End-to-end rush to score caps comeback
Red Devils wipe out two-goal deficit with stoppage-time strike
ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia — Jan Vertonghen started Belgium’s comeback with a wild, looping header, and Nacer Chadli capped it by finishing off a 10second, end-to-end attack in the final moments.
It added up to a 3-2 victory over Japan on Monday that gave the Belgians a spot in the World Cup quarterfinals for the second straight tournament.
With Belgium trailing 2-0, Vertonghen scored with a header in the 69th minute that appeared to be a cross but somehow dropped in under the bar. Substitute Marouane Fellaini headed in another from Eden Hazard’s cross in the 74th.
Chadli, who came on as a substitute in the 65th, decided it with virtually the last kick of the game in the fourth minute of injury time.
Belgium goalkeeper Thibault Courtois grabbed a corner kick and rolled the ball to Kevin De Bruyne, who dribbled to the top of the center circle and passed to Thomas Meunier on the right. Meunier one-timed the ball across the area, and Romelu Lukaku let it roll for Chadli to tap in with his left foot from 7 yards.
Belgium is the first team to overturn a two-goal deficit in a World Cup knockout match since West Germany beat England in extra time at the 1970 tournament. The last team do it in regulation was when Portugal beat North Korea in the 1966 quarterfinals.
“It’s a test of character. It’s a test of the team,” Belgium coach Roberto Martinez said. “You have to see how the substitutes react, how the whole team reacts.” The Red Devils will face fivetime champion Brazil in the quarterfinals Friday in Kazan.
“When you play against Brazil you have to accept that they are the best team in the competition,” Martinez said, looking ahead to the quarterfinals. “Coutinho, Neymar (are) players who can decide the game in one second. Against Brazil, I think we can enjoy it from the first minute. When you’re a little boy, you dream of facing Brazil in the World Cup.”
Japan led after early secondhalf goals by Genki Haraguchi and Takashi Inui but couldn’t hold on.
“When we were up 2-0, I really wanted to score another goal, and we did have opportunities,” Japan coach Akira Nishino said. “We were to some extent controlling the game, but Belgium upped their game when they had to.”
What was expected to be a mismatch ended up being a classic, partly because of Martinez’s decisions to send on Fellaini and Chadli as substitutes in the 65th minute.
“In football, sometimes you want to be perfect,” Martinez said. “In the World Cup and especially in the knockout stage, it’s about getting through.”
Belgium, which narrowly avoided joining Germany, Argentina, Spain and Portugal as big-name eliminations, won all three of its group matches and scored a tournament-leading nine goals at that stage.
Japan narrowly scraped through, advancing ahead of Senegal because it had fewer yellow cards.
The Japanese have lost in the round of 16 three times without reaching the quarters.
“It wasn’t the players,” Nishino said. “Maybe it was me who lost control of the game.”