The Sun (Malaysia)

Mexico take advantage of German’s weak defence

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MEXICO SPRANG the perfect trap for confident and overwhelmi­ng pre-game favourites Germany yesterday to take advantage of the champions’ defensive weakness in their opening match at the World Cup.

Mexico coach Juan Carlos Osorio lulled the four-time tournament winners into a false sense of security, fielding only one out-and-out forward in Javier Hernandez and awarding t heir opponents possession of the ball.

The Germans had more than 60% of it throughout the game but were unable make it count and break down a discipline­d four-man defence, which at every opportunit­y fed Hirving Lozano, Carlos Vela and Hernandez for counteratt­ack after counter-attack.

The strategy left Germany’s central defenders Mats Hummels and Jerome Boateng painfully exposed at the back, gasping for air and unable to cover the large patches in their own half left open.

Looking cumbersome and slow, Hummels and Boateng had little support as their holding midfielder­s Sami Khedira and Toni Kroos joined the attack, leaving the pair to battle against two or even three opponents at a time.

Germany, who went into the game having won all five previous encounters at internatio­nal tournament­s against the Mexicans, had no answer to that strategy in the first half and only upped the pressure after the break.

They have only themselves to blame, however, because the warning signs were there in their final warmup games going into the tournament.

A 2-1 loss to Austria and a narrow 2-1 victory over Saudi Arabia had highlighte­d exactly that weakness in the world champions, with Germany caught napping by the low-ranked Saudis several times throughout their game.

Coach Joachim Low warned his players that such performanc­es would not carry them far in Russia, but he somehow failed to heed his own warning, refusing to substitute ineffectiv­e midfielder.

Low’s side his team paid the price for a dismal first half.

“In the first half we played very badly. We weren’t able to impose our usual way of playing, our attacking and passing was not effective,” Low said.

“It’s disappoint­ing to have lost the first match,” he added.

“It’s a situation we’re not used to at all. In many previous tournament­s we’ve always won the first match but we have to accept it.”

“The team has experience dealing with losses. It goes without saying that the next match will be decisive for us, we have to win it,” Low said.

“We will not change our gameplan. If we play out our ideas then we have players who are able to deliver.

“We need to focus on our strong points, which we haven’t been able to do in our last couple of games. We have three matches in the group phase and we have ample opportunit­ies to correct this result.”

The Mexicans had more than half a dozen opportunit­ies in the game and should have made sure of victory much earlier with more clinical finishing.

But their win puts them in the driving seat in Group F, with Germany in the rare position of having their backs to the wall. – Reuters

 ?? – REUTERSPIX ?? Hirving Lozano (No. 22) celebrates scoring Mexico’s goal with teammate Javier Hernandez (front) during yesterday’s World Cup Group F match against Germany at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow.
– REUTERSPIX Hirving Lozano (No. 22) celebrates scoring Mexico’s goal with teammate Javier Hernandez (front) during yesterday’s World Cup Group F match against Germany at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow.

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