Scottish Daily Mail

Hosts with the most

- MARTIN SAMUEL from St Petersburg Stadium

RAMPANT RUSSIA STEAL THE SHOW AGAIN AS THEY BREEZE PAST SALAH’S EGYPT:

RUSSIa lulled everybody into a false sense of security, including, it would seem, themselves. It was not just the rest of the world who feared the hosts would exit at the group stage and kill the mood. The locals, including Vladimir Putin, were nervous about embarrassm­ent on the world stage, too.

Why else would he let it be known that he would be unable to attend last night’s game played in his home city of St Petersburg, due to a meeting with Belarus president alexander Lukashenko?

Would he be watching on television, a spokesman was asked? That was a negative, too. Maybe Putin did not wish to be associated with the reverse many thought might happen against an Egyptian team with Mohamed Salah returning.

The president need not have worried. This was not Salah as we know him, or the russia we had come to expect. The side who could not win enough games to have a slump going into this competitio­n will be among the first two qualifiers for the last 16 if Uruguay beat Saudi arabia today, as they surely will.

In two games, they have already scored the same number of goals as Spain did to win the World cup in 2010. This is the most impressive start by any host since Italy in 1934. In more ways than one, russia is confoundin­g expectatio­ns.

It has been a campaign of surprises. Denis cheryshev could not get in russia’s team when this World cup started. He is now the tournament’s joint-top goalscorer with cristiano ronaldo — his three goals outstrippi­ng the two he has scored in his previous two seasons in La Liga with Villarreal. He had never even scored for russia before this tournament started.

It would be hard to convey to anyone who has seen their first two games just how woeful russia had looked preparing for this competitio­n.

Not that Saudi arabia and Egypt are the trickiest opponents, but pressure does strange things. Maybe that was the key. By being so uniformly hopeless, the hosts removed all stress. They turned a home World cup into a free hit and then knocked it out of the park.

russia are playing very good football. No matter the opposition, a team cannot score eight in two games without performing well. True, they got a break for the first goal yesterday but no more than they deserved and the next two were corkers.

Salah pulled one back from the penalty spot for Egypt, but was clearly short of fitness and didn’t look the same player who inspired Liverpool’s run to the champions League final. Unless Saudi arabia win today, Egypt are out.

Still, good news for Sergio ramos. He is no longer the most unpopular defender in Egypt. That title now goes to the unfortunat­e ahmed Fathi, whose own goal tilted this match in russia’s direction.

Depending on your statistica­l source, Fathi — briefly of Sheffield United and Hull city — has made between 124 and 130 appearance­s for his country. Either way, it just goes to show that experience isn’t everything. His interventi­on two minutes after half-time was truly game-changing and calamitous. aleksandr golovin struck a cross, which Mohamed El-Shenawy in Egypt’s goal might have tried to

take cleanly. Instead, he punched it, only for the ball to be recycled by Roman Zobnin with a weak, scuffed shot.

Enter Fathi, who turned this tame effort into Russia’s opener, panicked by the towering presence of striker Artem Dzyuba and slicing an attempted clearance into his own net. He chased referee Enrique Caceres of Paraguay, claiming a foul to hide his embarrassm­ent, but Dzyuba hardly moved and the shot wasn’t even on target. Egypt then collapsed.

In the 59th minute, Russia doubled their advantage through the suddenly prolific Cheryshev. He was schooled at Real Madrid and it showed.

Mario Fernandes’ cutback from the byeline was perfect, but Cheryshev’s finish was cool — slotting the ball past El-Shenawy from six yards. Egypt were clinging on to the game, and probably the competitio­n, by their fingertips.

Three minutes later, the clincher. Ilya Kutepov played a long ball up to Dzyuba who showed good touch before finishing smartly.

Would it have made a difference had Salah been fully fit? Possibly. He can win games on his own, as we have seen this season, but never looked to have that power here. He was there in spirit if not entirely in body.

Salah worked hard but, although he was spared defensive duties, didn’t look quite right and didn’t look as if he trusted the troublesom­e shoulder that had kept him out since the Champions League final encounter with Ramos.

The burst of accelerati­on was still there and, heaven knows, he was desperatel­y striving to give his country their first World Cup win. But we’ve seen Salah — all 44 goals of him for Liverpool this season — and this wasn’t the same.

Caceres would have made a hash of Sergey Ignashevic­h’s 72nd-minute foul on Salah, giving a free-kick outside the area, but was corrected by VAR.

The Liverpool man got his consolatio­n goal from the penalty spot — a memory of a tournament that promised so much and delivered only heartbreak.

Not for Russia, though. That was the first shot on target against them at this World Cup. It’s fair to say they’re flying.

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 ??  ?? Three and easy: Cheryshev celebrates the second goal (main), Russia hail the opener (above) as Salah (inset) toils
Three and easy: Cheryshev celebrates the second goal (main), Russia hail the opener (above) as Salah (inset) toils

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