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    Iceland steps into the heat for Nigeria showdown

    Iceland will try not to melt in the fierce heat of Volgograd when it takes on Nigeria in only its second ever World Cup match on Friday after impressively holding twice champion Argentina to a draw at the weekend.

    Iceland steps into the heat for Nigeria showdown
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    World Cup debutant Iceland is dreaming of the knockout stage and writing a new chapter in one of the most outstanding stories of international football in recent years. In its way stand not only Nigeria, which is desperate for a win after losing its opening game 2-0 to Croatia, but also the challenge of searing temperatures in the southern Russian city.

    Weather forecasters are predicting heat of 32 degrees Celsius (90°F) at kick-off time on Friday, 10 degrees hotter than when Iceland pulled off its 1-1 draw with Argentina on Saturday. “Of course we’ve talked about it,” assistant coach Helge Kolvidsson said on Wednesday.

    “We have doctors... and we’re trying to prepare as good as we can, if it’s going to help with vitamins or stuff like that, but it’s going to be the same for both teams.” Iceland, which features many players based in northern European countries, has chosen a resort near Sochi, on Russia’s hot Black Sea coast, to help its acclimatization.

    Kolvidsson said the players were mindful of Nigeria’s long experience at the top table of world football. “They’ve been in the World Cup finals five times, three times they have moved on to the next round,” he said. “We are here for the first time.” In a potential blow for Iceland, winger Johann Berg Gudmundsson is a doubt after tearing a muscle in the Argentina game.

    Playmaker Gylfi Sigurdsson, who recovered from injury just in time for the World Cup, played 90 minutes against the South Americans, raising hopes he will remain fit for Nigeria. While a draw for Iceland would keep its knockout hopes alive, Nigeria, which is bottom of Group D, is under huge pressure to get all three points with manager Gernot Rohr saying his team must win.

    Striker Odion Ighalo promised Nigeria would be on the front foot after managing only two chances on target against Croatia. 

    “The Iceland game will be different from the Croatian one,” said Ighalo. “We want to attack and we want to create chances because only with chances you score goals.” So far, only one team from Africa has won at the Russia World Cup — Senegal which beat Poland 2-1 on Tuesday — adding to the pressure on Nigeria.

    • Nigeria has got past the first round three times.
    • Nigeria’s coach is German Gernot Rohr, a former Bayern Munich player who has also managed the national teams of Gabon, Niger and Burkina Faso.
    • Of the teams at the World Cup, Nigeria had the youngest squad during the qualifying matches with an average age of under 25. Iceland had the second-oldest squad, averaging 29 years of age.
    • Iceland’s manager, Heimir Hallgrimsson, was number two to Swede Lars Lagerback who steered Iceland to Euro 2016.
    • Previous meetings: Iceland and Nigeria have met only once before, a 1981 friendly in Reykjavik won 3-0 by the Nordic island nation.

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