| The former Manchester United, Rangers and Red 
				Star Belgrade midfielder is an outspoken presence in Sweden and 
				on club channel MUTV, and he says there is more to Marcus Berg 
				and Ola Toivonen than just goals.
 "When you play a 4-4-2 in the shape or the formation that Sweden 
				play, the strikers are going to be the ones that suffer the most 
				when you go to attack," he told Reuters.
 
 "They are so compact, they work so hard to protect the 
				midfielders - when you put so much work into it like Toivonen 
				and Berg do, you lose that little bit of energy when you get 
				your chance.
 
 "For the forwards, the pressure to score goals in those one or 
				two chances becomes more, but people don't actually understand 
				the way Janne wants his team to play."
 
 Calls for Berg and Emil Forsberg, who despite his winning goal 
				in the last 16 against Switzerland has yet to reach his usual 
				high level in Russia, to be dropped make no sense to the 
				36-year-old Djordjic, who won a Swedish league title with AIK.
 
 "They need to trust Berg and Forsberg, they made the 
				quarter-finals and they need to stick with the same team," the 
				Serbian-born Swede said.
 
 "Maybe we should have made more of the fact that, after seeing 
				off Holland (in qualifying), Italy (in a playoff) and Germany, 
				nobody wants to play against Sweden - it's a tough thing to do," 
				he said.
 
 Though he only made a handful of appearances for Manchester 
				United, the well-traveled Djordjic is remembered there as a 
				precocious talent and winner of the Jimmy Murphy award for the 
				best young player at Old Trafford in 2000.
 
 Asked to predict how the quarter-final would pan out, Djordjic 
				said he was going with his heart and the country that he grew up 
				in.
 
 "Every game Sweden have played, they give the other team 
				possession, even the last group game against Mexico - we only 
				had 33 percent of the ball, Sweden, but we still beat them 3-0," 
				he said.
 
 "England fans keep singing 'It's coming home', but the only 
				thing that's coming home is the England players on Saturday 
				night!"
 
 (Reporting by Philip O'Connor; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
 
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