Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Bagan favourites in group of three league winners

- Dhiman Sarkar

KOLKATA: Group D of the AFC Cup begins here on Wednesday with ATK Mohun Bagan (ATKMB) as favourites and league champions from India, Bangladesh and the Maldives out to prove that reputation­s don’t always decide football games. There will be three double-headers (May 18, 21 and 24) to choose the champions from south zone, one of the five in Asia’s secondtier competitio­n.

ATKMB have been there. Last term, they topped a group that had Bengaluru FC, Maziya and Bashundhar­a Kings to make the inter-zonal semi-final with two wins and a draw. ATKMB can buy “20 times Gokulam Kerala including myself,” said coach Vincenzo Annese one day before the first competitiv­e game between teams from ISL and I-league since 2019.

Emil Benny, who has come through the ranks at the club and whose goal on Saturday helped Gokulam Kerala FC (GKFC) become the first team to retain the I-league, said playing ATKMB would be a learning experience. Oscar Bruzon, coach of Bangladesh league winners Bashundhar­a Kings, said India’s higher Fifa rank and the number of national team players at ATKMB make them favourites. For Juan Ferrando, this doesn’t translate into pressure but “good expectatio­n”.

That said, the ATKMB coach pointed out that while all the other teams are league winners, his side came third in ISL. He wasn’t in charge in 2021 but with the bulk of the squad being the same, ATKMB had trailed Bashundhar­a Kings and Maziya last term. “We were not behind two ISL clubs,” Bruzon said. His team drew against ATKMB and Bengaluru FC.

ATKMB are also the only team in this group whose league finished in March. Leaders Maziya and Basundhara Kings are in the middle of a season and GKFC ended theirs on a high last Saturday. That will be of some advantage, said Maziya’s Montenegri­n head coach Miodrag Jesic. “But I

am sure ATKMB have been readying for this tournament,” he said, with central defender Nemanja Kartal as interprete­r.

Like Bashundhar­a Kings, Maziya have lost only once in the league. In Tana Dominguez, they have a playmaker who has represente­d Las Palmas in 129 games. “He loves having the ball, we need to avoid that,” said Bruzon who has coached in India and Maldives. Maziya also have St Vincent’s striker Cornelius Stewart who, in Bruzon’s words, “is not reducing his numbers.”

Including Brazilian attacking player Robson (also called Robinho), Bashundhar­a Kings and Maziya have retained most of the squad from last term.

GKFC couldn’t but still won the I-league losing once in 18 rounds.

“Only our skipper Sharif Mukhammad has experience of playing this tournament,” said Annese ahead of their Asian debut. “This will be a different level of football.”

Johor Darul Ta’zim, Kitchee FC and BG Pathum United, who have qualified for the round of 16 in the Asian Champions League this season, are proof that often reputation­s don’t matter. Add Mumbai City FC to that list, said Bruzon. “There’s been a lot of progress in south Asia from when I first came to India in 2011,” he said.

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