina, England
Pot 2 (Asia, Oceania and North/Central America): Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Australia, New Zealand, USA, Mexico, Honduras
Pot 3 (Africa and South America): Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria, Algeria, Paraguay, Chile, Uruguay
Pot 4 (Europe): France, Portugal, Slovenia, Switzerland, Greece, Serbia, Denmark, Slovakia
Fifa World Cup draw: Cape Town, Friday 4 December. Coverage: BBC Two/online from 1715 GMT, Jonathan Pearce commentating

Fifa has confirmed England will be one of eight seeded teams when the World Cup draw takes place on Friday.
They will thus avoid favourites Spain and Brazil, who are two of the other seeded sides, in the group stage.
Argentina, Germany, Netherlands, holders Italy and hosts South Africa make up the remaining seeded nations.
The 32 qualifiers will be assembled into eight groups on Friday in Cape Town when the draw is made for next summer's tournament from 1745 GMT.
England are ranked only ninth in the Fifa world rankings, but their impressive qualification campaign has been rewarded.
Portugal, currently ranked fifth, and France (seventh) had problems making the big tournament in South Africa and have thus missed out on the seedings - which reflect October's positions in the official table rather than the November ones.
France, who controversially qualified in a play-off against Ireland with a Thierry Henry handball, won the tournament in 1998 and were beaten finalists last time in Germany.
Portugal eliminated England in their last two major tournaments, both times through penalty shoot-outs.
BBC Radio 5 live's sports news correspondent Gordon Farquhar said: "Portugal and France are the dangerous floaters in Friday's draw."
The eight seeds will all be in pot one, with the remaining three pots drawn on regional boundaries.
Each will face one team in pot three - a team from Asia, north or central America, or Oceania - one team from pot three - which has five African and three South American sides - and one from the exclusively European pot four.
A worst case scenario on Friday would arguably see Fabio Capello's side take on France, Ivory Coast and the USA, while a far easier proposition on paper would have England facing Slovenia, Algeria and New Zealand.
Fifa said in a statement: "Hosts South Africa will be automatically positioned as A1, the other seeded teams will be drawn into the other groups B-H, but will always be in position "1" of their group.
"Groups will be drawn from A to H and the positions in the group will be drawn for pots two to four.
"Geographical criteria will also be respected, meaning that no two teams from the same confederation will be drawn in the same group (except European teams, where a maximum of two will be in a group).
The feeling was the October rankings most closely represented the best teams in the tournament
Jerome Valcke, FIFA general secretary
"For example, South Africa cannot play the African teams from pot three and Argentina and Brazil cannot be drawn against the three remaining South American teams."
FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke said there was no agenda against France as a result of the play-off controversy from their game with the Republic of Ireland.
Valcke said: "In the past the seedings have been determined by a mixture of world rankings and performances in past World Cups but this time the feeling was the October rankings most closely represented the best teams in the tournament."
Had the November rankings been used then England would have missed out and France been seeded.
Valcke added: "We made the decision last month that the October rankings would be used because they were fairer - countries who had been involved in the play-offs would have had an unfair advantages because they would have played more games and that affects their rankings.
"This is not a case of wanting Holland to be seeded in France, just that the feeling was the October seedings represented the best teams."
The draw for the finals, being staged from June 11 to July 11, will be made in a 90-minute television spectacular shown in the UK on BBC Two.
Pots for Friday's draw: eight groups of four countries to be drawn, each group containing one country from each pot.
Pot 1 (seeds): South Africa, Brazil, Spain, Holland, Italy, Germany, Argentina, England
Pot 2 (Asia, Oceania and North/Central America): Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Australia, New Zealand, USA, Mexico, Honduras
Pot 3 (Africa and South America): Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria, Algeria, Paraguay, Chile, Uruguay
Pot 4 (Europe): France, Portugal, Slovenia, Switzerland, Greece, Serbia, Denmark, Slovakia



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