Venezuela will aim to continue their impressive winning streak against Bolivia when playing on home turf.
Venezuela are expected to grab all three points when they tussle with Bolivia in Round 4 of the South American 2014 World Cup qualifiers at the Pueblo Nuevo stadium in San Cristobal on Tuesday.

The Venezuelans, who obtained a valuable 1-1 draw with Colombia in Barranquilla on Friday, take on a Bolivia side that also picked up a 1-1 draw, however, against South American giants Argentina at the Monumental stadium in Buenos Aires.

Cesar Farias, the coach of Venezuela, is expected to make a couple of changes to confront the clash with Bolivia. According to reports he will provide Juan Guerra and Luis Manuel Seijas with starts. After the result with Colombia, Seijas declared that if Venezuela don't claim the three points against Bolivia, the point in Barranquilla "won't be worth anything."

"We want to provide the fans with a spectacle and claim the three points," added Seijas.

Bolivia arrive in San Cristobal with high spirits, after shocking the continent with their 1-1 draw with Argentina in Buenos Aires. Gustavo Quinteros, the coach of Bolivia, admitted that "Venezuela have improved heaps and they will be difficult at home."

Although Quinteros has preferred not to reveal his starting eleven, he could make up to three changes in respect to the team he fielded in the Argentine capital. It is highly possible that Ronald Raldes could return to the starting eleven, while Jhasmani Campos is also a possibility.

Players to look out for are Venezuelan attacking midfielder Juan Arango, who is particularly dangerous with dead-ball situations, and Bolivian striker Marcelo Martins Moreno, who scored a brilliant individual goal against Argentina.

In the past three World Cup qualifying campaigns, Venezuela have recorded three successive victories over the Bolivians when playing on home turf. They won 3-1 in the 2002 Korea/Japan World Cup qualifiers, 2-1 in the Germany 2006 World Cup qualifiers and 5-3 on the road to South Africa 2010.

While Bolivia have qualified for three World Cups, the last of them being in 1994, Venezuela are the only team from South America to have never qualified for soccer's biggest competition.