World Cup 2018: Sweden reaping the rewards of Janne Andersson’s team rebuild as Switzerland test awaits

Sweden are still struggling to get the respect they deserve from the outside world but within it they believe that anything is possible having already claimed several prize scalps

Ed Malyon
Sports Editor
Monday 02 July 2018 18:46 BST
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Sweden v Switzerland Last 16 World Cup preview

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Louise Thomas

Louise Thomas

Editor

Perhaps Sweden’s biggest test, in their biggest game, is to just keep doing what they’ve been doing.

Underdogs against Switzerland according to Fifa world rankings and the bookmakers, Janne Andersson’s men are still struggling to get the respect they deserve from the outside world but within it they believe that anything is possible.

It is fitting, perhaps, that their most memorable World Cup moment so far came when they were the backdrop, the vanquished pretender as Toni Kroos’s last-gasp winner set the group stage ablaze in Kazan. That is Sweden’s role, it seems; the bridesmaid, the extra, the painting on the wall.

And while Andersson is happy for his side to occupy that place it is worth remembering that this is the team that has already accounted for the Netherlands, Italy and Germany on the route to the World Cup knockout stages. There are very few bigger scalps left. Sweden won a difficult group and yet they continue to be ignored due to the lack of big-name players, even if the absence of Zlatan Ibrahimovic – their biggest-ever name – might have ultimately made this a better team.

There is something of the Ewing Theory about post-Zlatan Sweden. Originally applied to American sports, the theory states that when a team is excessively reliant on a superstar player, too heavily committed to featuring them, it takes away from team performance. When that star is removed by injury, retirement or similar there is a sudden uptick and the Swedes appear to confirm this hypothesis quite nicely. It was a “rebuild from scratch” Andersson says, but a rebuild that has produced the best results in a decade.

Sweden have cultivated a positive team spirit
Sweden have cultivated a positive team spirit (EPA)

“If you google ‘team’, you’ll get a picture of us,” John Guidetti added, neatly summarising the mood around the camp. That wasn’t necessarily the case with Ibrahimovic’s continent-sized ego sucking the joy out of the national team.

They are a united team who know their limitations but for Sweden there is a belief that with the bigger, more fancied teams dropping like flies in the shape of Spain, Argentina, Portugal and those pesky Germans, a chance of history could open up.

King of the understated, Sweden coach Andersson doesn’t want to say that they have a shot at matching the semi-final they reached at USA 94, but he did suggest that it could be an end to the elite teams winning every title.

“Some of the results are purely fascinating, and it really shows that the greatest, biggest nations won’t win all the time. That, to me, is a source of inspiration if anything.”

On the softer side of the draw, Sweden know they have a chance. It is Switzerland who stand in their way, but they measure up like just another favourite to be conquered on the understated path to stepping out of Zlatan’s shadow.

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