Daily Dispatch

Sweden power through – just

- Unimpressi­ve win over Switzerlan­d leaves much to be desired

Sweden reached the World Cup quarterfin­als for the first time in 24 years after Emil Forsberg’s deflected shot earned a scrappy 1-0 win over Switzerlan­d yesterday.

This was far from a classic at the Saint Petersburg Stadium and if Colombia or England’s players were watching on from Moscow, they could be forgiven for feeling bullish about their prospects in the last eight.

Switzerlan­d’s Michael Lang was sent off in injury-time for a last-ditch push on Martin Olsson and referee Damir Skomina downgraded his penalty to a free-kick on the edge of the area.

But the game was already up. Forsberg’s second-half strike, which deflected off the unfortunat­e Manuel Akanji, means Sweden are through to the World Cup last eight for the first time since 1994 in the US.

Their route to the quarters has not been easy and, what they have lost in the individual brilliance of Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, they appear to have gained in grit, determinat­ion and collective spirit. Their next opponents would be foolish to take them lightly. The one blemish on the victory was a yellow card for defender Mikael Lustig, who will now be suspended for the quarterfin­al in Samara on Saturday.

Both sides had been hampered by suspension­s here too, with Switzerlan­d more badly affected. They were without both Fabian Schaer and captain Stephan Lichtstein­er at the back, prompting Johan Djourou and Lang to come in. For Sweden, Gustav Svensson replaced Sebastian Larsson in midfield. After back-to-back penalty shootouts, Brazil versus Mexico and Belgium’s pulsating comeback against Japan, there was always a danger this last-16 tie would struggle to deliver, even on low expectatio­ns. It was a contest that lacked quality, particular­ly in the final third, where both teams were often painfully imprecise.

Victor Lindelof slipped on the ball in the first 10 seconds and that set the tone for the first half, which was largely a collection of mishit passes, heavy touches and skewed shots.

There were chances and Sweden had most of them. Marcus Berg blasted over when set free early on and then saw his finish blocked following a poor clearance by Swiss goalkeeper Yann Sommer. After a slow start, and Lustig’s foul on Josip Drmic, Switzerlan­d grew in confidence and should have scored when Blerim Dzemaili snatched at Steven Zuber’s pull-back. At the other end, Albin Ekdal was even closer, and completely free, when he sidefooted Lustig’s cross over. With space on the edge of the box, his dummy did for Granit Xhaka before the shot was helped in by the outstretch­ed foot of Akanji.

In the 93rd minute Mina scored the 1-1 equaliser for Colombia with a towering header from a corner. He leapt above Maguire and headed down into the ground and the bounce took it above England’s Tripper and in off the crossbar. The final result was unavailabl­e at the time of going to press.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? GREAT BALLS OF FIRE: Top: Sweden's Ola Toivonen celebrates victory with a member of the coaching staff after the match Bottom: Sweden fans in high spirits at the Saint Petersburg Stadium yesterday.
Picture: REUTERS GREAT BALLS OF FIRE: Top: Sweden's Ola Toivonen celebrates victory with a member of the coaching staff after the match Bottom: Sweden fans in high spirits at the Saint Petersburg Stadium yesterday.
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