A small piece of football history will be made in Johannesburg when Brazil play North Korea for the first time, perhaps the most incongruous pairing thrown up by the World Cup draw.
Brazil are five-time winners and the world's top-ranked side; most of their players are superstars on a global level.
The majority of North Korea's squad are unknowns, insulated from the intense glare of the world's biggest tournament in their secretive homeland. At 105th, they are also the lowest-ranked team at the competition.
The images projected by the two nations are similarly far apart.
Brazil is synonymous with an unfettered joy of expression, illustrated perhaps most vividly down the years by its football team.
Think of North Korea, however, and thoughts instinctively turn to a political regime, whose military spending and belligerent foreign policy earned them a place alongside Iraq and Iran in former United States president George W Bush's 'Axis of Evil'.
Their domestic media were described as "so suppressed they are non-existent" by campaign group Reporters Without Borders and the few interviews that have appeared from inside the squad have been full of cliches.
"Perhaps there is no other team in the world who would be fighting with the same dedication to please the leader and to bring fame to their motherland," said coach Kim Jong-Hun.
North Korea's domestic game is predictably impenetrable.
Clubs do not participate in Asian continental competitions, partly due to their failure to abide by international transfer rules, but unfortunately for Kim, Fifa were sufficiently clued up about the country to spot his attempt to fill one of the three mandatory goalkeeper places in his 23-man squad with an extra striker, Kim Myong-Won.
BBC World Service's Richard Fleming, who followed the national team on a tour of France in 2009, says North Korea's players are "very dismissive of the west, and the western media".
He added: "I knew that, they knew that and they knew that I knew that. There was very much a coldness and mistrust, but also maybe a fear on their part."
Michael Church, Asia correspondent for World Soccer magazine, tried to track down the team at last December's East Asian Games in Hong Kong, yielding similar results.
"While the rest of the teams were staying in downtown Hong Kong where all the tourists stay, they were set in an outdoor recreation centre as far away from prying eyes as possible," he added.
"It was surrounded by hedges and fences and locked gates and set away from the road. They were completely isolated, which is exactly the way they wanted it."
Headlines about North Korea in the build-up to the tournament have hardly been positive.
The decision to accept an invitation to base themselves in Zimbabwe - the only one of the 32 teams to do so - led to anger among the local population because North Korea has been involved in training government troops.
Meanwhile, there have been reports that some of North Korea's ticket allocation has been handed to China and that those left at home could be unable to watch the finals if the South Korean TV coverage they depend on falls victim to escalating tensions between the two nations.
Through it all, however, North Korea have the eternal appeal of the underdog.
And that appeal is intensified by their performance in their only previous World Cup appearance 44 years ago.
By Mike Henson
Brazil are five-time winners and the world's top-ranked side; most of their players are superstars on a global level.
The majority of North Korea's squad are unknowns, insulated from the intense glare of the world's biggest tournament in their secretive homeland. At 105th, they are also the lowest-ranked team at the competition.
The images projected by the two nations are similarly far apart.
Brazil is synonymous with an unfettered joy of expression, illustrated perhaps most vividly down the years by its football team.
Think of North Korea, however, and thoughts instinctively turn to a political regime, whose military spending and belligerent foreign policy earned them a place alongside Iraq and Iran in former United States president George W Bush's 'Axis of Evil'.
Their domestic media were described as "so suppressed they are non-existent" by campaign group Reporters Without Borders and the few interviews that have appeared from inside the squad have been full of cliches.
"Perhaps there is no other team in the world who would be fighting with the same dedication to please the leader and to bring fame to their motherland," said coach Kim Jong-Hun.
North Korea's domestic game is predictably impenetrable.
Clubs do not participate in Asian continental competitions, partly due to their failure to abide by international transfer rules, but unfortunately for Kim, Fifa were sufficiently clued up about the country to spot his attempt to fill one of the three mandatory goalkeeper places in his 23-man squad with an extra striker, Kim Myong-Won.
BBC World Service's Richard Fleming, who followed the national team on a tour of France in 2009, says North Korea's players are "very dismissive of the west, and the western media".
He added: "I knew that, they knew that and they knew that I knew that. There was very much a coldness and mistrust, but also maybe a fear on their part."
Michael Church, Asia correspondent for World Soccer magazine, tried to track down the team at last December's East Asian Games in Hong Kong, yielding similar results.
"While the rest of the teams were staying in downtown Hong Kong where all the tourists stay, they were set in an outdoor recreation centre as far away from prying eyes as possible," he added.
"It was surrounded by hedges and fences and locked gates and set away from the road. They were completely isolated, which is exactly the way they wanted it."
Headlines about North Korea in the build-up to the tournament have hardly been positive.
The decision to accept an invitation to base themselves in Zimbabwe - the only one of the 32 teams to do so - led to anger among the local population because North Korea has been involved in training government troops.
Meanwhile, there have been reports that some of North Korea's ticket allocation has been handed to China and that those left at home could be unable to watch the finals if the South Korean TV coverage they depend on falls victim to escalating tensions between the two nations.
Through it all, however, North Korea have the eternal appeal of the underdog.
And that appeal is intensified by their performance in their only previous World Cup appearance 44 years ago.
By Mike Henson
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