Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Japan win yellow card tiebreaker

FIFA Fairplay points take Japan past Senegal to Round of 16 after Asian team loses to Poland

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Japan and Poland were booed from the pitch in Volgograd after a farcical end to their final Group H match which saw the Blue Samurai qualify for the last 16 despite a 0-1 defeat.

Japan went through by the slimmest of margins --- their fair play record --- after the last 10 minutes were played out like a training match as both sides settled for the result.

They will meet either Belgium or England after reaching the knockout stage for the third time in their history.

When Jan Bednarek scored his first internatio­nal goal in the 60th minute for already eliminated Poland, the score between Colombia

and Senegal stood at 0-0 meaning Japan were going out. But once news filtered through of Yessy Mina’s 74th minute goal for Colombia the match changed for the worse.

The strike meant Colombia would win the group and Japan were ahead of Senegal despite identical points, goal difference and goals scored, because they had received fewer yellow cards.

A cacophony of boos rang out

as hardly any tackles were made in the last 10 minutes as Poland decided any sort of win would be enough and Japan decided not to risk any yellow cards.

Japan coach Akira Nishino made six changes including bringing in attacking pair Shinji Okazaki and Yoshinori Muto for his World Cup debut.

It was they who fashioned the first real opening in the 12th minute of a game played at sedate pace in 36 Celsius temperatur­e.

Bednarek played a blind pass across his penalty area straight to Muto who shifted it to Yuto Nagatomo motoring down the left flank. His whipped cross was met by a diving Okazaki header which flashed wide.

Moments later Muto won possession again outside the box and his fierce shot was parried out of harm’s way by goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski, one of five changes in Poland’s starting line-up.

Polish captain Robert Lewandowsk­i is renowned as a worldclass goal-scorer for Bayern Munich but, as in the rest of Poland’s sorry World Cup campaign, he was seeing little of the ball. Goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima kept his place for the Samurai Blue despite a howler for Senegal’s first goal in the 2-2 draw and repaid Nishino’s faith with a wondrous save to keep the score goalless at half-time.

Piotr Zielinski crossed from the right and Kamil Grosicki found himself unmarked near the penalty. His cleverly-directed header looked destined for the bottom corner until Kawashima made ground to claw it to safety with a right hand at full stretch.

 ?? REUTERS ?? After being booed by the crowd throughout the match, Japan players acknowledg­e following their entry into the World Cup knockout stage for the third time.
REUTERS After being booed by the crowd throughout the match, Japan players acknowledg­e following their entry into the World Cup knockout stage for the third time.

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