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Haaland Delivers! 4 Takeaways From Norway's Milestone Win vs. Ivory Coast
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Fox Sports·about 3 hours ago

Haaland Delivers! 4 Takeaways From Norway's Milestone Win vs. Ivory Coast

Almost three decades after their last World Cup, Norway just won its first knockout game in history.

Momentous, but not pretty.

Ivory Coast had more shots, more corners, and controlled the ball for long stretches.

But Antonio Nusa bent in a beauty right in the top corner, Erling Haaland did Erling Haaland things, and Ørjan Nyland slammed the door in stoppage time.

A place in the Round of 16 against Brazil?

Here are my takeaways from Norway's 2-1 win over the Ivory Coast: 1.

Norway Is the Real Deal.

Believe the Dark Horse.

Don't you dare treat Norway like a fluke.

Their World Cup qualification statistics were bordering on legendary.

They have Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard, two of the tournament's best players, and a team around them that keeps finding ways to win.

First World Cup since 1998, and they breezed through the group with victories over Iraq and Senegal.

Yes, they lost 4-1 to France.

Don't read much into that one.

Ståle Solbakken made wholesale changes and rested ten starters, including Haaland and Ødegaard, as qualification was already locked.

The B-team took a beating.

The A-team is humming.

Now they have their first knockout win ever and a date with Brazil.

This isn't a Cinderella story.

It's a genuinely good side that happens to have a generational striker up top.

Underestimate them at your peril.

The Tactical Tightrope: Norway Won Ugly, and That's Just Fine.

This was not the Norwegian masterclass we've seen so often over the last year.

Ivory Coast piled up 14 corners to Norway's three and outshot them, camping in the Norwegian half for long spells.

So how did Norway win?

Ruthlessness, individual quality, and a clutch goalkeeper.

Antonio Nusa curled in a gem from the left.

Patrick Berg buzzed all over midfield and teed up the winner.

Martin Ødegaard pulled the strings and took the set pieces.

Then there was Haaland: barely a touch for an hour, then one clinical left-footed flick to win it.

That's a striker who doesn't need the ball to hurt you.

As Zlatan Ibrahimović said on air: Haaland needs one touch to score one goal.

Meanwhile, Alexander Sørloth still hasn't hit form, spurning chances and having a tough time sharing room with Haaland.

And when Ivory Coast loaded up a stoppage-time free kick, Ørjan Nyland produced the save of the night.

Win the moments, survive the rest.

Farewell, Ivory Coast.

Ivory Coast goes home, but they leave with their heads high.

This was their first-ever World Cup knockout appearance, and they didn't just make up the numbers.

They pushed Norway to the brink.

Amad Diallo came off the bench and conjured a moment of pure magic to level it, dancing through the box before finishing, and for a while, the Elephants had Norway hanging on for dear life.

This side was built on two contrasting heroes.

Nineteen-year-old Yan Diomandé, the fearless winger who announced himself as a star of the future, has drawn plenty of attention from giant European football clubs.

And Nicolas Pépé, the veteran who rolled back the years with goals and big-game nerve.

Emerse Faé's team played without fear all tournament.

A country that had never won a knockout tie now knows, beyond doubt, that it belongs at this level.

And Norway has a Blueprint.

Here's the good news for Norway: Brazil is beatable.

Japan just showed everyone how.

Carlo Ancelotti fielded one of the oldest teams in Brazil's World Cup history, and it showed.

Casemiro, Danilo, and a thirty-something back line looked slow and leggy as Japan's pace and movement sliced them open in the first half.

Brazil needed a 96th-minute Gabriel Martinelli winner to avoid the upset, and they gifted Japan a goal off a sloppy turnover.

Now hand that blueprint to a team with Erling Haaland leading the line and running the channels.

Pace in behind, a clinical edge on the counter, and the appetite to punish every mistake.

Norway has all three.

They'll spend most of Sunday defending, no question.

But if Brazil plays as nervously as they did against Japan, and Haaland gets one clean look, the South American giants could see an early exit.

Sources: Fox Sports

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