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Saturday, July 30, 2011
Points to ponder on Azkals
Saturday, July 30, 2011 |
Posted by
zilljanmark

OVER a lunch of lemon chicken and pasta Bolognese,
the Azkals looked and sounded loose and easy but not in a boisterous
manner.
The
rain was pouring, yet the Filipinos were oblivious to the downpour that
caused many to wonder whether the match versus Kuwait would push
through. The players signed some souvenir shirts and magazines after
lunch before heading over to their rooms to rest.
Before the team left
for the Rizal Memorial Football Stadium, the players discussed the task
at hand. Could they overhaul the three-goal lead of Kuwait? They had
skipper Aly Borromeo and midfielder Stephan Schrock back. They knew they
had the home crowd in their corner. And maybe, just maybe the rain that
could once more work in their favor.
They
considered the possibilities—that winning the match was more within
reach than qualifying for the next round of the Asian Qualifiers of the
2014 World Cup. The optimum word was to try, to go all out and leave it
on the floor. The coaching staff and management urged them to do their
best, win or lose not simply for themselves but for the people watching
and for the country.
That thought alone made the burden somewhat easier.
Four
hours later, after the Azkals absorbed a 2-1 setback to Kuwait that
ended their World Cup dreams, the team sat inside the dugout quiet and
lost in their thoughts. Disappointment was written all over their faces.
Not much was said as they had to carefully measure their thoughts and
the raw emotion that pervaded the room.
“We needed the space for ourselves,” Manuel Ott would later say. “We needed to think about what happened and what’s next.”
Space, pace and possession obsession
WHAT
happened was the Kuwaitis, out of their desert element, exposed the
Azkals’ lack of experience and on-field chemistry. For all the talk
about the Kuwaitis poor defense, the Filipinos were reduced to thunder
strikes from outside.
There
were earlier musings on how the visitors would fare in the rain. Yet
for much of the first half, Al Azraq went back to their old ways of
swarming an opposing player to dispossess him of the ball. They once
more ran their attack from the left flank that saw them get off eight
attempts (to the Philippines’ five) in the first half alone.
But
it was the home side that struck first after Stephan Schrock, showing
why he is perhaps the team’s biggest impact player, saw his cracker of a
shot beat Al Azraq goalkeeper Nawaf Al Khaldi, who repeatedly engaged
Philippine counterpart Neil Etheridge in a match of “can you stop this?”
Come
the second half, and ironically a man down after Fahed El Ebrahim was
cautioned for a second time in the match, Kuwait showed better
composure.
In the
63rd minute, after Ray Jonsson was whistled for a foul, midfielder Jarah
Al Ateeqi, instead of sending the ball forward following a free kick,
chose to send it back to defender Mesad Neda who had a better view of
the defense.
Neda
waited for a moment for the Philippines’ defense to open up as he drew
the attention of Angel Guirado and Phil Younghusband, who had gone back
to defend. The Kuwaiti defender sent a long ball into the Philippines’
box that central back Rob Gier headed away.
Only
Al Azraq’s Waleed Ali retrieved the ball and with one touch sent it
forward to striker Yousef Naser who took one dribble to break free of
the Azkals holding midfielder Manny Ott before blasting a shot from some
20 yards out to beat a flailing Etheridge.
Twenty-two
minutes later with Kuwait on a quick counter, Borromeo showed
breathtaking pace as he slalomed through four defenders, took a return
forward pass from line mate Saleh Al Sheikh without missing a beat,
side-stepped Etheridge before he poked it home toward an empty net
despite Jonsson giving futile chase.
Those
were carefully measured strides—four to beat the middle third and four
more to blow past the defending third—before the score. Schrock’s first
international goal was just as similar. He snared the loose ball, took
one dribble and fired away.
It’s
about quality possession, short and one touch passing with the
objective of moving forward then putting on a sudden burst of pace for a
clinical finish. And if one cannot look at Kuwait’s deconstruction of
the Philippines’ World Cup dreams, one should take a look at Argentina’s
incredible 25-pass possession against Serbia and Montenegro in the 2006
World Cup that was capped by an exquisite Hernan Crespo backheel to
Esteban Cambiasso for a goal.
The
stat sheet may record Cambiasso as the goal scorer but truly, that
belongs to every single Argentine who passed that ball and preserved
possession.
The dip in the rankings
DAYS
after the 3-nil loss in Kuwait City, the Philippines fell from No. 152
in Fifa’s rankings to No. 155. Kuwait, in the meantime, went up by seven
notches (No. 102 to No. 95).
After
the 2006 World Cup, Fifa introduced a new formula for coming up with
its rankings after receiving much criticism over the standings heading
into football’s biggest event in Germany.
Fifa
has introduced a simpler formula: where changes include the dropping of
home and away matches, as well as the corresponding goals scored and
conceded. The factors that Fifa takes into account include match
results, match status, opposition strength and regional strength.
Matches from the previous four years are also considered with more
weight given to the most recently played ones.
While
the Philippines blitzed through Sri Lanka, 4-0, at home, the 1-1 draw
in Colombo and the 3-0 loss in Kuwait City were taken into
consideration. The 2-1 home loss, where the Philippines was eliminated
from World Cup contention, however, was not yet included in the
tabulations.
The
four Asian Qualifying World Cup matches will carry much more weight than
the Asian Football Confederation Challenge Cup games where the
Philippines has advanced to the next stage of the tournament.
“The
Philippines has a good team,” noted Kuwait coach Goran Tefugdzic. “If
the Philippines sticks to its program and supports its team it will get
better.”
Kuwait
assistant coach Abdul Aziz Hamad added that the goals must be realistic.
“Start with your region then begin to move forward in other
competitions. But there must be patience. It takes years—two years, four
years, sometimes even a decade or more. We made the World Cup in 1982
and it’s only now where we are beginning to go forward again. And
football is our national sport.”
“We are a work in progress,” summed up Philippine head coach Hans Michael Weiss.
National
Team manager Dan Palami, whose goal is to see the Philippines rise to
the No. 120s in the Fifa rankings remained undaunted and echoed Weiss’s
statement. “It remains doable and our success in this span of time
confirms that we are doing something right.”
There
were concerns about Weiss’s not making proper use of his substitutions
during the game and the German gaffer defended his position by saying
that he needs more quality and experienced players.
Expect
the team to scour for more talent as it begins its massive build up for
next year’s Suzuki Cup, where the Philippines has already qualified for
the group stage.
New blood
WITH
2011 into the second half, the focus shifts to the Under-23 team where
many of the country’s best young players culled from the two-month
summer tournament could possibly be competing in the Long Teng Cup in
Taiwan this September in preparation for the Southeast Asian Games in
Indonesia this November.
The
team, which will also be coached by Weiss and managed by Palami, could
possibly feature some of the younger and eligible players from the
seniors team but at this point, their inclusion also depends on their
availability.
Those
eligible include goalkeepers Etheridge and Paolo Pascual, as well as
midfielders Jason de Jong and Patrick Hinrichsen. Forward Guirado’s
younger brother is said to be trying out for the team in the near
future.
Hope springs eternal
HOURS
after being eliminated by Kuwait, the team was feted a dinner by the
Philippine Football Federation at the Diamond Hotel. The mood was
celebratory and any traces of dejection quickly dissipated. After all,
they talked about it much earlier and as long as they gave it all
they’ve got then they can take the match’s outcome.
Even
after dinner, the supporters and fans lingered while the players went
off to private parties or other get-togethers. Yet everywhere they went
there was the feeling that they were the victors who were moving on.
“I
think people understand that we have something good going on here and
that this is a long process,” said striker Phil Younghusband as he left
the hotel early in the morning to go home in Alabang. “Some things you
have to take in stride and not let them get you down because the
ultimate mission is far from over.”
“We
left it all out on the field yet we came up short,” said Gier. “But it
was nice to see that the people appreciate all our efforts. It was
heartwarming.”
“Now
that gave us something to think about,” summed up a smiling Ott. “And
that gives us the inspiration to do better next time.”
In Photo: For the Azkals, the ultimate mission is far from over. (Roy Domingo)
source: Rick Olivares
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