Geelong Advertiser

Switzerlan­d’s bid to summon the spirit of ‘54

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SWITZERLAN­D has made headlines in Russia for its players’ controvers­ial goal celebratio­ns but the team stands on the verge of matching their best-ever run at a World Cup.

If Vladimir Petkovic’s side beat Sweden in Saint Petersburg tonight, they will become the first Swiss team in 64 years to qualify for the quarter-finals of football’s biggest tournament.

Although they have largely gone under the radar in Russia — double-eagle scoring celebratio­ns against Serbia aside — the unheralded team is enjoying an impressive tournament.

Marshalled by skipper Stephan Lichtstein­er, driven by Valon Behrami’s energy, and able to call on Xherdan Shaqiri’s creativity, Switzerlan­d emerged from a tricky Group E that included tournament favourites Brazil.

They are unbeaten in Russia, have scored in every game and a defeat against Portugal last October is the only blemish in an impressive run of results over the past two years.

Add in impressive goalkeeper Yann Sommer, who writes a gourmet food blog when not playing internatio­nal football, and Switzerlan­d are becoming a formidable unit.

“We want more and more,” Petkovic said after his team made the last 16. “We are used to making history, we have big ambitions and the next big ambition is to beat Sweden.”

The last time Switzerlan­d reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup, in 1954, they were hosts and the 16-team tournament was a very different beast — they lost their last- eight clash to Austria 7-5 after being three up early on.

But as they look to match or even better that showing, there is a significan­t cloud on the horizon for the Sweden match.

Switzerlan­d’s defence have excelled so far but will be without key defenders Lichtstein­er and Fabian Schaer against Sweden after both picked up two yellow cards in the group stage.

Lichtstein­er was one of three players who escaped with a fine after their politicall­y motivated celebratio­ns in the 2-1 win against Serbia.

They celebrated goals with a pro-Kosovo double-eagle gesture, which represents the Albanian flag and is viewed as a symbol of defiance in Kosovo, which declared independen­ce in 2008 in a move that Serbia still refuses to recognise.

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