BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil — Much is made of Brazil’s Jogo Bonito — the Beautiful Game — with its slick passes, hip-swiveling dribblers, joyful celebrations, and internationallyknown stars such as Pelé, Ronaldo, Ronaldinho, and newest sensation Neymar, who will miss Tuesday’s semifinal against Germany with a fractured vertebra. The German team, on the other hand, conjures up images of a well-oiled, drama-free machine —organized, efficient and powerful. Germany, a three-time World Cup champion, has a reputation for having a tough defense and being predictably successful. The Germans have reached 10 of the past 13 World Cup semifinals, including the past four, but have been unable to win the title since 1990. In recent years, the German team has added an offensive-minded, fast-paced, attacking style with technically gifted players such as Mesut Oezil, Thomas Mueller, Toni Kroos and Mario Goetze. That is one reason many experts predict Germany will beat a depleted Brazil team in the semifinal and go on to win tournament. Die Mannschaft has become, dare we say, a scoring machine. Bundesliga players have scored 30 goals in this World Cup, more than players from any other league in the world. They also lead the tournament in assists (23). Mueller…