Mikel Merino, who smashed in the World Cup quarter-final winner against Belgium in the 88th minute on Friday, said it was “surreal” to have scored a late winner in two straight knockout games for Spain.

Mikel Merino, who smashed in the World Cup quarter-final winner against Belgium in the 88th minute on Friday, said it was “surreal” to have scored a late winner in two straight knockout games for Spain. “I couldn’t have imagined something like this even in my wildest dreams — another goal in the dying minutes,” said Merino, who had already scored in stoppage time in Spain’s 1-0 win over Portugal on Monday. “I thought it would take a long time to repeat a feat like that… and I managed it in the very next game!”
Late in the game and with the score tied 1-1, Spain’s Pau Cubarsi had shot low from range.
Belgian substitute ‘keeper Senne Lammens should have held onto the ball. Instead it bounced toward Merino, who had only been on the pitch two minutes himself. The Arsenal player was first to the rebound and fired it in.
Merino said it was not purely a coincidence, attributing his dramatic late success to “going out there with drive” and belief in himself to “contribute wherever you’re needed.”
“That’s exactly what I did,” he said.
Merino said his team’s run to a semi-final clash with France at the World Cup has so far been “less flashy” than Spain’s victorious campaign at the European Championships two years ago.
“It was a struggle today,” he admitted.