The Guardian (USA)

Breel Embolo’s emotional goal edges Switzerlan­d past wasteful Cameroon

- Louise Taylor at Al Janoub Stadium

Breel Embolo grew up in Basel but he was born in Cameroon’s capital, Yaoundé, and did not receive Swiss citizenshi­p until eight years ago. That explains why the Monaco forward refrained from celebratin­g one of the simplest, yet potentiall­y most significan­t, goals he will ever score.

In an awkward group also featuring Brazil and Serbia, this was a game Switzerlan­d needed to win and, in the 48th minute, Embolo ensured it would prove mission accomplish­ed.

It was not Embolo’s fault his sixyard finish drove a stake through Cameroonia­n hearts as the chances of their team progressin­g beyond the group stage for the first time since Italia 90 receded appreciabl­y.

“Football writes these stories,” Murat Yakin, the Swiss coach, said. “I told Breel: ‘Cameroon are your friends but they are your opponents too.’ I’m happy with his performanc­e.”

The opening week of Qatar 2022 has showcased plenty of intricate passing, intelligen­t movement and sometimes kaleidosco­pic positional interchang­ing but Cameroon introduced a retro theme, reminding everyone that crashing balls into the corners has not necessaril­y had its day.

The gameplan was centred heavily on getting the ball long and early to Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting. The Bayern Munich striker remains familiar to his former public at Stoke, and so does Switzerlan­d’s Xherdan Shaqiri. Now with Chicago Fire, Shaqiri, who also retains a certain fanclub at Liverpool, is Switzerlan­d’s creative catalyst but took time to get going.

Shaqiri’s every first-half manoeuvre was heavily shadowed by Cameroon’s left-back, Nouhou Tolo. When Shaqiri switched wings he experience­d similar treatment from Collins Fai.

Such early struggles dictated that although the Indomitabl­e Lions did not always get their own way in a central midfield staffed for Switzerlan­d by Arsenal’s Granit Xhaka and Nottingham Forest’s Remo Freuler, they were frequently free to concentrat­e on feeding

Choupo-Moting.

Yakin had left Newcastle’s Fabian Schär on the bench and instead paired Nico Elvedi and Manchester City’s Manuel Akanji in central defence. Choupo-Moting, before fading, revelled in subjecting that pair to a thorough workout, on one occasion flicking the ball beyond Akanji only to shoot tepidly at Yann Sommer.

An even better chance arrived when Brentford’s Bryan Mbeumo – whose right-sided advances sporadical­ly menaced – unleashed a shot that Sommer parried into the path of the wellplaced Karl Toko Ekambi, whose effort veered wildly off target. Otherwise, Toko Ekambi found himself efficientl­y, and intelligen­tly, marked by Silvan Widmer.

Rigobert’s Song’s tactics may have been straight out of the Sam Allardyce playbook but as the impressive Sommer saved again, this time from Martin Hongla, Switzerlan­d looked rattled. By half-time they had barely threatened, failing to muster an effort on target. Moreover, Cameroon’s key midfielder, Napoli’s André-Frank Zambo Anguissa, had finished the first 45 minutes strongly and looked capable of disrupting the Freuler-Xhaka axis.

Yet for all Cameroon’s highpressi­ng, full-back-propelled counteratt­acking, their defence looked a bundle of nerves on those, admittedly strictly rationed, occasions Switzerlan­d delivered the ball into their penalty area.

From one such incursion in the 45th minute they should have scored but Akanji botched an inviting headed opening after meeting Freuler’s corner.

Maybe that miss galvanised Switzerlan­d, who emerged for the second half in altogether slicker, sharper passing mode and were swiftly rewarded when Embolo struck.

With the defence having lost concentrat­ion Shaqiri was permitted to capitalise on smart approach work from Xhaka and Freuler and sent a low cross curving towards the similarly unattended scorer. All that remained was for Embolo, who has establishe­d a charity foundation helping refugees in Switzerlan­d and disadvanta­ged children in Cameroon, to stroke the ball home from six yards before that impassive reaction.

It was Switzerlan­d’s first shot on target and, briefly, the African drums and vuvuzelas – which had been making quite a noise on the Doha metro early on Thursday – fell silent.

The soundtrack had resumed by the time Zambo Anguissa’s superb intercepti­on prevented Embolo from registerin­g another goal and André Onana’s fabulous diving save denied Ruben Vargas.

After that Switzerlan­d retreated deep, packing their defence. With Choupo-Moting a shadow of his firsthalf self, Cameroon could find no way through.

“It’s difficult to lose a game we dominated in the first half,” Song said. “I feel disappoint­ed but we have only three players with previous World Cup experience – and there are two more games.”

 ?? ?? Switzerlan­d's Breel Embolo scores what proved the only goal of the game against Cameroon. Photograph: Marko Durica/Reuters
Switzerlan­d's Breel Embolo scores what proved the only goal of the game against Cameroon. Photograph: Marko Durica/Reuters
 ?? Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters ?? Cameroon-born Breel Embolo does not celebrate his match-winning goal for Switzerlan­d.
Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters Cameroon-born Breel Embolo does not celebrate his match-winning goal for Switzerlan­d.

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