Brazil Outclasses Serbia to Set Up Mexico Clash

After Germany’s exit and Argentina’s nerve-shredding escape, Brazil made more serene World Cup progress on Wednesday (27/06) when goals by Paulinho and Thiago Silva earned the team a 2-0 win over an outclassed Serbia and a knockout tie against Mexico.

The five-times champion rarely hit the heights against tough, dogged opponent that had qualification hopes of its own but, in this World Cup of shocks and late drama, Brazil will be delighted to have made it through a potentially awkward game with the minimum of fuss.

The victory, and Switzerland’s 2-2 draw with Costa Rica, meant Brazil finished top of Group E on seven points, two ahead of the Swiss who will face Sweden in the last 16. Serbia ended third on three points and are eliminated along with Costa Rica.

Brazil took a while to find its stride against a physical Serbian side that briefly rattled its illustrious rival, but once Paulinho put the team ahead after 36 minutes it always looked comfortable and Silva’s 68th-minute header settled it.

“We don’t live by expectation, we live by reality,” Brazil coach Tite said when asked how he felt about his team now being the tournament favorite.

“Because we did so well during the qualifiers and friendlies, we created an excessively high sense of expectation, but the World Cup is a new cycle, a new format,” he added.

“We are a team who withstand pressure, who have high-quality substitutes. We look at getting stronger and improving.”

Playing hours after holders Germany suffered a shock exit after a 2-0 defeat by South Korea, Brazil was desperate to stamp its authority on a tournament where World Cup pedigree has counted for so little.

The team had yet to click in its earlier games, where it limply drew 1-1 with Switzerland and needed two stoppage-time goals to beat Costa Rica, and it did not exactly sparkle in the first half-hour on Wednesday.

However, a superb lofted pass from just inside his own half by the outstanding Philippe Coutinho sent Paulinho clear and he stretched high to toe the ball over goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic and ease the pressure.

Brazil’s often-overlooked defense, which has now conceded only three goals in 13 games, did still have to stand up strongly against a Serbian side whose only real threat looked to be an aerial assault.

Striker Aleksandar Mitrovic roused the Serbian fans around the hour when he went close with two headers but that brief flurry proved their high-water mark as Silva finished it when he rose high to thump home a Neymar corner.

That assist was a frustrated Neymar’s major contribution as he fired one shot at Stojkovic’s legs after a 70-meter counterattack, bounced another over the bar and saw the keeper palm clear his final effort of a night where he was routinely bullied off the ball and lost possession countless times.

It was not his greatest performance, nor Brazil’s, but it was more than enough and they march on and remain the team everyone else will want to avoid.

“We were on the front foot in the first half except for the moment when Brazil scored,” said a somewhat optimistic Serbia coach Mladen Krstajic.

“It’s very difficult to play such an open game against such a football powerhouse like Brazil and these are the moments when the individual qualities of their players come through.”

courtasy : jakartaglobe.id
photo: Jakarta Globe

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