Switzerland brought an end to Brazil’s 11-match unbeaten
run as Dani Alves headed into his own net to hand the hosts a shock 1-0 win.
The Barcelona defender failed to control a swinging cross
from Xherdan Shaqiri and put the ball through his own goal with 47 minutes
gone, unwittingly handing the Swiss reward after strong pressure from Ottmar
Hitzfeld’s side.
The victory for Switzerland marks their first since 1989
against the five-time world champions.
Hitzeld fielded a strong side for the match, including
veteran Philippe Senderos as well as promising Bayern Munich youngster Shaqiri.
His Brazil counterpart Luiz Felipe Scolari opted to stick
with nine of the XI who had won the FIFA Confederations Cup final against
Spain.
Julio Cesar, currently seeking a move from English
Championship side QPR, missed out while reported Barcelona target David Luiz
was replaced by Dante at the back.
The visitors started strongly, piling on the pressure
early – and it looked like they would be rewarded in the 11th minute when Fred
managed to shake off his man to feed Hulk, who was poised in the middle, but
quick reactions from Diego Benaglio saw the 27-year-old’s shot kept out.
The home side continued to struggle to retain any
possession, and the Wolfsburg goalkeeper was called into action again a few
minutes later. Hulk was once more involved as he charged at goal, but his shot
fell well for Benaglio, who saved with his feet.
Switzerland did pose some threat on the break, but their
finishing was wayward as a shot from Shaqiri cleared the crossbar just before
the interval.
Tempers began to fray shortly before half-time, when
Stephan Lichtsteiner was chopped down by Neymar, with the Barcelona striker
earning a yellow card as referee Deniz Aytekin struggled to separate the
players.
Brazil’s class was evident in patches, and they should
have opened the scoring when Paulinho’s header came back off the crossbar,
before at the other end Shaqiri tested Jefferson with a long-range effort.
At the break, the hosts opted to withdraw Valentin
Stocker,to be replaced by Tranquillo Barnetta, while 21-year-old Fabian Schaer
made his international bow at the expense of Senderos.
And the changes reaped rewards within a few minutes, as
Switzerland’s pressure ended with a cross from Shaqiri and Alves inadvertently
head past his own keeper.
The Brazilian embarrassment was almost increased soon
after when Jefferson failed to control a ball leading to a melee in the box,
with Haris Seferovic just beaten to the ball by the Brazilian.
Scolari opted to make three changes to force the game,
with the most notable seeing 31-year-old Paris Saint-Germain defender Maxwell
make his international debut while Fred – who has scored five in five for
Brazil – left the field to be replaced by Jo.
That did not seem to help the visitors, who still found
themselves battling against the impressive Swiss attack – which was typified
through Shaqiri, who once again fired over the crossbar after 66 minutes.
Brazil attempted to fight back in the latter stages,
going close through Jo, but debutant defender Michael Lang intercepted.The loss
marked the first for Brazil since February, while Switzerland gained a
confidence-boosting win ahead of the resumption of their World Cup qualifying
campaign.
Hitzfeld’s men currently sit top of UEFA Group E,
although they still have another four games to play, the next coming against
Iceland on September 6..
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