Gulf Today

Swiss, Serbia eye round of 16 berths

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When Serbia plays Switzerlan­d at the World Cup on Friday, it will be a headto-head eliminatio­n match to get into the knockout rounds.

The European rivals seemed destined for a win-and-advance final group stage match at 974 Stadium ever since the tournament draw in April placed them in Group G with heavily favored Brazil.

“We knew at the beginning of the tournament that the game against Serbia would be the final in this group,” Swiss captain Granit Xhaka said ater a 1-0 loss to Brazil on Monday.

That result sent Brazil to the round of 16 even before playing its last game against Cameroon, and let Switzerlan­d in second place likely needing only a draw with Serbia to advance. Not that the Swiss plan on playing for a tie.

“I don’t know a single team in the world that would go on the pitch aiming for a 0-0. That’s really dangerous,” Swiss midfielder Djibril Sow said.

Still, Switzerlan­d have a proven record of managing these situations in modern tournament­s, advancing out of the group to the round of 16 at the past two World Cups and in the past two European Championsh­ips.

Serbia has not played a World Cup knockout match since becoming an independen­t nation, and a relative lack of tournament experience - playing at three of the four World Cups since 2010 but no Euros - perhaps showed in Qatar.

Leading Cameroon 3-1 on Monday ater dominating the play either side of half-time, the Serbians lost control and conceded back-to-back goals quickly to draw the game.

The five goals Serbia has so far conceded is as many as the rest of the group combined, while Switzerlan­d has let in just Casemiro’s rising shot that was a late winning goal in Brazil’s 1-0 win.

Switzerlan­d could not force Brazil goalkeeper Alisson Becker into a save, but should have two fit creative threats restored Friday: Xherdan Shaqiri in a playmaker role and Noah Okafor, whose pace and direct play can be used late in games.

Shaqiri and Xhaka were key figures - with their goals and provocativ­e celebratio­ns - when the Swiss won this same fixture 2-1 at the last World Cup. Shaqiri was born in Kosovo, the former Serbian province that declared independen­ce in 2008. Serbia doesn’t recognize Kosovo’s independen­ce and relations between the two countries remain tense. Xhaka’s parents are originally from Kosovo and they are of Albanian heritage. His brother plays for Albania’s national team.

That was a game in Russia that Serbian fans still remember ruefully for a penalty call not given for an apparent foul by two defenders on forward Aleksandar Mitrovi .

Mitrovi scored his first goal in Qatar against Cameroon, though a partnershi­p with Dušan Vlahovi was not developed.

 ?? R euters ?? Serbia’s Aleksandar Mitrovic and coach Dragan Stojkovic speak during a press conference.
R euters Serbia’s Aleksandar Mitrovic and coach Dragan Stojkovic speak during a press conference.

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