Shanghai Daily

Stunning Swede win keeps alive Germany hopes

- SOCCER (AP)

IN the aftermath to one of the most memorable victories in Germany’s long history of success, Toni Kroos and Marco Reus had a message for the critics back home waiting to see them fail.

“We got a lot of criticism and some of it was justified,” Kroos said. “We had the feeling that a lot of people in Germany would have been happy if we’d gone out today, but we don’t make it that easy.”

No, Germany didn’t make it easy. Nothing in this tournament has come easy for Die Mannschaft. Yet the Germans sit with three points after Saturday’s 2-1 win over Sweden and a chance to avoid what befell Italy and Spain, the previous two defending champions who failed to advance from the group stage.

It’s all unexpected in a way. Germany’s lackluster opening performanc­e and loss to Mexico was unexpected. Falling behind to the Swedes 0-1 at halftime was unexpected. And certainly after going down to 10 men, Kroos’ curling strike in the fifth minute of injury time to secure Germany’s win was unexpected.

After nearly a week of hearing what was wrong following the loss to Mexico, the defending champion was on the verge of an even louder uproar. One moment, one strike changed it all.

“I think that’s an impression we have that many people in Germany were looking forward to us bowing out of the tournament here,” Reus said. “But I think we’ve shown a team spirit here despite Sweden going up 1-0.”

If Kroos’ shot was deflected, a little too high, or didn’t have the perfect whipping curl, Germany would be sitting with one point, needing a victory in its last group game and a lot of help to keep alive a streak of making the knockout round in every World Cup since 1938.

But Kroos was perfect. The perfect curl, the combo play with Reus catching Sweden by surprise just enough that defenders and goalkeeper Robin Olsen were unable to react. It was the latest goal ever scored by Germany in a World Cup match that didn’t go to extra time.

It also created chaos in Group F. What seemed straight forward deep into stoppage time was turned upside down. Mexico, which has been among the more impressive teams with two wins, could be eliminated if it doesn’t get at least a draw against Sweden. Even South Korea after two losses could still advance with a win over Germany and help from Mexico. The situation will create a lot of scoreboard watching on Wednesday when Mexico and Sweden play in Yekaterinb­urg and Germany and South Korea meet in Kazan.

The lineup Germany coach Joachim Loew will use against South Korea will again be different. Loew made four changes to the lineup against Sweden, including benching Mesut Ozil for the first time in his senior team career in a major internatio­nal tournament. The moves eventually seemed to pay off.

There will be even more changes against South Korea. A shaky defense will be without Jerome Boateng, who picked up a red card. Although, Loew is expecting Mats Hummels back after he missed the Sweden match with a neck injury. It was the HummelsBoa­teng combo that showed vulnerabil­ity against Mexico, and the pairing of Boateng and Antonio Ruediger was also unsteady against the Swedes.

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