Nelson Mail

SWEDES AND SOUR

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A last-minute goal. A non-called penalty. A disrespect­ful celebratio­n. Sweden had a lot to be upset about when the final whistle blew yesterday.

The Swedes were within seconds of holding defending champions Germany to a draw and moving into a good position to advance to the round of 16 at the World Cup, when Toni Kroos scored deep into stoppage time to give Germany a 2-1 come-frombehind victory.

‘‘I’m sorry that we didn’t get at least one point,’’ Sweden coach Janne Andersson said. ‘‘I’m not blaming anyone tactically or analysing too much right now, there are so many emotions going around. This is probably the heaviest conclusion that I’ve experience­d in my career.’’

Kroos’ goal from a set piece came in the fifth and final minute of injury time. The draw would have kept Sweden ahead of Germany in group F and needing only a draw against Mexico in the last match.

‘‘It was just bad luck,’’ Sweden forward John Guidetti said. ‘‘Now we need to try to find a way to win the last match. In a few days we play again and we have to win it. It’s simple.’’

Germany, who are tied with Sweden on points and goal difference, will play South Korea in the final round.

‘‘We still have an excellent opportunit­y to qualify,’’ Andersson said. ‘‘Now we have to clean up, tidy up after this game. We’re going to do that.’’

The Swedes were leading Germany at halftime thanks to Ola Toivonen’s goal in the 32nd minute at Fisht Stadium. They felt they could have been ahead even earlier if the referee had called a penalty when Marcus Berg appeared to be fouled inside the area with a clear chance to score. There was no formal video review called for.

‘‘If we have the (VAR) system, it’s very unfortunat­e that he [the referee] can feel so secure in the moment that he doesn’t go and have a look at the situation,’’ Andersson said.

He and the Swedish players said they also couldn’t understand why Germany decided to celebrate near their bench.

‘‘You shouldn’t celebrate in front of our bench the way they did, that’s disrespect­ful,’’ Guidetti said. ‘‘You can celebrate with your own fans. Don’t celebrate in front of our bench like that. That’s why they apologised, because they knew they did something wrong.’’

Andersson said he was ‘‘very annoyed’’ by seeing the Germany team ‘‘running in our direction and rubbing it in our faces by making gestures’’.

In the other group F match, Carlos Vela and Javier Hernandez scored a goal each to move Mexico closer to a spot in the round of 16 by beating South Korea 2-1.

Mexico, who upset Germany in their opening match, took the lead when Vela converted from the penalty spot in the 26th minute.

The Mexicans were awarded the penalty after Jang Hyun-soo handled the ball while trying to stop a cross from Andres Guardado. Hernandez added the second in the 66th, scoring his 50th goal for Mexico.

Son Heung-min scored a consolatio­n goal for South Korea in injury time, sending a powerful shot past goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa.

‘‘You shouldn’t celebrate in front of our bench the way they did, that’s disrespect­ful.’’

Sweden forward John Guidetti

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? German midfielder Toni Kroos celebrates with team-mates after scoring the dramatic winning goal in injury time against Sweden.
GETTY IMAGES German midfielder Toni Kroos celebrates with team-mates after scoring the dramatic winning goal in injury time against Sweden.
 ??  ?? Mexico’s Javier Hernandez, obscured, and Miguel Lynn are all smiles after their win over South Korea.
Mexico’s Javier Hernandez, obscured, and Miguel Lynn are all smiles after their win over South Korea.

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