Sweden coach Janne Andersson must find a way to pick up his deflated players following their devastating defeat to Germany in a World Cup Group F that stands tantalisingly poised.
Sweden were on course for the last 16 until Toni Kroos stepped up with a wonderful winner in the fifth minute of injury time to rescue the reigning champions 2-1 in a Saturday-night thriller.
It left Group F on a knife-edge going into the final round of games on Wednesday, when Sweden face Mexico in Yekaterinburg while at the same time Germany play South Korea in Kazan.
Mexico have six points and one foot in the knockout rounds, with Germany and the Swedes both on three points and with the same goal difference and having scored the same number.
Sweden will progress if they better Germany's result.
Several Sweden players were left prone on the turf such was the late, excruciating nature of the defeat to Germany.
Andersson said: "The whole group is still alive so we will have to lick our wounds and come back for the last game." The 55-year-old, who accused Germany's backroom staff of "rubbing it in our faces", also needs to deal with the delicate fall-out surrounding his winger Jimmy Durmaz.
Durmaz, born in Sweden to Assyrian parents who emigrated from Turkey, was subjected to racial hatred and death threats on social media for giving away the foul that led to Kroos's late winner.
The 29-year-old was moved to read out a statement to reporters at the team's Black Sea coast base in Gelendzhik on Sunday, saying of the abuse: "Who the hell does such things? "It is completely unacceptable."
- Record-breaker -
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