Ivory Coast comeback leaves Japan stunned

RECIFE, Brazil – Two goals in two second-half minutes saw the Ivory Coast come from behind and beat Japan, 2-1, in a dramatic World Cup Group C late Saturday (Sunday morning, Manila time) encounter.

Ivory Coast’s Serge Aurier is hugged by a team member after their 2-1 victory over Japan in a group C World Cup soccer match at the Arena Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil, Sunday, June 15, 2014. AP

A fine Keisuke Honda strike after 16 minutes had put Japan in front at the Pernambuco Arena in Recife, but the Ivorians introduced Didier Drogba from the bench just after the hour mark before going on to turn the game on its head.

Within five minutes of the veteran striker’s arrival on the rain-soaked surface, the Elephants scored twice, both times from Serge Aurier crosses.

The equalizer came when the right-back’s curling delivery was headed home by Wilfried Bony, before Gervinho connected with another Aurier centre to stun the sizeable Japanese contingent inside the stadium.

The result sees the Ivory Coast join Colombia — who beat Greece, 3-0, earlier in the day in Belo Horizonte — on three points at the top of Group C, and Sabri Lamouchi’s side must face the South Americans next in Brasilia on Thursday, with Japan next taking on Greece in Natal.

The Elephants are desperate to finally progress beyond the group stage at a World Cup after failing in 2006 and 2010, and they were boosted in Recife by the presence in their starting line-up of Yaya Toure, who shrugged off a hamstring problem in time to captain the side.

Drogba was left on the bench at kick-off, with Swansea City’s Bony preferred as the spearhead of the attack, but the Ivorians still maintained a considerable physical advantage over the Asian champions.

However, what Japan lack in muscle they more than make up for in technical ability, and Honda displayed his class to put the Blue Samurai ahead.

Following a throw-in from the left flank, the ball arrived at the feet of AC Milan playmaker Honda at the edge of the box, and he took a touch before letting fly with a powerful, rising left-foot strike that gave Boubacar Barry Copa in goal no chance.

Honda also scored Japan’s first goal at the 2010 World Cup finals, in a 1-0 victory against Cameroon in South Africa, before the Asian giants eventually bowed out in the last 16.

This time, his goal gave Japan a platform which right-back Atsuto Uchida almost built on, as he broke into the box and turned inside Serey Die only to see his shot beaten away by the goalkeeper.

Drogba unsettles Japan

As the rain continued to fall, the Ivorians gradually came back into the contest with Yaya Toure and Arthur Boka both threatening from free-kicks and the latter seeing a fizzing long-range strike parried away by Eiji Kawashima in the Japanese goal.

Lamouchi opted to throw Drogba into the fray in the 62nd minute, withdrawing a defensive midfielder in Serey Die, and his presence unsettled the Japanese defence enough for them to concede two goals in quick succession.

Promising full-back Aurier, of French club Toulouse, was the source of both goals with two identical balls into the box from the right flank.

For the equalizer, Bony connected with his head to send the ball flying past Kawashima and into the net at the far post.

Two minutes later, Roma forward Gervinho was left unmarked to head into the net at the near post, and Japan never really looked like coming back into the contest after that.

Indeed, the Ivory Coast could have added to their lead, with Drogba twice almost getting his name on the scoresheet, including from a curling 30-yard free-kick that Kawashima did well to turn behind.

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