The Herald (South Africa)

Dream game

● Late goal sees defending champions beat Sweden

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Honda stars in Japan 2-2 draw

Toni Kroos rescued Germany’s World Cup hopes in dramatic fashion on Saturday, curling in a stunning free kick deep into injury time to seal a 2-1 win against Sweden.

Germany’s late, late show keeps Joachim Loew’s team on course to be the first to retain the title in 56 years, but their fate is still not entirely in their own hands.

The defending champions were in desperate trouble when Ola Toivonen lifted the ball over Manuel Neuer to put the Swedes ahead in the first half in Sochi after Kroos gave the ball away.

Germany, looking far sharper than they did in their opening defeat against Mexico, piled forward and eventually earned their reward when Marco Reus reacted quickly to turn the ball in shortly after the interval.

Despite incessant pressure, Loew’s men could not find the goal they craved as time ticked away and Germany’s task was made more difficult when key defender Jerome Boateng was sent off in the 82nd minute for a second yellow card.

But Kroos had other ideas, stepping up in the 95th minute to curl a free-kick from the left edge of the penalty area into the top corner, beating the despairing dive of Robin Olsen, who had been outstandin­g in the Swedish goal.

“Of course, the first goal [by Sweden] was my fault. When you put in 400 passes in a game, then one or two won’t go where they should.

“Now we have to recover and we don’t have much time before we have to beat South Korea, when we have to play convincing­ly,” Kroos said.

Germany – level with Sweden on three points, with Mexico on six – must now beat South Korea in Kazan on Wednesday and hope the other result in Group F goes their way.

Mexico showed that their shock defeat of Germany last weekend was no fluke with a 2-1 defeat of South Korea in Rostov-on-Don.

West Ham striker Javier Hernandez grabbed his 50th internatio­nal goal while Los Angeles FC forward Carlos Vela was also on target from the penalty spot.

South Korea scored a late consolatio­n strike from Tottenham’s Son Heung-min, but it was too little, too late for the Asian giants, who desperatel­y needed a victory after losing to Sweden in their opening game.

“Sometimes against teams that have less of a footballin­g tradition than the biggest nations, you can tend to rest on your laurels and lose concentrat­ion,” Mexico coach Juan Carlos Osorio said.

“But it was a deserved victory. We are very happy and we share that with the whole of the country.”

In the first game of the day, Belgium produced an imperious display to overwhelm Tunisia, with Premier League stars Romelu Lukaku and Eden Hazard scoring two apiece in a 5-2 rout at Moscow’s Spartak Stadium.

The one-sided victory cemented Belgium’s place at the top of Group G. –

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