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≡ FIFA WORLD CUP ≡
A very busy day in the U.S., Canada and Mexico with a special performance by England striker Harry Kane.
● Group K: Portugal 1, Dem. Rep. of Congo 1 ● Highly-favored Portugal got off to a nice start at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, with forward Pedro Neto sent a cross from the left side into the box and there was midfielder Joao Neves, who headed it into the goal for a 1-0 lead in the sixth minute!
Portugal held as much as 80% possession in the half, but the D.R. Congo midfield was aggressive and the Portuguese had just three shots after 35 minutes. And as the D.R. Congo players showed increased confidence, their pressure increased.
All this paid off at 45+5, as defender Arthur Masuaku’s looping ball into the box from the right side went directly to striker Yoane Wissa for a perfect header from the far left of the goal that sailed right under the crossbar, leaving no chance for Portugal keeper Diogo Costa.
The half ended at 1-1, with Portugal at 80% possession, but D.R. Congo – the Leopards – with six shots to two! Neither side could score in the “third quarter” before the hydration break at 67 minutes. Portugal was down to 78% possession and each side was credited with just one shot apiece.
The defenses were good and the offenses were hardly imaginative, but midfield star Bruno Fernandes got loose near the Leopards’ endline and played the ball back to star scorer Cristiano Ronaldo – he’s 41 now and in his sixth World Cup – in front of goal and he just missed wide right in the 74th.
But neither side could score and it ended 1-1. It was the first-ever goal for D.R. Congo – known as Zaire when it participated in 1974 and lost its three group games by 0-14 – and its first-ever point in the World Cup. Portugal controlled 75% possession but the Leopards had eight shots to seven for Portugal.
● Group K: Colombia 3, Uzbekistan 1 ● he nightcap was played in Mexico City, with Uzbekistan making its World Cup debut. It was mostly Colombia on offense and Uzbekistan on defense for the “first quarter” with the South Americans enjoying 63% of possession and the only shot in the game.
The pace increased slightly after, with more probing by the Colombians and nearly a goal in the 32nd as forward Luis Diaz hit the far post from the left side. Later, Diaz had the ball above the box in the 40th and sent a perfect lead pass to the front of goal and onto the right toe of defender Daniel Munoz, who volleyed it off Uzbek keeper Utkir Yusupov and into the net for the 1-0 lead.
By halftime, Colombia was up to 72% possession and 7-1 to shots, accurate reflection of play.
The Colombians continued in control, but the Uzbekistan counterattacks showed promise. In the 60th, a long pass into Colombia territory ended up with sub forward Dostonbek Khamdamov near the endlne. He executed a perfect cross to the other side of the goal to striker Eldor Shomurodov, whose volley popped up off of Colombian keeper Camilo Vargas and midfielder Abbosbek Fayzullaev was there to tap it in with his head. 1-1.
The Colombian response was immediate pressure, then after a turnover, midfielder Gustavo Puerta sent a quick pass to his left to Diaz, who sent a right-footed to right side of goal that bounced in off of Yusupov for the 2-1 lead in the 65th. The hydro break followed with Colombia now at 68% possession and shots at 11-3.
The Uzbeks pressured for the equalizer, with midfielder Akmal Mozgovoy shooting over the far side of the goal in the 90th and another chance at 90+2 missed by Shomurodov. Then as Colombia tried to run out the clock, a stunning cross from sub forward Chuco Hernandez near the right sideline flew to the far side of the Uzbek goal and was blasted in at 90+9 with a header by sub midfielder Jaminton Campaz for the 3-1 final.
Uzbekistan had one last blast at 90+10 from defender Behruzjon Karimov that hit the post, but it ended 3-1 with 61% possession for Colombia and 15 shots to eight.
● Group L: England 4, Croatia 2 ● This was one of the most-anticipated group-stage matches, in the giant AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas and after a somewhat confused start, the English got possession and on offense after a couple of minutes.
Pressure on the Croatian goal resulted in a corner and forward Noni Madueke was pulled down in the box by Croatian star Luka Modric, resulting in a penalty in the ninth minute.
Star striker Harry Kane’s penalty was straight on and was saved by keeper Dominik Livakovic, but the keeper was off his line early, and the try was re-taken. This time Kane slammed the ball into the far right side of the net for a 1-0 lead in the 12th.
England had 59% possession and a 5-1 shots edge at the hydration break. Both teams had chances in the ensuing play, but a rush by midfielder Petar Susic led to a pass back to an oncoming midfielder Martin Baturina, who one-timed a rocket that rose as it flew into the far left side of the English net in the 36th for the 1-1 tie.
Now the English had more work to do and on a corner from midfielder Declan Rice, the ball curled to Kane, standing just behind the crowd and headed it in, scoring his 10th career World Cup goal, in the 42nd for the 2-1 lead.
In stoppage time, England fell back too deep and a Croatian pass into the box to striker Ivan Perisic on the left side and his headed cross to fellow striker Petar Musa was turned into an immediate goal with a right-footed smash and a 2-2 tie on the final play of the half at 45+5. Croatia had four shots in the half and scored twice; England had nine. With good control after the break, Croatia ended the half with 48% possession.
Just into the second half, English midfielder star Jude Bellingham got hold of the ball on the right side inside midfield, dribbled in and hit a laser from right to left just inside the box that rippled the net for a 3-2 lead just 90 seconds into the half!
Bellingham had another chance a minute later and then defender Nico O’Reilly send a header just wide in the 49th! England was assaulting Livakovic now, and he made three saves in about seven seconds in the 55th and then two more in the 57th; at this point, England has 18 shots to four. At the break at 69 minutes, it was still 18-4 and 56% possession for England.
The clincher came in the 85th, after both teams had chances, but sub striker Marcus Rashford took a right-to-left side pass from sub forward Bukayo Saka, stopped, cut left right and scored on a right-footed screamer to the right side of the net for the 4-2 lead. That was the final, with England at 52% possession and a final shots edge of 22-10.
● Group L: Ghana 1, Panama 0 ● This game in Toronto had modest temps at 66 F but also light rain from the start. This didn’t worry Panama – the Canaleros – who were on the march consistently, with Ghana only able to counterattack.
By the hydration break, Panama had 66% possession and the only two shots in the game, but they kept pressure on Ghana keeper Lawrence Ati Zigi, who was equal to the task with major saves in the 2nd and 38th minutes, and half was scoreless. Panama stayed at 66% possession and had a 3-1 shots lead.
There was more action in the second half and the Ghana offense came alive, getting its first shot in the 48th, which was saved. By the hydro break in the 68th, Panama had 64% possession but the shots – in an increasingly end-to-end game – were 8-5 for the Canaleros, meaning nine shots in 23 minutes compared to four in the first half!
Both sides had chances, but it looked like a 0-0 tie was the mostly likely outcome. In another rush down most of the field at 90+5, it was forward Brandon Thomas-Asante who dribbled down the left side, nearly reached the endline, but sent a line-drive cross through the Panama defense to an onrushing midfielder Caleb Yirenkyi, who slammed home the goal.
That was the winner – 1-0 – despite Panama making a last-ditch effort that had to be saved by Ghana’s second-half keeper Benjamin Asare. Panama ended 62% possession and with a 12-7 edge on shots. But they came away with nothing.
≡ PANORAMA ≡
Awful Announcing noted Monday that the addition of hydration breaks in each half of World Cup games has been an enormous boost for Fox, which paid a reported $485 million – a bargain – for the 2026 rights on a special extension from FIFA before the 2022 World Cup. The Awful Announcing story included:
“The Wall Street Journal reported Fox was selling 30-second ad spots during these hydration breaks at roughly $200,000 for early-round games, and around $750,000 for games featuring the U.S. Men’s National Team.”
Based on this, the story calculations estimated Fox as able to sell from $249.6 million to $332.8 million across the 104-game tournament. Translation: hydration breaks are here to stay, with the U.S. rights now up for sale for 2030 and beyond.
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An anonymous Fox executive expressed irritation in a Front Office Sports story that ESPN was not doing much with the World Cup, but Awful Announcing noted that FIFA’s “news access” restrictions limit highlights (1) to a total of two minutes per show, limited only to sports news programs, and not including talk shows, and (2) highlights cannot be shown until the U.S. rights-holder (Fox) coverage ends for the entire day!
ESPN for its part, has added special World Cup programming from its ESPN FC line-up and short news segments – no highlights – on its talk programs.
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