New Straits Times

MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL DRAW

France top Group C, Denmark second after stalemate

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THE goals finally dried up at this thrilling World Cup yesterday when a flat France and dull Denmark played a mutually beneficial 0-0 draw at the Luzhniki Stadium which allowed the French to finish top of Group C and the Danes to qualify in second spot.

Thirty-six games in Russia had failed to result in a goalless stalemate, but neither France nor Denmark ever looked like scoring in a tedious affair.

France were already assured qualificat­ion but wanted to go through in top spot to avoid a likely last-16 clash with in-form Croatia.

Denmark could have only been denied qualificat­ion had they lost to France and had Australia beaten Peru in the match being simultaneo­usly played in Sochi.

But with the Peruvians leading 2-0 before the hour in that game, the Moscow clash settled down to little more than a canter.

While not in the same category as the infamous 1982 “Nichtangri­ffspakt von Gijon” — the nonaggress­ion pact of Gijon — when West Germany and Austria both settled for a 1-0 German win which put them both through, neither side at the Luzhniki looked to be going all out for win.

The writing had been was on the wall early in the capital, with the play dominated by industry rather than any kind of inspiratio­n.

The Danes built a pattern of firing balls deep before quickly tracking back, while the French kept possession well but struggled throughout with the final ball.

Antoine Griezmann, surprising­ly not among the six players rested by Didier Deschamps for this match, looked listless as he sought to probe the Danish defence for a way through.

At times it seemed as though he was on a different wavelength to his teammates, who failed to spot his runs or find the spaces Griezmann played into.

It took more than half an hour before there was any real chance, and then Ousmane Dembele pushed his right foot shot wide of the goal — and of Kasper Schmeichel’s overly elaborate dive.

Deschamps brought Benjamin Mendy on for Lucas Hernandez just after half time, but he might have made a raft of changes as the French continuall­y misfired.

Jeers and whistles swirled around the frustrated crowd as both sides failed time after time to create any real opportunit­ies, the Danes continuing to defend deep and the French rarely breaking out of a trot.

Few teams will fear either side on the back of this performanc­e but surely there will be better days ahead for both nations when the reality of sudden-death forces their hands.

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