
Sweden secured their place in the quarter-finals of the 2018 FIFA World Cup with a 1-0 win over Switzerland on Tuesday.
Emil Forsberg scored the only goal of the game on 66 minutes as his deflected strike beat goalkeeper Yann Sommer. That knocked Switzerland out of the tournament and keeps Sweden's World Cup dreams alive.
England and Colombia have little to fear from Sweden
England and Colombia may have added motivation for their last-16 clash after watching Sweden struggle in front of goal and win the match only through a deflected strike.
Marcus Berg was guilty of missing some glorious chances for Sweden, who looked toothless in attack. Match of the Day highlighted his World Cup record:
Albin Ekdal managed to outdo his team-mate with an even worse miss as he blazed a chance over from close range just before half-time. Goal's Sam Lee offered his view:
Journalist Mattias Karen felt a deflection would be the only way Sweden would score:
Sweden have kept clean sheets in three of their four World Cup games, but Switzerland did manage to create chances. Blerim Dzemaili will wonder how he did not score when well placed.
Manager Janne Andersson has few star names in his squad but has built a well-organised team who defend well, are hard-working and have a strong team ethic.
Although they have picked up some impressive results to reach the last eight, they have shown little for England or Colombia to fear and look one of the weakest teams left in the competition.
Sweden are antithesis of thrilling World Cup
The 2018 World Cup has provided excitement, thrills, shock results and great goals, and it has been widely regarded as one of the best tournaments in recent memory.
However, Sweden have contributed few memorable moments, and this game will not live long in the memory either.
The two teams created few chances, and when they did get sight of goal, they lacked quality in attack. Sweden's goal came via a deflection and Switzerland rarely looked like scoring after going behind.
James Tyler at ESPN FC offered his view on Sweden:
Sweden are unlikely to change their approach for the quarter-finals, and while they are surpassing expectations on the pitch, there's very little to get excited about.
Lustig will rue picking up careless booking
Mikael Lustig made headlines before this match by suggesting his team would try to get Switzerland midfielder Granit Xhaka sent off as they were aware of his poor disciplinary record, per the Telegraph's Jeremy Wilson.
However, it was Lustig who picked up the first booking of the match, and it was to prove a costly one as it rules him out of Sweden's quarter-final clash.
Dan Kilpatrick at the Evening Standard offered his view:
It was a needless booking from the Celtic man when he hauled back Josip Drmic when there was no danger.
Sweden's biggest strength has been their defensive solidity, but Lustig's suspension means they will have to change their backline for Saturday.
What's Next
Sweden will take on either Colombia or England for a place in the semi-finals on Saturday at the Samara Arena in Russia. Switzerland's next scheduled fixture is a clash against Iceland in the UEFA Nations League in September.
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