Mohamed Salah’s team is facing an early exit after their defeat to Russia
The Russian hosts continue to mesmerize their home fans, as a convincing 3-1 victory over Egypt has all but secured a spot in the knockout stage of the tournament. In a closely fought contest, it took an own goal from Egyptian captain Ahmed Fahty in the 47th minute to release the shackles from the relentless Russian attack.
Mohamed Salah then went on to convert a 73rd-minute penalty, merely a consolation goal for the ambitious North Africans, who will now be eliminated from Group A, should Uruguay avoid losing to the underdogs from Saudi-Arabia.
Frankly, the North Africans were overwhelmed with the ball at their feet and struggled to spread the game into the areas where they had an advantage over the Russian team. Along with the technical errors in their build-up play, Egypt never appeared to have a plan on how to unhinge the Russian defence.
Egypt’s heroic defensive effort against Uruguay was praised for all the right reasons, but their match against Russia showed, that the side significantly lacks quality in the middle of the park.
Ahmed Fahti’s own goal was the epitome of a poor defensive effort from the Egyptians
After one of the strongest defensive efforts we’ve seen at this year’s World Cup against Uruguay, the Egyptians failed to find any of their characteristic resilience against effective hosts in Saint Petersburg.
Egypt seemed completely overwhelmed by the physical force of Artem Dzyuba, paired with the creativity of Denis Cheryshev and Aleksandr Golovin. While Russia’s attack was less threatening than Uruguay’s, their prolific goalscoring showed the Egyptian defence their limits quite clearly.
Mohamed Salah was completely wasted in Egypt’s formation
Finally, it’s time to address the elephant in the room. Salah went completely missing last night, despite the Egyptian hopes largely resting on his shoulders.
When watching Ronaldo for Portugal, Messi for Argentina or even Gareth Bale for Wales, the centre-pieces of so-called ‘one-man-teams’, you can see them begging for the ball. They move deeper and deeper, even into their own half, to get their team going and initiate their teams’ attacks.
Admittedly, Salah isn’t a typical playmaker and his pace is arguably his greatest asset, but at international level he simply needs to be more involved to help his team onto the right track.