Brazil held to 1-1 draw by Switzerland at World Cup

Switzerland's Steven Zuber in action with Brazil's Paulinho and Neymar. (REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff)
Updated 18 June 2018
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Brazil held to 1-1 draw by Switzerland at World Cup

  • Besides Brazil and Germany, Argentina were held to a 1-1 draw by Iceland on Saturday and Spain and Portugal played to a 3-3 draw on Friday.

ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia: Brazil joined the list of big teams struggling to win their opening matches at the World Cup in Russia.
The five-time champions were held to a 1-1 draw by Switzerland on Sunday, a few hours after four-time champion Germany was beaten by Mexico 1-0.
Philippe Coutinho gave Brazil the lead in the 20th minute with a volley that bounced in off the right post.
Steven Zuber then headed in the equalizer in the 50th.
Mexican referee Cesar Ramos dismissed complaints that Zuber had shoved defender Miranda before getting to the corner from Xherdan Shaqiri.
Besides Brazil and Germany, Argentina were held to a 1-1 draw by Iceland on Saturday and Spain and Portugal played to a 3-3 draw on Friday.


Verstappen fumes ‘whole day a disaster’ after Shanghai struggles

Updated 2 sec ago
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Verstappen fumes ‘whole day a disaster’ after Shanghai struggles

  • A fuming Max Verstappen said Friday was “a disaster” after torrid practice and sprint qualifying sessions at the Chinese Grand Prix
SHANGHAI: A fuming Max Verstappen said Friday was “a disaster” after torrid practice and sprint qualifying sessions at the Chinese Grand Prix.
Verstappen’s Red Bull was almost two seconds behind championship leader George Russell’s Mercedes as he finished in eighth place in both sessions in Shanghai.
The Red Bulls struggled for pace again on the second race weekend of the season with their new in-house power units having replaced Honda as engine supplier.
They are also clearly far from getting to grips with the sweeping new aerodynamic and chassis regulations as Formula One enters an era of a 50-50 split between conventional and electrical power.
“The whole day has been a disaster pace-wise: no grip — I honestly think that is the biggest problem — no grip, no balance,” said an angry four-time world champion Verstappen, whose best lap was a colossal 1.734 sec adrift of Russell.
“(We are) just losing massive amounts of time in the corners and then of course because of that you start to trigger other little problems.
“But the biggest problem for us is that the cornering is completely out.”
His teammate Isack Hadjar fared even worse, he was 10th, barely scraping into the top-10 shootout in sprint qualifying.
It prompted Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies to apologize to Verstappen.
“Sorry, Max,” said Mekies over team radio at the end of the session.
“Tough one, a lot to learn. The weekend is still long, we need to learn from (it). Let’s try again.”
Verstappen, who fought back from a qualifying crash in the opening race in Australia last weekend to finish sixth from 20th on the grid, was at a loss as to the way forward.
“I don’t know at the moment what we can do. We’ll see,” said the Dutchman.