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Germany vs. Sweden: World Cup 2018 Live

Germany is playing Sweden at the Fisht Stadium in Sochi today in a suddenly pivotal Group F match. Sweden won its opening game but Germany did not, putting it in an uncomfortable (and treacherous) position.

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Germany Sweden
Group Stage
Sweden’s Albin Ekdal in action with Germany’s Sebastian Rudy and Joshua Kimmich during their World Cup match on Saturday. Hannah Mckay/Reuters

How to watch: In the U.S., Fox and Telemundo have the broadcast at 2 p.m. Eastern, but you can stream it here.

12’: Sweden Chance!

HUGE chance for Sweden there, with a turnover and quick diagonal ball springing Berg free behind the German defense. But Rudinger arrives in the nick of time to deliver just enough of a shove to knock him off, and a charging Neuer smothers the chance like a warm blanket. The Swedes howl for a penalty, or at least a review, and it might have been worth one. But play never stopped, and two minutes later, when it did, it seems the Polish referee, didn’t feel it was worth the bother.

Once played stopped and restarted for a Swedish free kick in their end, anyway, he COULDN’T go back and look.

We continue ......

10’: Germany Attacking

Sweden is keeping all 10 field players behind the ball at almost all times. They’re really feeling the German pressure, and seem determined to just hunker down and fight them off.

At least for the moment.

8’: Chances at Both Ends

Sweden has probed the German end just once, but a collapsing defense smothered the chance before it became anything. At the other end, Draxler turns the corner on the left and skims a cross through the goal mouth but no one is there to redirect it and it sails through to safety.

Now Reus does the same on the right, but his cutback hits a defender instead of Werner.

2’: Early Chances for Germany

Good work from Timo Werner at the end line gives Germany two bites at the apple, but Sweden blocks both, then the rebound goes out wide.

Cycling it back in, Germany gets two more (slightly deeper) shots. Both are blocked, too.

Hard to Believe: Germany Could Be Out After This One

One last time since it seems so strange to type it: Germany will be out of the World Cup if it loses to Sweden tonight. Enjoy the game.

Don’t Sleep on Sweden

Sweden isn’t one of those sexy teams everyone always looks at as a World Cup dark horse. But they’re a solid group, and they’re tight and disciplined. And remember: they knocked out another big brand, Italy, to seal their place in Russia. Coming off a win over South Korea in their opener, they surely see tonight as a chance to announce themselves.

What’s at Stake

Mexico’s victory over South Korea positions them to advance through to the knockout round tonight for the seventh straight World Cup, but it also makes the stakes very clear here: a Germany loss to Sweden and the Germans, the defending World Cup champions, are OUT after only two games in Russia.

A win or draw extends their life to the final group game, but here are the current group standings:

Mexico 6 points; +2 goal difference

Sweden 3 points; + 1 goal difference

Germany 0 points; -1 goal difference

South Korea 0 points; -2 goal difference

Sweden’s Lineup

And here’s Sweden’s XI tonight:

Robin Olsen; Mikael Lustig, Victor Lindelof, Andreas Granqvist, Ludwig Augustinsson; Sebastian Larsson, Albin Ekdal, Victor Claesson, Emil Forsberg, Ola Toivonen, Marcus Berg

Germany’s Lineup

The lineups are out and Germany has made FOUR changes from the opener. Özil, Khedira dropped in midfielder, Cheslea’s Antonio Rudiger in for the injured Mats Hummels at center back.

Manuel Neuer; Joshua Kimmich, Jerome Boateng, Antonio Ruediger, Jonas Hector; Sebastian Rudy, Toni Kroos; Julian Draxler, Marco Reus, Thomas Muller; Timo Werner. That’s a manager who knows the stakes and wasn’t happy with the performances on Sunday.

Germany vs. Sweden Top Story Lines

• Germany, the defending World Cup champion, sits at the bottom of Group F after dropping its opener against Mexico, 1-0. The Germans seemed put off by the Mexicans’ pace and directness, but they hit the bar with a shot in the second half and nearly grabbed a point.

• Still, one combination of results on Saturday — a Mexico win over South Korea and a Germany loss to Sweden — would put the Germany out of the tournament by bedtime.

• Germany Coach Joachim Löw guaranteed after the loss to Mexico that would not happen. Told that three recent World Cup champions — France in 1998, Italy in 2010 and Spain in 2014 — had celebrating their titles by crashing out in the group stage of the next World Cup, Löw feigned ignorance and confidence at the same time. “I have no idea why that might be the case,” he said. “But we will qualify for the next round.”

• Sweden famously qualified for the World Cup by eliminating Italy in a UEFA playoff after finishing second in its group behind France. The Swedes can be tough defensively: they surrendered only nine goals in 10 qualifiers, and none in their two-leg playoff against Italy.

• Germany may be without center back Mats Hummels on Saturday — he has a neck injury, the team said — but Sweden may have bigger problems: a stomach bug is sweeping through their camp.

Graphic

Video Review at the World Cup Is Resulting in More Goals From Penalty Kicks

The video-assistant-referee system has led to a higher percentage of penalty-kick goals than in each previous tournament.

OPEN Graphic

Some Pregame Reading

Rory Smith of the Times wrote that Germany’s biggest problem was that it has become entirely predictable.

That said, Löw says he isn’t changing anything. “We will not just break apart now and become headless and do something completely different,” he said this week. “There is no need to break out in panic just because we have lost a match.”

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Read Again Brow https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/23/sports/world-cup/germany-vs-sweden.html

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