Manuel Akanji claims he “let his country down” when England defeated Switzerland in the quarterfinals of the 2024 European Championship due to his missed penalty.
Breel Embolo’s late goal put Switzerland on set to send the Three Lions home early on Saturday, but Bukayo Saka promptly equalized.
After extra time, the game headed to penalties. Akanji took his team’s first penalty kick attempt, but Jordan Pickford stopped it with a meek effort.
That proved to be the only miss of the shootout as England won 5-3 to move on to the European Championship semi-finals, where they will take on the Netherlands on Wednesday evening.
It was heartbreak for the Swiss who were on the verge of reaching the last-four in a major tournament for the first time in their history.
It was all too much for Akanji who was consoled by captain Granit Xhaka, as well as England stars Phil Foden, John Stones, Kyle Walker and Cole Palmer, who play or played with the defender at Manchester City.
Speaking afterward, the 28-year-old said, as quoted by the Mirror: ‘I let my team down and let my country down.’
But Switzerland manager Murat Yakin fiercely defended his player, revealing that Akanji volunteered to go first in the shootout and praising him for doing so.
‘You give responsibility to your players, and you can’t be angry at them afterwards – players who played a fantastic tournament, especially Manu,’ the 49-year-old said in his post-match press conference.
‘What can you say to him? Well, there’s not many words of solace. It doesn’t matter, no. I said “thank you” to him for his performance, and also how he led the team, how he performed. This was really on the highest level.
‘Of course, there’s deep emptiness, deep sadness. But this is the kind of sadness where everybody, every individual, has to work through it.
‘It’s incredible. But these moments are part of the business. It is a missed penalty. And now, he doesn’t need to be bothered anymore about it when you see how he played, the responsibility he carried on his shoulders.’
As Yakin says, Akanji played brilliantly throughout the tournament, helping his side beat holders Italy in the last 16 and come very close to defeating hosts Germany in the group stage.