The Guardian (USA)

Cody Gakpo and Klaassen stun Senegal with thrilling Netherland­s late show

- Jonathan Wilson at Al Thumama Stadium

It began as a tale of two centre-forwards and ended as a game of two goalkeeper­s. As the Netherland­s began their World Cup campaign with a 2-0 win against Senegal, it had seemed the decisive factor would be the absence from the starting lineups of Sadio Mané, and Memphis Depay. But in the end it turned out to be about the two goalkeeper­s, the debutant Andries Noppert of the Netherland­s, who had a fine game, and Édouard Mendy of Senegal, who did not.

For Senegal, it had all seemed to be going well. With their fans drumming away behind Aliou Cissé’s bench, this sounded like a Cup of Nations game and, for a long time, it looked like a Cup of Nations game as well. There was very little width, a lot of bodies banging into each other in a congested centre, and only ever the vaguest sense that a goal might come.

When one did eventually arrive, with six minutes remaining, it was for the Netherland­s and Mendy was badly at fault. Nor did he impress with the decisive second that sealed the game deep into injury time.

With their three powerful central midfielder­s, Senegal had, for the most part, negated the Dutch but when Frenkie de Jong was given time to measure his cross from the left, Mendy was slow to react, allowing Cody Gakpo to get to the ball first and direct it into the net.

Then, Depay, who had come off the bench just after the hour, was released on the break as Senegal chased the game, Mendy tamely pushed his low shot into the path of Davy Klaassen.

Given Senegal had the better of what few clear chances there had been before that, the contrast was obvious. The Dutch have so struggled with goalkeeper­s of late that Remko Pasveer, a 39-year-old who had never previously been capped, played in the last two games before the World Cup, but Noppert looked an inspired selection – an entirely characteri­stic Louis van Gaal gamble. As Noppert acknowledg­ed, nobody else would have picked him.

His is a remarkable story. Noppert is 28 but has only ever played 45 league games. A late developer, he was briefly without a club after leaving Dordrecht in 2020 at which his family begged him to give up football.

It’s as well for the Netherland­s that he ignored them. Noppert made a tidy low save early in the second half to keep out an effort on the turn from Boulaye Dia, pulled off a far more spectacula­r block to deny Idrissa Gueye from the edge of the box with quarter of an hour remaining, and then made a sprawling save low to his right to keep out a long-ranger from Pape Gueye just after the Dutch had taken the lead.

“He has an open personalit­y,” said van Gaal, who seemed amused that Noppert had said in his post-match interview he is similar to his manager.

“He is quite direct and outspoken, that is probably what he meant, but that does not mean he can be a coach. His quality is that he can stop balls and he did that three times today, perfectly.”

Van Gaal himself was in typically direct and outspoken mood. “Frenkie de Jong? It was not his best match,” he said, “but he gave the assist for the winning goal and that is Frenkie de Jong. It was a very tough match for us.

“We didn’t have that many difficulti­es when the opponent was in possession, but I was not happy with ball possession on our side, we were inaccurate and ran with the ball too much.”

To an extent, that played into Senegal’s hands. “We deserved at least a point from this match,” said their coach Cissé. “We had a definite plan from the outset. We had a plan to press them high up the pitch but eventually we had to drop back a little bit. We had chances but we didn’t score.”

He felt his side lost intensity after Cheikhou Kouyaté was forced off with a twisted ankle and he must wait also on the fitness of the left-back Abdou Diallo, who limped off with a muscle strain.

Senegal’s biggest injury issue, though, without question, is the absence of Mané. Cissé acknowledg­ed it was “a problem” but insisted that “the players who did play did what was expected of them”, particular­ly in “shutting down their attacks on the wings”. Van Gaal, at least, had the option of introducin­g Depay, whom he praised for bringing added “precision”.

Next up for Senegal are Qatar, who surely cannot be as bad again as they were in losing to Ecuador on Sunday. “If you lose the first match,” Cissé said, “then the second match becomes like a final.”

Qualificat­ion remains within their reach, but it is the Dutch who control the group.

 ?? Photograph: Noushad Thekkayil/EPA ?? Cody Gakpo (centre) receives a loving embrace after scoring the Netherland­s’ winner over Senegal.
Photograph: Noushad Thekkayil/EPA Cody Gakpo (centre) receives a loving embrace after scoring the Netherland­s’ winner over Senegal.
 ?? Photograph: Luca Bruno/AP ?? Davy Klaassen scores the Netherland­s’ second goal against Senegal.
Photograph: Luca Bruno/AP Davy Klaassen scores the Netherland­s’ second goal against Senegal.

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