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DOHA — Winger Ismaila Sarr kept his cool to score a first half penalty and captain Kalidou Koulibaly netted a second goal as Senegal beat Ecuador 2-1 at the Khalifa International Stadium on Tuesday to earn a place in the last 16 of the World Cup.
Sarr scored his penalty in the 44th minute having earned the spot-kick himself, but Ecuador, who needed only a draw to reach the knockout rounds, equalized through Moises Caicedo.
As the Canadian national soccer teams head to their respective FIFA World Cups, Derek Van Diest is on the scene to cover all the action. Expect expert insights and analysis in your inbox daily throughout the tournaments, and weekly on Thursdays for the rest of the season.
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That joy for the South Americans lasted only three minutes as Koulibaly restored Senegal’s lead and eased the pain of their losing out on the last 16 to Japan four years ago.
The African champions finish second in Group A with six points from three matches, one behind winners Netherlands and two ahead of Ecuador, whose tournament held much promise but has ended in disappointment.
Ecuador’s players slumped to the turf in tears on the final whistle but in truth they were second best on the night and might have asserted themselves more in the first half.
Senegal dedicated its win to the memory of midfielder Papa Bouba Diop, the goalscorer when they claimed a shock 1-0 win against France in 2002, and who passed away aged 42 two years ago to the day.
“This is for the family of Papa Bouba Diop,” Koulibaly said. “We wanted to make him proud and give homage to him. He made me dream as a boy.”
The beating of African drums was constant, as was the effort and endeavour of Senegal, which dominated the opening period against an opponent happy to sit on the point they needed.
Idrissa Gana Gueye fired wide early and Senegal striker Boulaye Dia had a superb chance when he had a clear sight of goal, but skewed his shot wide of the far post.
The decisive moment in the half came late on when Sarr was ploughed into by Ecuador defender Piero Hincapie and picked himself up to convert the spot-kick, leaving goalkeeper Hernan Galindez rooted to the spot as the shot nestled in the bottom corner.
The game’s flow flipped in the second period as it was Senegal which was happy to sit back and defend as a desperate Ecuador pressed for the equalizer.
It arrived midway through the half when Felix Torres flicked on a corner and Caicedo was unmarked at the back post to provide a simple finish.
The sizeable Ecuadorean support in the stands erupted in celebration. But that was halted shortly afterwards when Senegal struck again.
Ecuador failed to clear a corner and the ball fell kindly for Koulibaly to volley into the net from six yards.
Ecuador had most of the ball after that, but created little to trouble Edouard Mendy in the Senegal goal.
“It is a hard blow. It is a big frustration that we are feeling,” Ecuador coach Gustavo Alfaro said. “Unfortunately we made mistakes in the decisive match. And this leaves us with a bad feeling because we wanted to go through and stay on this road we had been following.
“The pain that we all feel right now is a huge pain. Unfortunately we were knocked out of a beautiful dream that these guys were building in the last two years. But we need to take into account the good performances we had and take that into the future.”
Senegal will now want to at least match their quarterfinal finish in 2002, when current coach Aliou Cisse was team captain.
It will play the top team from Group A in the last 16, but it will have to do without Gueye, who will be suspended after picking up his second yellow card of the tournament
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