Santa Fe New Mexican

Brazil scores late to beat Costa Rica, 2-0

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ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — After more than 90 minutes of aggravatio­n and exasperati­on, Neymar and Brazil finally broke through Costa Rica’s smothering defense.

Philippe Coutinho scored in the first minute of stoppage time, and Neymar followed six minutes later to give Brazil a 2-0 victory over Costa Rica on Friday at the World Cup.

Unlike Argentina and Lionel Messi, Brazil is still in a good position to advance to the round of 16. Costa Rica has been eliminated.

“The responsibi­lity is huge when you are playing for the national team,” Coutinho said. “You have to be mentally strong from the beginning until the end. We fought until the end and we were rewarded.”

Neymar dropped to his knees after the final whistle, sobbing in his hands as his teammates surrounded him and then lifted him off the ground.

“We know he had a difficult injury, he went through a very bad patch,” Coutinho said through a translator, referring to Neymar breaking a bone in his right foot four months ago. “But his joy at being on the pitch is contagious.”

A few minutes before the end, Neymar flopped backward to initially earn a penalty, but the contact was so exaggerate­d that the referee reversed the call after using video review. Neymar then angrily punched the ball a short time later as Costa Rica’s players tried to waste time. It earned Brazil’s biggest star a yellow card.

NIGERIA 2, ICELAND O

In Volgograd, Russia, Ahmed Musa gave Nigeria its first win at this year’s World Cup, and gave Argentina a gift.

Musa scored two second-half goals to help the Nigerians beat Iceland and move into second place in the group behind already-qualified Croatia.

Nigeria will face Argentina in its final group match Tuesday in St. Petersburg. If Nigeria wins, it will advance to the round of 16. But if Argentina claims all three points, it can still advance depending on the result of the other match between Croatia and Iceland.

Musa, Nigeria’s all-time leading World Cup scorer with four goals, has played well against Argentina before. His two previous goals came at the 2014 tournament in Brazil in a group match against the two-time champions.

“It’s possible I’m going to score another two goals,” the 25-year-old Musa said.

On Friday, Musa gave Nigeria the lead in the 49th minute after Victor Moses sprinted deep into the Iceland half and curled a cross to the near post. Musa deftly controlled the ball before slamming it past Iceland goalkeeper Hannes Halldorsso­n on the half-volley.

SWITZERLAN­D 2, SERBIA 1

In Kaliningra­d, Russia, Albania’s national flag was at the center of Switzerlan­d’s victory over Serbia.

Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri celebrated their goals by making a nationalis­t symbol of their ethnic Albanian heritage.

Both players put their open hands together with their thumbs locked and fingers outstretch­ed to make what looks like the doublehead­ed eagle displayed on Albania’s flag. The thumbs represent the heads of the two eagles, while the fingers look like the feathers.

“I think about this, I don’t want to speak,” Shaqiri said. “In soccer, you have always emotions. You can see what I did, and it’s just emotion, and I’m just happy to have scored the goal. I did it, and we don’t have to speak about this.”

The gesture is likely to inflame tensions among Serb nationalis­ts and ethnic Albanians.

Shaqiri was born in Kosovo, the former Serbian province that declared independen­ce in 2008. Serbia doesn’t recognize Kosovo’s independen­ce and relations between the two countries remain tense. Xhaka’s parents are from Kosovo and they are of Albanian heritage. His brother plays for Albania’s national team.

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