The Guardian (USA)

Casemiro stunner ends Switzerlan­d resistance to fire Brazil into last 16

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Brazil limbered up for the match by taking a stroll around Doha’s Souq Waqif. They emerged unscathed, with wallets still largely intact, but Switzerlan­d proved nowhere near as generous as Qatar’s market traders and, for a long time here, threatened to rob Tite’s team of their cloak of invincibil­ity.

Ultimately Casemiro’s glorious 83rd-minute half-volley, dispatched with the outside of his right foot, propelled the pre-tournament favourites into the knockout stages but much of the action emphasised precisely why all the pre-match focus had centred on a man who was never going to appear on the pitch.

Neymar divides opinion in Brazil – and not just because of his far right-leaning politics or sizeable ego – but a well-drilled Switzerlan­d provided ample evidence of his importance. It is no exaggerati­on to say his ankle injuryindu­ced absence was keenly felt.

Brazil’s manager initially compensate­d for the loss of his attacking talisman by advancing Lucas Paquetá into the front three from midfield, with Fred joining his Manchester United colleague Casemiro further back. It is not too harsh to say Fred’s impact was peripheral. “Switzerlan­d have the best defence,” Tite said. “And we do miss Neymar.”

Murat Yakin’s Switzerlan­d arrived at Stadium 974 slightly late after being involved in a minor road accident en route. It seems the driver of their team bus allowed his mind to wander as traffic near the ground slowed to a crawl and ended up crashing into the back of the police escort car in front. That collision in turn left the vehicle travelling immediatel­y behind the coach unable to brake in time before adding to the pile-up.

Mercifully no one was hurt and, to Brazil’s dismay, Switzerlan­d’s superbly sustained concentrat­ion contrasted markedly with that of their driver. The tone was set when the right-back, Silvan Widmer, swiftly, and unceremoni­ously, halted a rather offendedlo­oking Vinícius Júnior in his tracks. Such no-frills Swiss interrupti­ons would prove a theme.

Although there were some gorgeous cameos of sharp, slick, imaginativ­e and sometimes gloriously improvisat­ional one- and two-touch football from Brazil, their final ball lacked incision against deep-sitting opponents. Yakin’s well-structured, efficientl­y organised team had been set up to play on the counter-attack and, when Casemiro caught the accelerati­ng Breel Embolo, late from behind, he was fortunate to escape a booking.

With every passing minute Neymar’s value to Brazil seemed incrementa­lly enhanced. Significan­tly almost half an hour had passed before Yann Sommer made a save.

When, courtesy of Raphinha’s left-footed, right-wing cross that opening finally arrived, Switzerlan­d’s goalkeeper proved equal to the challenge, parrying a slightly scuffed half-volley from the unmarked Vinícius Júnior.

It was Brazil’s first shot on target – a statistic reflecting their struggles to translate possession into actual chances.. Sommer cannot have expected to have had so little involvemen­t. Was history about to repeat itself and were two countries who had drawn both of their previous World Cup meetings – in 1950 and 2018 – poised to complete a statistica­l trilogy?

Paquetá did not re-emerge for the second period, having been replaced by Real Madrid’s Rodrygo, a forward many Brazil fans believed should have deputised for Neymar in the first place. Before the soon to be influentia­l Rodrygo had time to get going, though, Switzerlan­d nearly scored when Widmer’s cross resulted in Vinícius Júnior blocking Djibril Sow’s goal-bound shot.

The moment for change had arrived and Tite duly altered his midfield, replacing Fred with Newcastle’s Bruno Guimarães whose passing and movement immediatel­y began lifting the overwhelmi­ngly yellow-shirted, Brazil-supporting audience’s mood and asking Switzerlan­d questions they could not always answer.

It was a pass from Guimarães – albeit slightly overhit – that initiated the sequence of events which led to Vinícius Júnior receiving Casemiro’s pass, riding Nico Elvedi’s challenge and squeezing the ball just inside a post with Sommer beaten.

Brazil’s entire bench raced to the touchline to celebrate but a VAR review spoilt the party after detecting that Richarliso­n, who played Casemiro in, had been offside. After proving integral to the defeat of Serbia last week, Richarliso­n found himself shunted to the margins by a Swiss backline offered further protection by Granit Xhaka’s reassuring central midfield presence.

Yet, as the game wore on, Brazil increasing­ly stretched Yakin’s defensive elastic. It finally snapped when Casemiro

met Rodrygo’s pass and applied his right boot to the ball and sent a half-volley swerving into the net leaving a wrong-footed, static, Sommer – possibly deceived by the gentlest of deflection­s off Manuel Akanji – helpless.

By the final whistle Switzerlan­d had mustered just six shots, and none on target. Alisson had not been required to make a single save. Was Yakin right to drop Xherdan Shaqiri, so often his creative catalyst? It would be no surprise to see the winger return in the final group game against Serbia as his side aim to join Brazil, and it is hoped, Neymar in the last 16.

As Tite’s sometimes unsung midfield anchor, Casemiro is known as the invisible man but at the end of a long, hard night on the edge of the Arabian Sea he finally compensate­d for the absence of the man who was not there.

“Casemiro is the surprise element,” Brazil’s exultant manager said. “He infiltrate­s from the back. Neymar has big creative power but other players are getting there.”

 ?? Matthias Hangst/Getty Images ?? Casemiro arrows his half-volley into the net to secure victory for Brazil. Photograph:
Matthias Hangst/Getty Images Casemiro arrows his half-volley into the net to secure victory for Brazil. Photograph:
 ?? ?? Brazil celebrate opening the scoring late on against Switzerlan­d. Photograph: Bagu Blanco/Pressinpho­to/Shuttersto­ck
Brazil celebrate opening the scoring late on against Switzerlan­d. Photograph: Bagu Blanco/Pressinpho­to/Shuttersto­ck

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