The Post

24% possession

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Another World Cup day, another World Cup shock.

Substitute­s Ritsu Doan and Takuma Asano scored late goals yesterday to help Japan come from behind and upset Germany 2-1 in Doha yesterday. Both Doan and Asano play for German clubs.

‘‘It’s a historic moment, a historic victory. If I think about the developmen­t of Japanese soccer, thinking of players, for them this was a big surprise,’’ said Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu, who had five Germany-based players in his starting lineup and three, including the scorers, on the bench.

‘‘They’re fighting in a very strong, tough, prestigiou­s league. They’ve been building up their strength. In that context we believe that those divisions [Bundesliga and second division] have been contributi­ng to the developmen­t of Japanese players,’’ Moriyasu said. ‘‘I’m very grateful for that.’’

Ilkay Gundogan had given four-time champion Germany the lead with a first-half penalty. But Doan, who plays for Freiburg, pounced on a rebound to equalise in the 76th minute after Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer blocked a shot from Takumi Minamino.

Then Asano, who plays for Bochum, sprinted clear of Nico Schlotterb­eck and beat Neuer from a narrow angle in the 83rd minute.

It was the first competitiv­e meeting between the two nations. They played two friendlies in the past, with Germany winning 3-0 in 2004 before a 2-2 draw in 2006.

Germany outplayed Japan for much of the match and had 24 attempts on goal compared to Japan’s 11. The Japanese had only 24% possession.

‘‘It’s brutally disappoint­ing, not only for the players, but also the coaching team,’’ Germany coach Hansi Flick said. ‘‘We deserved to go in front. It was more than deserved. Then you have to say that Japan gave us a lesson in efficiency.‘‘

The match was played a day after Argentina’s 2-1 upset loss to Saudi Arabia.

Before their game, Germany’s players covered their mouths dur

ing the team photo to protest against Fifa following its decision to stop plans to wear armbands that were seen as protesting discrimina­tion in host nation Qatar.

Nancy Faeser, Germany’s sports minister, attended the match at the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium and was sitting beside Fifa president Gianni Infantino while wearing the same ‘‘One Love’’ armband Fifa had outlawed.

It was only the third time Germany had lost their tournament-opening game after

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