Honduras vs. Nigeria5 p.m.BST/1 p.m. local time/12 p.m. ET, Mineirao, Belo HorizonteThe third-place play-off in any major football tournament is usually a big anti-climax. But the Olympic Games is no normal competition. The bronze medal and national pride is up for grabs, and Honduras and Nigeria will be desperate to triumph.Both beaten semi-finalists will have a point to prove after failing to overcome the form book against the two favourites. The Central Americans' cagey playing style was blown apart by rampant Brazil, while the Super Eagles were perhaps unlucky to go down to Germany after matching the eventual winners across the 90 minutes.Road to the bronze medal matchHondurasGroup D: 3-2 vs. AlgeriaGroup D: 1-2 vs. PortugalGroup D: 1-1 vs. ArgentinaQuarter-final: 1-0 vs. South KoreaSemi-final: 0-6 vs. BrazilNigeriaGroup B: 5-4 vs. JapanGroup B: 1-0 vs. SwedenGroup B: 0-2 vs. ColombiaQuarter-final: 2-0 vs. DenmarkSemi-final: 0-2 vs. GermanyPlayer to watchHe has been Honduras' stand-out player throughout the improbable run to the Olympic semis, and now Anthony Lozano is looking for one more big performance to seal his country's first-ever football medal.The Tenerife striker barely touched the ball as Honduras were overrun against Brazil. But there is no doubt about his talent, and if Nigeria allow their opponents to play he is the man who can make the Super Eagles sweat.Key battlesBryan Acosta vs. Jon Obi Mikel. The two captains go head-to-head on Saturday, in a midfield battle that will shape the fate of this bronze medal clash. Mikel has all the experience, but Acosta has proved himself a feisty competitor over the course of the games and will have no qualms about taking on the Chelsea star.Brazil vs. Germany9.30 p.m.BST/5.30 p.m. local time/4.30 p.m. ET,EstadioMaracana, RiodeJaneiroIt is the match all of Brazil has been dreaming of since Rio de Janeiro was first announced as the host of the 2016 Olympic Games. Rogerio Micale's team have battled through to the final, and a win on Saturday will clinch the nation's first-ever gold in the men's football competition.Neymar and his team, however, will not have it easy. Germany have proved a more than accomplished team on the way to the gold-medal match, tightening up early defensive problems to waltz through the second half of the tournament.A potent mix of youth and more experienced heads has brought the Europeans to the brink of their own triumph, and they go into the Maracana knowing they are more than capable of upsetting the home crowd. The women showed the way on Friday with football gold; now the men will want to seal an historic treble as world champions and double Olympic victors.Will Neymar continue his stunning knockout form and galvanise his inexperienced team-mates to the gold' Or will the Germans' potent counter-attacking play prove the difference in Rio' And how much will the 7-1 thrashing back in 2014 weigh on Brazilian minds going into that crunch match'All these questions will be answered over 90 minutes on Saturday evening, and whatever the result an enthralling clash is all but guaranteed.Road to the finalBrazilGroup A: 0-0 vs. South AfricaGroup A: 0-0 vs. Iraq Group A: 4-0 vs. DenmarkQuarter-final: 2-0 vs. ColombiaSemi-final: 6-0 vs. HondurasGermanyGroup D: 2-2 vs. MexicoGroup D: 3-3 vs. South KoreaGroup D: 10-0 vs. FijiQuarter-final: 4-0 vs. PortugalSemi-final: 2-0 vs. Nigeria Player to watchBoth in those first fruitless outings and in the flowing attacking play of the latter rounds, Brazil's dynamic strikeforce has been the focus of attention at this Olympic Games. Germany, however, pose quite a different threat, and more than in any other game the hosts must be impeccable in midfield.For that reason, Beijing Guoan star Renato Augustocould prove key to gold. The former Bayer Leverkusen man knows the German style of play inside out, and while other players have hogged the spotlight at Rio he has been a steady presence as the side's deep-lying playmaker. Key battlesZeca vs. Serge Gnabry. If Brazil can keep Arsenal's flying winger under control, they will take a big step towards their first-ever Olympic gold. Gnabry has been the player of the tournament so far for Germany, breaking at will from the left wing and netting six goals to drive the nation to the brink of glory.Opposite him on Saturday will be Santos full-back Zeca, who has his own reasons to put in a glittering performance. With Dani Alves growing old a regular position on the right side of the Selecao defence may soon be up for grabs, and the youngster has done plenty to argue for inclusion in the senior side once this campaign comes to an end.Not as forward-minded as the Juventus star, but a solid marker and not afraid to cross the halfway line, Zeca faces the game of a lifetime as he comes face-to-face with another man looking to prove a point as he seeks to fight his way back into Arsene Wenger's plans.
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