The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lewandowsk­i, Poland topple Saudis

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AL RAYYAN, Qatar — Finally!

Robert Lewandowsk­i at last scored a goal in a World Cup match on Saturday, helping Poland beat Saudi Arabia 2-0 and boosting his team's chances of reaching the knockout stages.

Lewandowsk­i shed tears after scoring in the 82nd minute. He raced toward the corner with his arms outstretch­ed, then stayed slumped on the field as teammates rushed to congratula­te him. He got up, rubbed his face, and blew a kiss to the crowd.

“Today everything I had inside, the dreams, the importance of the occasion, all those dreams from my childhood came through," Lewandowsk­i said. "It was so significan­t.”

One of the best forwards in the world, Lewandowsk­i's barren streak at the World Cup was somewhat puzzling. Now, in his fifth match at the tournament, it's over.

“I always wanted to score at the World Cup and this dream came true,” said Lewandowsk­i, who had a penalty saved in Poland's 0-0 draw with Mexico on Tuesday. “It's not easy, because we didn't have many opportunit­ies in the first match and I missed that penalty.”

Against Saudi Arabia, Lewandowsk­i also set up the opener in the 40th minute when he kept the ball in play after goalkeeper Mohammed Al-Owais' initial block, then laid it back for Piotr Zielinski to knock in.

Lewandowsk­i, who had no involvemen­t in any goals in his first four World Cup games, also hit the post, and Al-Owais later denied the Barcelona player from scoring another goal toward the end of the match.

AUSTRALIA 1, TUNISIA 0

AL WAKRAH, Qatar — Mitchell Duke celebrated scoring Australia's winning goal by forming a “J” with his fingers in a tribute to his son Jaxson, who was in the stands.

Coach Graham Arnold dragged injured winger Martin Boyle — on crutches — into the celebrator­y huddle as fans sang merrily along to Men at Work's “Down Under,” blaring over the stadium speakers after the final whistle.

Later, Arnold was wiping away tears.

It was an emotion-filled day for Australia, which beat Tunisia 1-0 for only its third win in 18 World Cup matches.

Duke gave Australia the lead midway through the first half with a header.

Australia hadn't won at the World Cup since beating Serbia in 2010 and it means the Socceroos still have a chance to qualify for the round of 16, despite losing to defending champion France 4-1 in their opening match.

FRANCE 2, DENMARK 1

DOHA, Qatar — Kylian Mbappe scored two goals and put defending champion France into the knockout stage of the World Cup with a win over Denmark.

Mbappe gave his team the lead in the 61st minute and then scored the winner in the 86th with his right thigh as Les Bleus became the first team to advance to the round of 16.

The France forward swapped passes with Theo Hernandez down the left flank and poked the ball past Denmark goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel for the first goal. He then jumped acrobatica­lly to guide in the second after a cross from Antoine Griezmann.

Denmark defender Andreas Christense­n equalized for his team with a header in the 68th.

Mbappe scored four goals when France won the World Cup four years ago, including one in the final. He now has 31 goals for France, moving him one ahead of Just Fontaine — the all-time leading scorer at a single World Cup with 13 goals at the 1958 tournament.

 ?? Manu Fernandez / Associated Press ?? Poland’s Robert Lewandowsk­i celebrates scoring his side’s second goal against Saudi Arabia on Saturday.
Manu Fernandez / Associated Press Poland’s Robert Lewandowsk­i celebrates scoring his side’s second goal against Saudi Arabia on Saturday.

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