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More upsets on World Cup Day 6

- AP

MOSCOW - It was a day of upsets in an underdog-friendly World Cup.

Japan knocked off Colombia, becoming the first Asian team to beat a squad from South America in the tournament’s history. Then Senegal got past eighth-ranked Poland. Six of the top eight teams in the FIFA rankings failed to win their initial match.

No one was quite sure what to expect out of Egypt, which got star Mohamed Salah back from injury, but a second straight dominant performanc­e by host nation Russia was still a surprise. Russia scored three goals in 15 minutes and held on to win 3-1.

The hosts have benefited from a weakerthan-average group but still have played exceptiona­lly and are all but guaranteed a spot in the second round.

Russia is enjoying quite the party at its own World Cup — and not even the highly anticipate­d return of Mohamed Salah could slow it down on Tuesday.

Confoundin­g grim pre-tournament prediction­s, the host nation earned a second straight emphatic victory to start the group stage by beating Egypt 3-1. Having already routed Saudi Arabia 50, Russia is likely to be celebratin­g a spot in the round of 16 by Wednesday evening and few could have seen that happening so soon.

“It’s a group of solidarity and cohesion,” said Russia coach Stanislav Cherchesov, who whipped up the crowd by waving his arms in delight on the field after the final whistle. “You mention difficulti­es, problems. We don’t like these words. We don’t have this in our vocabulary. We had some issues and we dealt with it.”

Like a string of pretournam­ent injuries that ravaged the defense. Like a run of seven winless games heading into the tournament. The Russians started the World Cup as the lowest-ranked team at the tournament at No. 70, but they aren’t playing like it.

Three goals in a 15minute span early in the second half did the damage against Egypt, with Ahmed Fathi poking the ball into his own net — the fifth own-goal of the tournament — to put Russia ahead in the 47th minute. Denis Cheryshev, with his third goal of the World Cup, and striker Artyom Dzyuba then scored in quick succession before Salah won and converted a consolatio­n penalty in his first game back after 3 1/2 weeks out with a shoulder injury.

Salah needed to produce the type of performanc­e he delivered nearly every week for Liverpool this season, when he scored 44 goals in 51 games, but it was clear from the start that he was staying out of anything too physical on his return from damaged ligaments in his left shoulder sustained in the Champions League final.

Aside from his goal, Salah was quiet in his first ever match at a World Cup, much to the dismay of the Egypt fans in the stadium who roared every time their star player’s face flashed up on the big screen and when his name was announced before kickoff. Not to mention the 90 million Egyptians back home.

Salah won and converted a penalty, but had an otherwise quiet match.

“I was told by the medical staff that he was fit, feeling good,” Egypt coach Hector Cuper said. “He couldn’t prepare with us in the training camp, he had to train alone. Maybe that meant his total physical ability was reduced.”

 ?? AP photo ?? HEADER. Japan’s Yuya Osako scores his team’s second goal during their group match against Colombia in the ongoing 2018 World Cup in Russia.
AP photo HEADER. Japan’s Yuya Osako scores his team’s second goal during their group match against Colombia in the ongoing 2018 World Cup in Russia.

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