Senegal coach Aliou Cisse on Sunday told star player Sadio Mane to step up at the World Cup even though the Liverpool forward got on the score sheet in a thrilling 2-2 draw with Japan.
Substitute Keisuke Honda equalized with 12 minutes left as Japan twice pegged back Senegal in a captivating stalemate at the Ekaterinburg Arena that left Group H wide open.
Mane was the beneficiary of poor defending on 11 minutes when goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima made a mess of a shot, punching the ball into the lurking Liverpool star.
Photo: AP
It bounced back off his leg for his first World Cup finals goal, but Japan were successful in keeping the 26-year-old more or less quiet after that and Cisse admitted that the Asian side deserved to win, even if they were twice behind.
“Of course we have regrets, but we did not see a great Senegal team tonight compared to the previous match against Poland [a 2-1 victory],” Cisse said. “Frankly, we were not very good. Despite that we were leading twice and what is annoying were the two goals [conceded], but group matches are played over three stages so we will hope for the best for the game against Colombia.”
Cisse, Senegal skipper in the nation’s run to the quarter-finals in 2002, hopes that Mane can be the difference in what promises to be a nerve-wracking final round of matches on Thursday.
“A player like Sadio Mane is a player with a lot of expectations and he is one of the players under the spotlight,” he said. “He can do better, but today he was better than against Poland and he needs to do better against Colombia.”
Mane, fresh off the back of an exciting club season that took Liverpool to the UEFA Champions League final, felt the African side deserved to win.
“Honestly, we are all disappointed, there was a way to win and we did not do it,” said Mane, who was only a sporadic danger down Senegal’s left.
A win for either side would have more or less put them in the round-of-16 in a clash billed as the pace and power of Senegal against the tactical and technical nous of Japan, who took a gamble and replaced Vahid Halilhodzic with Akira Nishino as coach just weeks before the tournament.
It appeared to pay off when the unfancied Asian side stunned 10-man Colombia 2-1 in their opener, and on 34 minutes they were level with Senegal when Takashi Inui bent the ball wonderfully into the bottom corner.
On 71 minutes, soon after hitting the Senegal bar, Japan allowed a scuffed cross to go right across their goal and defender Moussa Wague arrived all alone at the far post to grab what looked like being an unlikely winner, but Honda, the former AC Milan midfielder who had only been on the pitch six minutes, hit a deserved late equalizer to become the first Japan player to score at three World Cups (2010, 2014 and 2018).
The 32-year-old is also now the top-scoring Asian player in World Cup history, netting four goals in nine appearances in the competition.
Nishino said he sent Honda on because Japan were going for the win and the Japan coach felt they did well to keep Mane at bay.
“It is very important to neutralize Mane, but we did a pretty good job in dulling his threat, but what we were more worried about was the impact he has on other Senegal players,” Nishino said. “In the first half we let him and the others play a bit too freely, but overall for countermeasures I think we did pretty well.”
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