The Herald (South Africa)

VAR penalty gives Sweden narrow win

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A VAR-awarded penalty gave Sweden a narrow but deserved victory in their opening Group F match against a poor South Korea side in Nizhny Novgorod yesterday.

Veteran Swedish skipper Andreas Granqvist scored the only goal of the game from the spot after Viktor Claesson was upended by South Korean substitute Kim Min-woo Kim in the 62nd minute.

Despite furious appeals, El Salvadorea­n referee Joel Aguilar, who had ironically been whistle-happy up until that point, initially waved away Swedish penalty claims.

But after consulting the video, he pointed to the spot.

It was the third VAR penalty awarded at these championsh­ips after France and Peru also benefited from video referrals.

The win was reward for Sweden’s more attacking approach, but it was unsurprisi­ng the winner came from the penalty spot in a game between two sides who had only managed two goals between them in seven games heading into Russia.

Sweden never really convinced anyone they would score prior to the penalty despite their domination of a toothless South Korea who did not manage one shot on target.

However, they should have equalised in the 90th minute but Hwang Hee-chan put a free header wide, spurning the Koreans’ best chance of the game by far.

The victory leaves Sweden joint top of the group after Mexico’s surprise victory over world champions Germany on Sunday. Next for the Swedes is their encounter against Germany in Sochi on June 23.

South Korea started the game brightly, forcing the first corner in the fourth minute, but were gradually forced back by an attritiona­l Swedish side.

It was the Europeans who came closest to breaking the deadlock when forward Marcus Berg was denied by a fine pointblank save by Jo Hyeon-woo in the 20th minute.

Berg was denied again nine minutes later by a desperate last-ditch block from Kim Young-gwon.

Despite their increasing dominance, Sweden also demonstrat­ed why they have struggled to score goals.

Berg, again, and Claesson went close before the end of the half, but it was clear for all to see why they had only scored once in their four matches prior to Russia.

Korea threatened only on the break where Son Heung-min’s pace troubled Granqvist, who was without defending partner Victor Lindelof due to illness.

The somewhat rancorous build-up to the game – with Sweden accused of spying on their opponents – was increasing­ly reflected in the niggly nature of the match.

Resilient Sweden held firm after the goal and the Hwang late scare and half-hearted South Korea appeal for a penalty aside, their defence rarely looked troubled.

The huge celebratio­ns, the first match played in the $290-million (R3.96-billion) stadium, at the end showed the importance the Swedes attached to this match.

Before the game, South Korea’s coach Tae Yong-shin called it a must win game but the defeat leaves his side contemplat­ing only an early exit.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/MURAD SEZER ?? TAKING FLIGHT: South Korea’s Jang Hyun-soo tries to fend off Sweden’s Marcus Berg in their World Cup Group F match in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, yesterday
Picture: REUTERS/MURAD SEZER TAKING FLIGHT: South Korea’s Jang Hyun-soo tries to fend off Sweden’s Marcus Berg in their World Cup Group F match in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, yesterday

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