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Sport, World Cup 2018, Russia Shocks Spain in World Cup Knockout. Spain Is Out.



Russia Shocks Spain in World Cup Knockout.




Russian eliminated Spain on penalties, 4-3 after a 1-1 tie, when goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev used his trailing left foot to kick away Iago Aspas’s fifth attempt for Spain. The Russians had been dominated on the field for 120 minutes, but a penalty kick by Artem Dzyuba before halftime and a gritty, disciplined defensive effort achieved what many believe their technical and tacticial deficiencies made unthinkable. Cherchesov and Russia have several heroes to choose from now. They can start on Saturday in Sochi, where they will play the Croatia-Denmark winner in the quarterfinals. They will start with Afinfeev, perhaps, who saved two of Spain’s three penalties. Or Dzyuba, who created and then converted the penalty that drew Russia level in a game in which appeared comically overmatched at times. Or maybe Sergey Ignashevich, the 38-year-old center back — drafted into the World Cup late in preparations — who has played every minute, and who gave his five-man back line the leadership and the structure to hold off Spain again and again.
To say Spain played Russia to a draw was technically true. But in reality Spain played and Russia chased for most of the match inside the cavernous Luzhniki Stadium, the former content to keep possession of the ball after an early goal and the latter, well, content to let them have it.
For 10, 15, 20 passes at a stretch, Spain worked the ball around the field at will — a game of keepaway disguised as a World Cup elimination match. The pro-Russian crowd whistled its disapproval early and repeatedly, and urged its team on with all its might whenever it managed — even briefly — to steal the ball away from the Spaniards. But Spain, inevitably and repeatedly, simply took it back. And kept it.

Spain was so dominant in the first half that it nearly made it to halftime with a one-goal lead despite taking no shots: its opening goal came off the right ankle of Ignashevich, who unwittingly scored the World Cup’s 10th own goal — a record that continues to grow — as he fell to the ground while tangling with Sergio Ramos on a free kick in the 12th minute.
Staked to the early lead it needed, and with Russia packed in ahead of a five-man back line, the game quickly devolved into a training session. Spain passed. Russia chased. Nothing happened.
And then, in the 40th minute, suddenly everything changed. Russia won a corner, Alexander Samedov fired it in and Dzyuba headed it directly onto the arm of Spain’s Gerard Piqué — who for some reason had jumped to challenge him with his back turned and one arm over his head.
The Dutch referee, Bjorn Kuipers, called a handball, Dzyuba buried it past David De Gea and just like that, Russia — and its crowd — came to life.
Russia had ridden that kind of full-throated support right through its first three games at the World Cup. Its maximum effort and early success at the World Cup quickly got its countrymen on board, easing fears that the tournament might be ignored by the host country; after its second victory, against Egypt, Russians poured into the streets of central Moscow, honking car horns, waving flags and celebrating until well after midnight.
Dzyuba’s goal seemed to revive them, and let them think victory might just be possible. The start of the second half was more even, and the free kicks Russia won — with increasing frequency — soon began to create two and three half-chances before Spain got the ball clear.
Spain still ruled the statistics — it completed 1,029 passes to Russia’s 202 — but it stubbornly refused to adjust its style even after it became clear Russia would not yield. It had good chances — a long-range shot by Andres Iniesta in the second half, a dangerous run by the substitute Rodrigo in the second extra period — but the goal never came.
Having reached the penalty kick shootout, Russia drove in the knife. Fedor Smolov, then Ignashevich, the Alexsandr Golovin, then Russia’s leading scorer, Denis Cherchyshev, all beat goalkeeper David De Gea. (Cherchyshev, who plays for Villarreal in Spain, where he has lived since joining Real Madrid’s academy at age 12, banged his in after Ramos whispered in his ear before the attempt.)
Akinfeev did the rest, stopping Koke on Spain’s third attempt and Aspas on the fifth. As he kicked the ball high into the air with his trailing foot to seal the victory, the crowd of 78,011 made a sound louder than any at this World Cup.They will get at least one more chance to cheer their heroes.
Russia Goes Wild!
The Russian team goes crazy as a jubilant Moscow crowd cheers on their advancement to the quarterfinals. Russia was considered one of the weakest teams in the tournament, and Spain one of the favorites. But in 120 minutes Spain could only force one own goal, and when it comes down to penalties anybody can beat anybody.
Andrew Das: Stunning finish there as Akinfeev kicks away the last attempt by Aspas. The Russians pour toward him and he dives, fists outstretched into the grass to absorb their love. The crowd has gone absolutely bonkers in here.
PK: Russia 4, Spain 3
MISS Spain! Akinfeev dives the wrong way but gets a foot on Iago Aspas’s penalty!
PK: Russia 4, Spain 3
GOAL Russia!

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