LONDON — Former world champions Italy and Germany are among seven countries who could confirm their places in next year's World Cup soccer Finals in Brazil when the qualifying tournament swings back into action after a three-month break. The Netherlands, twice finalists, could also qualify from Europe with wins on both Friday and Tuesday while Switzerland and Bosnia could go through if they win and other results go their way. The United States would seal the first qualifying place from the CONCACAF region with victories in Costa Rica and at home to Mexico while Argentina can guarantee a trip to neighboring Brazil if it beats Paraguay Tuesday. The former world champion, which tops the South American standings, could even qualify before it faces the bottom-placed Paraguayans if results go its way when it has a rest day Friday. With the opening match in Sao Paulo on June 12, just over nine months away, host Brazil and the four Asian qualifiers of Japan, Australia, Iran and South Korea are the only countries through so far. On Friday, the seven nations who will join already-qualified Ivory Coast, Egypt and Algeria in the final African qualifying round will be known. The 10 teams will be paired up and play each other home and away to decide Africa's five qualifiers for Brazil. In Asia, Jordan and Uzbekistan, neither of whom have reached the Finals before, will meet over two legs on Friday and Tuesday to decide who qualifies for a playoff against the eventual fifth-placed South American team for a World Cup place. Italy, the European Group B leader, faces second-placed Bulgaria in Sicily knowing that victory, and a win against the Czech Republic Tuesday, will give it a spot in the Finals. The main talking point in Italy has been who might succeed coach Cesare Prandelli if, as expected, he announces as soon as qualification is secured that he will leave the job after four years at the end of the Finals. The Italian players know what to expect in Brazil after their experience in the Confederations Cup in June when they reached the semifinals before losing to Spain on penalties. They will be missing five first-choice players against Bulgaria including the suspended Mario Balotelli, Riccardo Montolivo and Pablo Osvaldo, but the trio will return for the game against the unimpressive Czechs. Germany is likely to secure its place sooner rather than later, with Group C matches against Austria Friday and the Faroe Islands Tuesday. It would be the Germans' 16th successive appearance in the Finals — the last one they missed was when the World Cup was held in Brazil in 1950 following World War Two. Louis Van Gaal's Netherlands team is the only one with a perfect record after winning its opening six matches and it is seven points clear of Hungary and eight clear of third-placed Romania. The Dutch are likely to seal their place in the Finals following a trip to Estonia Friday and a visit to tiny Andorra Tuesday. Anything other than two wins would be a major surprise. World champion Spain should keep its grip on Group I, which it leads by one point from France. Coach Vicente del Bosque is without several key players for Friday's tie against Finland. Finnish coach Mixu Paatelainen has described the game as “a David and Goliath situation,” although Finland did hold Spain to a 1-1 draw in Gijon in March. — Reuters