Advertisement
Advertisement
Fifa World Cup 2018
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Fans of the Swiss soccer team (seen at a public viewing area at Turbinenplatz Square) celebrate after their team drew against Brazil on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

Brazil’s ‘first-match nerves’ lead to 1-1 draw against Switzerland in World Cup debut

‘I put it down to stress, first match nerves, that’s true for me too,’ said Brazil’s coach, Tite

Coach Tite blamed first night nerves after Brazil’s bid for a sixth World Cup got off to a rocky start as Switzerland withstood an early onslaught to snatch a 1-1 draw in Rostov-on-Don on Sunday.

On the day when holders Germany were shocked 1-0 by Mexico, Brazil’s tag as pre-tournament favourites looked justified in a dominant first-half capped by Philippe Coutinho’s wonder strike to open the scoring.

Moscow taxi driver ploughs into crowd, hurting two Mexican soccer fans

However, Brazil paid for their failure to kill the game off when Steven Zuber powered home an equaliser from Xherdan Shaqiri’s corner five minutes after the break.

The pressure will now be on Brazil to kick-start their campaign when they face Costa Rica on Friday.

The stalemate left Tite unimpressed.

“I’m not happy with this result. Our finishing wasn’t good. We had 20 chances, but too many shots were off target. We should have made their keeper work harder than that,” he said.

“I put it down to stress, first match nerves, that’s true for me too.”

He added: “Up to their goal, I was satisfied. We were moving well. Then they raised their game, and it took us 10 minutes to regain our rhythm. But once again, our finishing wasn’t good.”

Toothless Germany can’t find a way past Mexican wall in World Cup thriller

His Swiss counterpart, Vladimir Petkovic, had an understandably more upbeat assessment of the game. “I’m proud of my lads. I hope this will mean we are taken seriously,” he said.

“Sometimes, there is a lack of recognition and that is a pity,” he added. “Playing against Brazil and Spain, we demonstrated we could react, that this team always believes in itself and can get results. We will continue to play with this consistency.”

Brazil’s Fernandinho of Brazil vies with Xherdan Shaqiri of Switzerland. Photo: Xinhua)

Switzerland have lost only one out of 12 competitive matches since Euro 2016 – a World Cup qualifier away to Portugal.

“I hoped that we would do what we didn’t against Portugal, that we would play our game and try to impose our way of playing,” he said.

“I think the team has shown great determination and I’m very, very happy.”

Earlier, Serbia beat Los Ticos 1-0 to move to the top of Group F.

Astonishing South Korean race claims and Swedish 'spying' dominates build-up

Coutinho had been handed a central role behind Neymar, on his first competitive game for four months, Gabriel Jesus and Willian in a line-up filled with attacking intent.

The five-time world champions went about their task of erasing the memories of a 7-1 thrashing by Germany on home soil four years ago purposefully early on.

Paulinho passed up a glorious chance when his scuffed effort from close range was turned behind by Yann Sommer.

Roberto Firmino (far right) of Brazil heads the ball to score. Photo: Xinhua

It seemed a matter of time before Brazil’s pressure paid dividends and the opener arrived in stunning style on 20 minutes.

Barcelona’s record signing picked up a loose ball on the edge of the area and in trademark fashion bent the ball crashing in off Sommer’s far post.

Neymar looked bright despite his lack of match practice as he teased the Swiss defence provoking yellow cards for Stephan Lichtsteiner, Fabian Schar and Valon Behrami.

Captain Kolarov fires Serbia past Costa Rica in fiery encounter

However, Brazil failed to build on their lead as Thiago Silva and Jesus headed off target from dangerous corners and were made to pay early in the second-half.

Switzerland had offered barely any attacking threat before levelling when Zuber took advantage of a gaping hole in the heart of the Brazilian defence to head home Shaqiri’s corner.

Firmino reacts during the match with Switzerland. Photo: Xinhua

Forced back onto the front foot, Brazil turned to Neymar for a moment of inspiration but he could only blast into the side-netting before Coutinho sliced wide with a much simpler opportunity than the one from which he opened the scoring.

Brazil were unhappy that Zuber wasn’t penalised for a slight push on Miranda for the equaliser and felt hard done by again when Jesus tumbled under a challenge from Manuel Akanji inside the area with Mexican referee Cesar Ramos unmoved.

Diego Maradona does not deny making racist gesture to South Korean fans

Tite’s men ended as they had begun with a series of chances for a late winner as Neymar and Roberto Firmino headed straight at Sommer before Miranda dragged a shot inches wide.

And deep into stoppage time Schar’s outstretched leg turned a goalbound effort from Silva wide as Switzerland held out for a vital point.

Reuters contributed to this report.

The Brazilian team leave the pitch after their match on Sunday. Photo: Xinhua

Post