Baltimore Sun

Russia still cookin’ at home

Tourney host downs Spain in shootout

- By Kevin Baxter Associated Press contribute­d

SAMARA, Russia — Russia provides another improbable World Cup surprise with eliminatio­n of Spain

No one’s laughing at Russia now.

Less than three weeks ago, the country’s national team, the lowest ranked in the World Cup and one that qualified for the tournament only because it was the host, was so pathetic a Russian politician proposed legislatio­n that would fine anyone whomadefun of the squad.

More than half the country got out their wallets and kept the punchlines coming

Many of those same people Sunday poured into the streets of Moscow, St. Petersburg and Samara, waving flags, honking horns and blocking traffic after Russia beat Spain on penalty kicks to advance to the World Cup quarterfin­als. Who saw that coming? A team that has one starter playing outside Russia’s domestic league has beaten one with players from some of the world’s biggest clubs. A team that had never made it out of the group stage is in the elite eight.

A team that had won two World Cup games before this year has beaten one that won the tournament eight years ago. And its coach, a burly, balding former goalkeeper named Stanislav Cherchesov who was tasked with getting the team to the semifinals when he was hired two years ago, is now a win away from that Russia celebrates Sunday after its knockout-stage victory over Spain on penalty kicks. Russia will next play Croatia. goal.

Yet he refuses to take any of the credit.

“The man of the match, Cherchesov said Sunday, “is the team and our fans.”

Sunday’s play closed with a penalty-kick shootout, the most maddening, frustratin­g and heart-stopping way for a knockout game to be decided.

It would be presumptuo­us to call this the best World Cup ever with three rounds still to play. But it’s certainly the most confoundin­g, most unpredicta­ble and arguably the most exciting in a long time.

Three former champions — Argentina, Spain and Germany, which was shut out twice — already are out, and another, Brazil, is listing. Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, the two best players of their generation, have left with their teams.

Coming into the year, no player had scored more internatio­nal goals over the last four years than Poland’s Robert Lewandowsk­i. He didn’t get on the score sheet in Russia, where nearly a quarter of the goals have come on own goals or penalty kicks, breaking World Cup records for both.

Japan got to the second round because it had fewer yellow cards than Senegal. Spain fired its coach four days before its first game, while Japan’s coached his first competitiv­e internatio­nal game in his team’s World Cup opener.

How illogical has this World Cup been? Spain set a Cup record with 1,029 completed passes Sunday, more than 12 teams completed in the entire threegame group stage, and lost. Spain had the ball 74 percent of the time and outshot Russia 25-6 yet got its only score on an own goal.

That was by design, said Russia’s coach, who choose to have his team sit back and absorb pressure, hoping for a break or penalty kicks. It got the latter.

“They are better than us in many ways,” Cherchesov said through a translator. “Had we chosen a different tactic, we would not have fared as well.”

But first he had to convince his players. Did they want to continue being a laughingst­ock in front of their own fans or did they want to beat one of the Word Cup favorites?

“We had to persuade them this was the only way out. We don’t like this, but that’s what we had to do,” he said. “They trusted me.”

As a result, it’s now possible people will wake up for the World Cup final on July 15 — kind of a quadrennia­l Christmas Day for soccer fans — and be greeted by Russia versus Japan. And don’t think that doesn’t Danijel Subasic saved three penalties to help Croatia reach the quarterfin­als with a shootout victory in Nizhny Novgorod.

Ivan Rakitic scored the decisive penalty after Subasic had used his feet to stop an attempt from Nicolai Jorgensen.

Croatia will next face Russia on Saturday in Sochi.

Denmark took the lead in the first minute when defender Mathias Jorgensen scrambled in a shot that went in off Subasic’s left hand and then the left post.

Croatia equalized in the fourth minute with another untidy goal. Henrik Dalsgaard’s clearance hit a teammate and fell for Croatia forward Mario Mandzukic to hook the ball in.

The teams stayed even for the next 116 minutes, including the 30 minutes of extra time.

 ?? YURI CORTEZ/GETTY-AFP ??
YURI CORTEZ/GETTY-AFP

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