Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Germany, Brazil setbacks have stirred Cup into life

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qualificat­ion was a breeze and they arrived in Russia looking like football’s Roger Federer. Only to be sucker-punched.

Mexico beat them on speed, stamina, technique and concentrat­ion. They made Germany look ponderous by overrunnin­g them in midfield.

Sami Khedira looked older than 31 and his mates in the middle, Toni Kroos and Mesut Oezil, didn’t tackle as well as Mexico. Mexico also showed they knew how to exploit Joshua Kimmich’s love of going forward by playing the out-ball to their speedy winger.

The match typified that modern football is about penetratio­n and not possession. Most statistics from the game were in Germany’s favour save the one that matters most: goals scored.

So, I think it is time we devote attention to how the game is run in Mexico because players such as Hirving Lozano don’t fall from trees.

In six touches, they have landed the World Cup’s most telling blow so far. They have a strong league, they beat Neymar’s Brazil to win the 2012 Olympic gold and have been world under-17 champions twice.

I know Germany’s results in the recent friendlies haven’t been good --- the 2-1 win against Saudi Arabia now looks worse than it did then --- but they shouldn’t hit the panic button. They need to look beyond Khedira though.

Brazil may justifiabl­y claim to being Gabriel Jesus being denied a penalty and Steven Zuber did nudge Miranda, something that happens all the time inside the box during set-pieces, but they will need to introspect why they couldn’t unlock Switzerlan­d’s defence.

There was a plan to the way the Swiss frustrated Neymar and it didn’t help that Brazil couldn’t exploit the attention on their star to find space for others. But Brazil have way too much quality and I see them topping the group.

About Germany, I am not that sure. But I think they will get out of the group. And that could set up a Brazil-Germany pre-quarter final!

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