Ka-pi96 said:
I'd say Colombia have produced some good talent in recent years though, Peru not so much, but Colombia have. Although it is worth noting that the economy in Colombia/Peru is a fair bit worse off than in Argentina or Uruguay. As for the others, are they really as interested in football as the top European/South American countries? I don't think so. Australians and South Africans would rather play Rugby or Cricket. The Chinese are usually one of the top olympic medal earners so it's obvious where their top atheletes are going (although with all the investment they currently putting in to football who knows how that could change things for their national team in the long term). India is obsessed with cricket, if they liked football as much as they did cricket then they'd have a good team, but they don't. Japan & Korea prefer to play baseball rather than football. There have been some great players of Moroccan/Algerian origin (they just usually end up playing for France ). Egypt and Tunisia are significantly poorer than the top South American countries, their economies are actually at a similar level to Peru. As for Saudi I'd assume there just isn't as much interest there as elsewhere. It seems most of the Arab investment in football is coming from the significantly smaller UAE or Qatar rather than Saudi. For a lot of African countries there just isn't the infrastructure there for a lot of players. Brazil may have been a fairly poor country when they rose to the elite but they did have a top league. No African countries really have that. It seems a lot of the money invested in African youth football is from European teams so the African players often end up eligible to play for a European country as well after moving there at a young age. Although there have been times where it looked like an African country could emerge as a great footballing nation, so maybe it will happen sooner or later. As for Turkey... that's harder to explain. Maybe it's the fault of Germany stealing all the good Turkish footballers though |
The only reason Turkey has been a somewhat decent team in the past two decades is because of all the German-born Turkish players that learned how to play at a high level during their youth in German clubs. Turkey needs a much better youth system.