Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 Qualifying round the qualification for the World Cup 2010 in South Africa. watch today's match France Vs Serbia. Don't mess this match look on your PC and watch this match live.
France
vs
Serbia
France vs Serbia Live Streaming Match
Match scheduled:
Date : September 9, 2009
Time : 19:00 until 21:00 GMT
World Cup 2010 Qualifying Live
France vs Serbia live streams and TV channels
Belgrade - Serbia hosts tottering France on Wednesday hoping that it can wrap up direct entry to the 2010 World Cup.
Serbia is on 18 points from seven matches in Group 7, four more than France, with only three matches remaining. France unexpectedly stumbled against Romania in Paris on Saturday, in the form of a 1-1 draw, allowing Serbia welcome breathing space.
A win would leave Serbia untouchable atop the group. A draw may largely mean the same, as the Serbs would need only three points from the two remaining matches, at home against Romania and at Lithuania. 'It's in our hands,' striker Nikola Zigic was quoted in the Press daily as saying.
But Zigic also warned against too much euphoria in the runup to the match against the former world and European champions. 'The draw in Paris provided us with a huge lead in points, but there are three matches left in qualifications with nine points up for grabs,' he said.
Euphoria however still seeped from headlines and interviews two days ahead of the match, to be played in a packed Red Star stadium in Belgrade. 'Thank you, Romania,' said the daily Danas, while the mass- circulation Blic carries a forecast by the Serbian football legend Dragan Dzajic, who predicted: 'France will not dare to attack us in Belgrade.'
A possible renaissance by Hungary has been obscured by Portugal's travails in Group One but the Magyars, who went into the weekend lying second, can earn wider recognition by taking points from Cristiano Ronaldo and Co in Budapest on Wednesday and again in Lisbon next month.
Hungarian football appeared to have sunk to rock bottom in the qualifiers for Euro 2008 but their climb back to respectability began immediately after that campaign with a 3-1 friendly win over Italy. Their Dutch coach, Erwin Koeman, elder brother of Ronald, has sought to build on that victory and a team who include Fulham's Zoltan Gera are likely to be enriched by the rise of Gergely Rudolf, a 24-year-old striker who was Hungary's domestic player of the year last season and will this term tackle the Champions League with Debrecen. There is, however, a suspicion that Hungary's position is false, since their four wins have been against the group's weakest teams and, in addition to the games against Portugal, they must still travel to Denmark and host Sweden, who beat them 2-1 in Gothenburg.
Portugal, meanwhile, have come up with a time-honoured way of solving their scoring problems – giving a passport to a Brazilian. Liédson has been prolific for Sporting Lisbon, convincing the country's authorities to fast-track his naturalisation in time for the group's denouement.
Others in danger include France, who go to Group Seven leaders Serbia on Wednesday needing a victory to remain in the hunt for direct qualification. If it was a surprise that the French federation kept faith in Raymond Domenech after the misery of Euro 2008, even more eyebrows were raised when they declined to ditch him after their dreadful start in World Cup qualifying, when they lost to Austria and had to recover from two goals down before drawing in Romania. A few narrow wins revived them to a degree, but despite sporadic flashes of brilliance from Thierry Henry, Franck Ribéry and the new chouchou of French football, the Bordeaux schemer Yoann Gourcuff, Les Bleus remain off colour.