Toni Kroos celebrates scoring the winning goal
SOCHI, Russia — Germany saved
its World Cup with one swing of Toni Kroos’s right foot on Saturday
night, snatching a 2-1 victory over Sweden from the jaws of a draw that would have felt very much like a defeat.
night, snatching a 2-1 victory over Sweden from the jaws of a draw that would have felt very much like a defeat.
The goal, five minutes into
added time, and only moments before the final whistle, may have saved Germany’s
World Cup campaign. It gives them three points in the group, three behind
Mexico and even with Sweden. The Germans now probably need only a win over
winless South Korea in their final group game to advance out of the first round
— a possibility that seemed nervously out of reach at halftime.
The winning goal was a stunner:
a free kick won on the left that Kroos rolled a yard ahead to Marco Reus. Reus
stopped the ball and stepped back as Kroos took his full windup and curled a
shot over a group of defenders, around goalkeeper Robin Olsen and inside the
right post.
It felt like a relief to the
Germans, who raced to Kroos at the corner flag and smothered him with a mix of
joy and relief. A listless loss to Mexico in their opener had left the Germans in
a precarious position when they took the field at the Fisht Stadium: secure in
the knowledge that a defeat against the Swedes, who had won their first game,
would ensure Germany’s World Cup exit after two games.
But four changes to the lineup
and the death rattle of an early exit erased all the listlessness. The Germans
were a relentless machine again on Saturday, and while the Swedes fought hard —
and even took the lead first — they eventually crumbled under the pressure.
Over 90 minutes the German
strategy seemed rather simple: push the ball up the center, slot it wide, cross
it back in, and crash the net. When the Swedes cleared, the cycle would start
all over: collect the clearance out top, move it wide, cross it in. Rinse and
repeat.
Time and again it produced
gasps but no goal. But three minutes into the second half, it finally worked.
Werner took a ball in hard on the left and cut back a low cross toward the
halftime substitute Mario Gomez. The ball was a yard behind him, and his
outstretched trailing leg missed it. But that allowed it to reach Reus, and he
turned it in for the tying goal.
The Germans sighed, the Swedes’ shoulders dropped, and the
pattern promptly continued. A pass wide, a cross in, a ball cleared, or
smothered, or sent off target. It was a training drill come to life, forced on
Germany by an early Sweden goal.
That came in the 32nd minute, out of almost nothing and
against the run of play. An errant pass by Toni Kroos in the center circle
became, in two quick Swedish passes, a chance bouncing of the chest of forward
Ola Toivonen in the German penalty area. Coolly controlling under pressure,
Toivonen brought the ball down and calmly popped it over a charging Manuel
Neuer.
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