Sweden vs England (0:2); England beat Sweden 2-0 to reach FIFA World Cup semi-finals

Dele Alli with Harry Kane of England and Emil Forsberg with Viktor Claesson of Sweden.
(L-R) Dele Alli with Harry Kane of England and Emil Forsberg with Viktor Claesson of Sweden. England and Sweden meet in a World Cup quarter-final on Saturday. (Photo by FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)
  • England through to first World Cup semi-final since 1990

  • Three Lions will face winner of Russia-Croatia semi-final

  • Maguire, Dele headers either side of half-time seal victory

  • An impressive England advanced to their first World Cup semi-final for 28 years

  • Headers by Harry Maguire and Dele Alli gave them a deserved 2-0 last-eight victory over a disappointing Sweden.

  • England will next face either Russia or Croatia, who meet later on Saturday, July 7, 2018.

SAMARA RUSSIA: Headers from Harry Maguire and Dele Alli fired an impressive England into the World Cup semi-finals for the first time in 28 years after they eased their way to a 2-0 victory over a dogged but disappointing Sweden on Saturday.

Maguire opened the scoring in the 30th minute at the Samara Arena and Alli doubled the lead after the break as Gareth Southgate’s young squad continued to defy dampened pre-tournament expectations with another confident display.

Quarter-finals

Team MP W D L GF GA Pts
Winner Match 50 1 1 0 0 2 0 3
Winner Match 49 1 0 0 1 0 2 0
Uruguay 0-2 France
Nizhny Novgorod6th July 2018 5:00 pm
Winner Match 49 0-2 Winner Match 50
Nizhny Novgorod6th July 2018 5:00 pm
Brazil 1-2 Belgium
Kazan6th July 2018 9:00 pm
Sweden 0-2 England
Samara7th July 2018 6:00 pm
Russia 2-2 Croatia
Sochi7th July 2018 9:00 pm

For once it was not Harry Kane who claimed the plaudits as the tournament’s top scorer was kept quiet, but England found another hero at the other end of the pitch as Jordan Pickford produced three superb saves to shut out the workmanlike Swedes.

Hosts Russia or Croatia, who meet later on Saturday and are lower ranked than Gareth Southgate’s side, are all that stands between England and a first World Cup final since they lifted the trophy in 1966.

Sweden had reached the quarter-finals by making life hard for supposedly superior opponents and it was easy to see why after a dour opening when England looked incapable of stringing passes together against their hardworking opponents.

It was predictable in many ways, therefore, that the deadlock was broken from a set piece.

BULLET HEADER

England had laboured without reward before Ashley Young lined up a corner on the left and his curled effort was met by Maguire charging forward with conviction and barging Emil Forsberg out of his way to power a header down into the net.

That was England’s eighth set-piece goal at this World Cup, but, while they are seemingly lethal from dead balls, apart from Kane they are not blessed with too many other sharp shooters.

Raheem Sterling has faced some criticism over his struggles to score for England and just before halftime his doubters were handed ammunition when he was twice left alone to bear down on Sweden keeper Robin Olsen.

His blushes were saved by the linesman’s flag as he fluffed the first chance, but moments later he ran through again, this time trying to round the keeper, only to be denied once more.
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England were almost made to pay straight after the interval and would have been pegged back if Pickford had not produced a top-drawer save to keep out a Berg header.

The killer blow, however, arrived in the 59th minute as Jesse Lingard’s teasing cross into the box was met by Alli unmarked at the far post to head powerfully past Olsen.

England had not kept a clean sheet in their four previous matches and had Pickford to thank for ensuring they did not concede this time.

The keeper saved superbly from Viktor Claesson before tipping a shot from Berg over the bar and that was enough to ensure Swedish hopes of reaching their first semi-final since 1994 were dashed.

“We always said take each game as it comes, we know our ability and it’s all about our togetherness. If the togetherness is there, which it is always, we control our ability on the pitch. That’s why we won, kept a clean sheet, we work hard as a team.


“This is what football’s all about, being on the big stage.
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I never put myself under any pressure. I just embrace the moment, play in the moment. I feel strong, nothing fazes me. I just want to be the best I can. Criticism doesn’t affect me it just makes me want to be better.
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Jordan Pickford, Budweiser Man of the Match

credit: The Times of India