Sunday News

Swiss shots fire

- BEN RUMSBY

IT was when Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri celebrated their goals with the Albanian eagle salute that you knew just how much beating Serbia meant to them.

Two players of Kosovan descent not only put Switzerlan­d on the brink of the World Cup knockout stages but they struck a blow for the nation the country they were playing still refuses to recognise.

Whatever Arsenal fans think of Xhaka, surely not even they would begrudge him what must have been one of the most emotional goals of this World Cup, with his father having been imprisoned for campaignin­g for the independen­ce of Kosovo.

That kept Switzerlan­d’s Group F destiny in their own hands before Shaqiri put them firmly in control of it and left Serbia needing to beat Brazil to reach the last 16 for the first time since their country became independen­t.

The first meeting of these two countries since the collapse of Yugoslavia had long been billed as a grudge match, given two of Switzerlan­d’s players were born in Kosovo – the former Serbian province its former overlords still refuse to recognise as an independen­t state – and a third’s family was forced to flee there.

The most faithful of them to his heritage, Shaqiri, even speaks Albanian at home and has long worn boots bearing the flag of both his adopted country and birthplace, an online picture of which last month prompted a caustic response from Serbia striker Aleksandar Mitrovic.

As well as earning their country a Fifa fine for a World War II-era banner in their World Cup opener in Samara, Serbia fans could be heard singing ‘‘Kosovo je Srbija’’ [Kosovo is Serbia] in the city’s bars.

In Kaliningra­d – a place with its own complex history of nationhood – they made their feelings clear by jeering Switzerlan­d’s Balkan-blooded players from the moment their names were announced over the public address.

Xhaka, tried to silence the catcalls with the first shot in anger but Serbia’s fans were celebratin­g at the other end inside five minutes.

Switzerlan­d failed to learn their lesson as, first, Mitrovic climbed highest to connect with a header Yann Sommer did well to repel, before the Newcastle United striker outmuscled Fabian Schar to power home Dusan Tadic’s cross moments later.

Another Balkan-born Swiss, Blerim Dzemaili, screwed wide from Ricardo Rodriguez’s cutback but Mitrovic was winning almost everything in the air, wreaking enough havoc for Aleksandar Kolorov to go close to a second goal.

Mitrovic also saw fit to barge into the back of Shaqiri in what was a visible reminder of the bad blood between them.

Switzerlan­d’s defensive game plan, just days after they managed to keep Brazil at bay, was proving one of the great mysteries of the World Cup. But they began soon began exposing holes of their own in their opponents’ back line and would have equalised after half an hour but for a superb reflex save from Vladimir Stojkovic.

Steven Zuber’s brilliant through ball was met by a firsttime finish from Dzemaili, who wasted another promising attack moment later when almost sent clean through by Shaqiri.

The problem was Switzerlan­d

 ??  ?? Switzerlan­d’s Xherdan Shaqiri celebrates after scoring their second goal against Serbia.
Switzerlan­d’s Xherdan Shaqiri celebrates after scoring their second goal against Serbia.

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