China Daily

Senegal channels past glory to advance

-

AL RAYYAN, Qatar — Kalidou Koulibaly literally drew inspiratio­n on his captain’s armband, writing the No 19 on it in memory of one of Senegal’s most loved players.

Then Koulibaly became one himself.

The Senegal captain scored the winner in the 2-1 victory over Ecuador on Tuesday, putting his team into the last 16 at the World Cup despite the absence of the injured Sadio Mane, the team’s best player and considered one of the best strikers on the planet.

The No 19 was to honor Papa Bouba Diop, the Senegal midfielder who scored the winning goal against defending champion France in the opening game of the 2002 World Cup. It was one of Senegal’s greatest soccer moments and a victory that started that team’s run to the quarterfin­als — still Senegal’s best performanc­e.

“We wanted to make him proud. We wanted to give homage to him,” Koulibaly said of Diop, who died at the age of 42 exactly two years ago Tuesday. “He was the one who made me dream when I was a boy. This was something we weren’t going to let slip.

“Thank God I was there to send that ball into the back of the net.”

Only a win against Ecuador would have taken Senegal through to the next round from Group A, and Koulibaly scored the goal that made it happen at Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium.

A freekick from Idrissa Gueye bounced off an opponent and came his way. Koulibaly threw out his right foot and hit it past Ecuador goalkeeper Hernan Galindez in the 70th minute. Koulibaly then sprinted toward the corner flag and slid on his knees to celebrate.

The African champion took the lead after a first-half penalty from Ismaila Sarr. But Moises Caicedo equalized when he was left unmarked after a corner kick in the 67 th minute.

At 1-1, Ecuador was going to advance and Senegal was out.

That result would have been as agonizing as Senegal’s early eliminatio­n four years ago, when the team finished the group stage with a loss to Colombia and level on points with Japan. Senegal was eliminated on a fair-play rule because it had picked up two more yellow cards than the Japanese.

This year, Senegal coach Aliou Cisse was forced to reinvent his forward line following the injury to Mane, who sent the team a message before the match. Koulibaly said the Bayern Munich striker has also been an inspiratio­n for the team despite not being in Qatar.

“When it came to his (Mane’s) injury, two thirds of the world probably doubted that we would be able to qualify,” Koulibaly said.

Senegal lost its opening match against the Netherland­s 2-0 but gave itself a chance with a 3-1 win over host Qatar. Still, the team needed a victory over Ecuador.

“We were up against a brick wall,” Cisse said.

The 24-year-old Sarr won the penalty when he was knocked over by a clumsy challenge from Ecuador defender Piero Hincapie just before halftime. He side-footed his penalty into the bottom right corner in the 44th minute and almost the entire Senegal bench and coaching staff ran to him.

Sarr also headed over to the corner flag to celebrate while putting his hands over his eyes.

He can look now, because Senegal has at least one more match to play.

History quest

Senegal now has a chance to match, or even better, the country’s scintillat­ing run to the quarterfin­als in 2002, when Cisse was the captain and the team equaled Africa’s best performanc­e at a World Cup. No African team has ever made the semifinals.

Ecuador emotion

It was the end of a strong campaign for Ecuador and striker Enner Valencia, who scored his team’s first three goals at this year’s World Cup and played against Senegal despite struggling with a bad knee strain. Valencia was left consoling Galindez, who was welling up near the end of the game and couldn’t hold back the tears after the final whistle as he sobbed on Valencia’s shoulder.

 ?? AP ?? Kalidou Koulibaly celebrates scoring Senegal’s second goal during a 2-1 World Cup Group A victory over Ecuador at Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday. The result sent the African side through to the last 16 and ended Ecuador’s involvemen­t.
AP Kalidou Koulibaly celebrates scoring Senegal’s second goal during a 2-1 World Cup Group A victory over Ecuador at Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday. The result sent the African side through to the last 16 and ended Ecuador’s involvemen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong