SAMARA, July 7 -- The city of Samara, so closely linked to the Russian space program, has had its share of heroes over the years and there plenty of the city's high-rise blocks with murals of Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space on their sides. Just for a short time on Saturday, however, Gagarin was no longer the biggest hero for England fans in Samara and they could be forgiven for thinking a painting of Harry Maguire would very nice on the side of one of those buildings.
Maguire rose like the Soyuz rocket that stands in the main street of Samara to power Kieran Trippier's corner into the Swedish net after half an hour to open the scoring as England beat Sweden 2-0 to qualify for the semifinals of the World Cup for the first time since 1990.
England have other candidates for a mural: goalkeeper Jordan Pickford built on his penalty save against Colombia with 3 vital stops to keep the Swedes at bay, while full back Trippier produced two assists and Jordan Henderson was both a dynamo and calming influence in midfield.
With Dele Ali and Ashley Young recovered from slight physical issues during the week, England named an unchanged side, while Emil Krafth replaced the suspended Mikael Lustig for Sweden and Seb Larsson returned after suspension.
The game got off to a cagey start with Sweden's 4-4-2 setup closing down spaces in midfield, while England's timid probing for a way through wasn't helped by some wayward passes, with Dele Ali too often the guilty party.
It wasn't until the 19th minute that England created a chance as Raheem Sterling's run from halfway set up Kane to fire narrowly wide from 25 yards, shortly before Trippier's low cross was smothered by Robin Olsen as England appeared to come to life, with the tricky Sterling and the right back at the heart of their best moves.
Half an hour in Trippier's cross was put out for a corner which Maguire headed powerfully into the net. It was the eighth goal England have scored from a set piece in the tournament.
Sterling should have increased England's lead after finding space behind the Swedish defense, but Olsen got down well to force him wide.
Sweden had created nothing in the first half, but it needed a fine save from Pickford to stop Marcus Berg's powerful header in the first minute after the break. It was a huge moment; England breathed again and resumed control.
In the 59th minute a patient move ended with Trippier crossing from the right and Ali peeled off at the far post to plant a powerful header past Olsen to make it 2-0.
Then it was Pickford's turn with another stunning save to deny Claesson as Sweden looked certain to score, before he tipped Berg's effort over the bar as England suffered a brief wobble before seeing the game comfortably over the line.
Chang'e-3 success sparks star-gazing craze
Rupert Murdoch OKs 'amicable' divorce
Macao packs a big punch
Air zone 'beneficial to safety'
US Ambassador Locke to leave post next year
Agency releases 2017 holiday plan
Shenzhen facility for abandoned babies has skeptics
Girl's death spark calls for child services oversight
Group claims Tian'anmen attack
Laojiao facilities in limbo as detention system to end
System for organ donors tested
Apple sends in experts to probe employees' deaths
Israel slams nuclear agreement with Iran
Thai rallies maintain pressure
PLO chief was 'not poisoned'
Parents say golfing teaches good life lessons
Normalizing trade may bear fruit for US apples
Signer claims 'schizophrenic' moment at Mandela event
Hershey hits sweet spot with deal for China confectionery Golden Monkey
Urban shoppers shifting to online purchases
Ancient expertise provides answers to Sichuan river project
Continuity in DPRK policies expected
China allows rouble in border city
Erupting volcano forces villagers to flee in Indonesia
Dialogue 'key to relations'
University students seek to ace art of love
Screen time leads to bigger waistlines
Students see benefits from courses in Romanian
Experts say more seismic activity could still come
Parents urged to supervise children's TV-viewing habits