Robert Lewandowski backed to bounce back from penalty miss and lead Poland
An “emotional” Robert Lewandowski has to digest his penalty miss against Mexico and be Poland’s spearhead for the rest of the World Cup in Qatar, according to his coach Czeslaw Michniewicz.
The Barcelona star looked poised to score his first ever goal at a World Cup finals and his 77th in a Poland shirt when he won a penalty early in the second half and stepped up to take it himself.
However, Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa showed all the experience of his 37 years and five World Cups to guess the right way and save low to his left, sparking delirium among the largely Mexican crowd and ensuring a disappointing game ended goalless.
Victory for either side would have been a real springboard towards the knockout stage in a group which has been blown wide open by Saudi Arabia’s shock victory over Argentina earlier on Tuesday.
But Michniewicz has called upon Lewandowski to dig deep and recover from his disappointment.
“I sympathised with him, I know how a captain who misses a penalty feels,” he said. “He was very emotional about it.
“We have a monitor in the dressing room, he watched a few replays of it. He has to digest it himself, he knows how he will deal with the situation. We know he will help us a lot in this tournament.
“When he misses there is always the question ‘why?’ Yesterday he trained on penalties and he never missed. But this happens.”
Ochoa said: “We work on that these two weeks, maybe one month (before the tournament) with the goalkeeping coach, it’s always difficult when you watch videos of penalties by Robert Lewandowski.
“You watch more than 15, 20 penalties so you never know which side to choose. In the end I’m happy to save the penalty, he’s a great striker and I’m happy to keep the zero.”
Mexico dominated possession and had the best of the first half, but without any real clear-cut chances to show for it.
El Tri coach Gerardo ‘Tata’ Martino said: “We never let (Poland) run at us, they’re always dangerous when they run.
“Maybe we had our best chances in the first half, we became predictable, we were too cautious. We had to gamble with the ball. It’s true in the first half the intensity was there.
“But it’s always a result that keeps you alive. A win would have been better but a defeat would have been much worse.”
Martino now faces his home country Argentina on Saturday night knowing a Mexico win could eliminate Lionel Messi and co.
Asked how he would approach the match, Martino said: “I would say (we need to be) cleverer – knowing the game we must play. We need to think, we are playing against one of the main candidates to lift the World Cup trophy.
“This is the situation – they were unbeaten for 36 games and we need to play the game we must play.”
He admitted the result against the Saudis changed his thinking for Saturday, adding: “Until 1pm today we had our idea, at 3pm things changed quite a lot.”