The Oklahoman

Russia wins second straight

World Cup host Russia, which started as the lowest-ranked team at the tournament, earned a second straight victory to start the group stage with a 3-1 win over Egypt on Tuesday.

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ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA — Two wins, eight goals and almost certainly a place in the knockout stage for first time since the Soviet era.

Russia is enjoying quite the party at its own World Cup — and not even the highly anticipate­d return of Mohamed Salah could slow it down on Tuesday.

Confoundin­g grim pretournam­ent prediction­s, the host nation earned a second straight emphatic victory to start the group stage by beating Egypt 3-1. Having already routed Saudi Arabia 5-0, Russia is likely to be celebratin­g a spot in the round of 16 by Wednesday evening and few could have seen that happening so soon.

The Russians started the World Cup as the lowest-ranked team at the tournament at No. 70, but they aren't playing like it.

Three goals in a 15-minute span early in the second half did the damage against Egypt, with Ahmed Fathi poking the ball into his own net — the fifth own-goal of the tournament — to put Russia ahead in the 47th minute.

Denis Cheryshev, with his third goal of the World Cup, and striker Artyom Dzyuba then scored in quick succession before Salah won and converted a consolatio­n penalty in his first game back after 3 ½ weeks out with a shoulder injury.

Salah needed to produce the type of performanc­e he delivered nearly every week for Liverpool this season, when he scored 44 goals in 51 games, but it was clear from the start that he was staying out of anything too physical on his return from damaged ligaments in his left shoulder sustained in the Champions League final.

Japan 2, Colombia 1

SARANSK, RUSSIA — Yuya Osako had a surprise in store for those who gave Japan little chance of competing with Colombia at the World Cup.

Osako's gritty determinat­ion to set up one goal and his 73rd-minute header from Keisuke Honda's corner kick lifted Japan to a surprising 2-1 victory over the Colombians on Tuesday.

Osako won a bouncing ball to begin an early sequence that led to a penalty, put Colombia a man down and gave Japan a 1-0 lead when Shinji Kagawa converted from the spot.

Colombia had to play all but the opening minutes with 10 men after Carlos Sanchez received a red card for blocking Kagawa's shot on goal with his extended right arm.

Colombia equalized late in the first half on Juan Quintero's rolling but accurate free kick, which sneaked inside the right post.

Senegal 2, Poland 1

MOSCOW — Senegal midfielder Mbaye Niang saw the signal from the referee to re-enter following treatment for an injury and jogged along the center line.

Then Niang noticed Poland's Grzegorz Krychowiak loft a backpass to Jan Bednarek, who hadn't realized Niang was back on the field.

Niang outsprinte­d goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny to reach the ball about 40 yards from the net, knocked the ball forward and tapped it in for Senegal's second fluky goal of the night. The Lions of Teranga held on for a 2-1 win over Poland and opened the World Cup with a surprising victory — just like in 2002.

Senegal became the first African team to win at this year's World Cup after Egypt, Morocco, Nigeria and Tunisia were outscored 6-1 in losses.

It went ahead in the 37th minute when Thiago Cionek's attempted block of Idrissa Gueye's shot deflected and wrong-footed Szczesny, who was picked to start over fellow Arsenal castoff Lukasz Fabianski.

After Niang doubled the lead in the 60th, Krychowiak headed in Kamil Grosicki's free kick in the 86th minute, ending a streak of five straight scoreless openers for Poland.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Russia’s scorer Artyom Dzyuba, right, and Mario Fernandes celebrate a goal against Egypt at the World Cup on Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Russia.
[AP PHOTO] Russia’s scorer Artyom Dzyuba, right, and Mario Fernandes celebrate a goal against Egypt at the World Cup on Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Russia.

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