The Phnom Penh Post

Asia to beat Africa to World Cup win: James

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ASIA has overtaken Africa and now looks the more likely continent to produce a World Cup-winning team, according to the f o r mer Engl a nd goalkeeper David James.

S p e a k - ing at the World Footbal l Forum i n Changsha, James s a i d Asia’s

financial clout and passion would propel it to the forefront of the game in the coming decades.

“I genuinely think that an Asian country has got a better chance of winning the World Cup than an African one,” said the former LiverpoolL­i keeper. “When I was growing up in the nineties, it was all about how Africa waswa going to be the next contine continent to win the World Cup. I can’t see it.” James was referring to Braz i l i a n l e g e n d Pele’s famous prediction that an African team wouldw win the World Cu Cup before 2000, which turnedtu out to be wide ofo the mark. No AfricanA team has made i it past the quarterfin­al terfinals, and although Asian sidess flopped at the last World Cup in 2014, wit with none reaching the kno knockout rounds, South Kor Korea reached the semis on home soil in 2002.

Currently, Asia’s top-ranked team is Iran at 28, while South Korea, Japan and Australia are the others inside the world’s top 50.

But Ja mes, whose CV includes playing for the Indian Super League’s Kerala Blasters, said China and even India – ranked 81st and 100th respective­ly – could emerge as World Cup contenders.

“I think there’s such fertile soil [in Asia]. Maybe the financial aspects of China provide that,” said James, 46, who made 53 England appearance­s.

“But I think with the enthusiasm for football in India, plus there is obviously a financial potential to back them, I think the opportunit­y is massive, massive. There’s something like two and a half billion people if you take the two countries – it’s a third of the world’s population.”

‘Enthusiast­ic for Asia’

The World Cup will return to the Asian confederat­ion at Qatar 2022, and China i s actively considerin­g a bid to host the tournament, probably in the 2030s.

China has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on foreign players and coaches after an official decree that the country hopes to host and win the World Cup.

But James (pictured training with Kerala, AFP) said he was also optimistic for India, recalling crowds of 50,000 turning up to watch Kerala Blasters.

India will also be in the lime- light later this year when it hosts the U17 World Cup, the country’s biggest football tournament to date.

James said there was “no reason” why Asia’s national teams wouldn’t be at the same level as their European rivals 30 years from now.

“With the size of the countries . . . somewhere you can find the perfect areas for a super camp or whatever. I’m enthusiast­ic for Asia,” he said.

But he warned: “You can’t have the best national team and the best domestic league . . . You can’t have both.

“It’s a difficult beast – it’s almost like the dog with a bone looking at his reflection in the pond,” he said, quoting one of Aesop’s fables. “What do you go for?”

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