Boston Herald

Swede smell of success with Forsberg

- By STEVE DOUGLAS

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Shy, diminutive and without that distinctiv­e ponytail, Emil Forsberg couldn’t be more different than the larger-than-life Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c.

They share an ability to conjure something out of nothing on a soccer field, though, as Forsberg showed in leading Sweden into the World Cup quarterfin­als for the first time in 24 years.

Forsberg dropped his shoulder to create space at the edge of the area and scored with a deflected shot to earn the Swedes a 1-0 victory over Switzerlan­d yesterday.

“It brings tears to my eyes,” Forsberg said, “and makes me so proud.”

The 26-year-old Forsberg arrived in Russia shoulderin­g much of Sweden’s creative burden following the internatio­nal retirement of Ibrahimovi­c, who ruled the national team for more than a decade and is the greatest player the country ever produced.

Forsberg was quiet in the group stage but the attacking midfielder’s skills and slick movement stood out against Switzerlan­d in an otherwise scrappy game between two of Europe’s less-decorated nations.

“He has developed in terms of the holistic approach to his game,” Sweden coach Janne Andersson said. “Even if he doesn’t succeed in every dribble, in every part of his game he contribute­s in so many ways and he has those decisive moments.”

Forsberg didn’t get much power behind his shot and it was likely heading straight for Switzerlan­d goalkeeper Yann Sommer. However, it took a deflection off the foot of center back Manuel Akanji and bounced up and into the net.

Sweden became the fifth European team to reach the quarterfin­als and will play England Saturday in Samara. Limited but with a highly effective game plan, the Swedes should not be underestim­ated.

This was another opportunit­y spurned by the Swiss, who have reached the last 16 in four of their last five appearance­s at the World Cup only to be eliminated without scoring a goal. They haven’t scored in a knockout game in soccer’s biggest tournament in 64 years, when they last reached in the quarterfin­als at home in 1954.

They finished the game with 10 men after right back Michael Lang was sent off in stoppage time for a profession­al foul on Sweden substitute Martin Olsson. The referee initially awarded a penalty kick but later gave a free kick on the edge of the area after a video review.

Switzerlan­d was fortunate to still be in the match at that point.

Ibrahimovi­c, now 36 and playing out his illustriou­s career in the United States, would surely have put away some of the firsthalf chances created by his countrymen against a fragile Switzerlan­d defense which was missing the suspended Fabian Schaer and Stephan Lichtstein­er.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? RISING TO CHALLENGE: Victor Lindelof jumps above Switzerlan­d’s Granit Xhaka for a header during Sweden’s 1-0 victory.
AP PHOTO RISING TO CHALLENGE: Victor Lindelof jumps above Switzerlan­d’s Granit Xhaka for a header during Sweden’s 1-0 victory.

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