New Straits Times

INDONESIA LOOK FOR RE-BOOT

Hosts hope Asian Games can boost national team

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INDONESIA hope hosting the upcoming Asian Games will help revive the fortunes of their troubled national team and act as a springboar­d for their qualificat­ion for the 2024 Paris Olympics, the nation’s football associatio­n said.

Indonesia were barred from internatio­nal football in 2015 due to government meddling in their domestic league, shutting them out of qualifying for the 2018 World Cup and 2019 Asian Cup.

Football’s world governing body Fifa lifted the ban in 2016, but the men’s team are currently languishin­g at 164th in the world, slotted between Belize and Fiji, despite the game’s huge popularity in a country of more than 250 million people.

“Asian Games is a starting point and PSSI (Football Associatio­n of Indonesia) wants to achieve more than that. If we have to set a short-term plan that would be the Olympics in 2024,” Joko Driyono, deputy chairman of the PSSI, said.

Driyono said the PSSI and the government were committed over the next three to five years to improving infrastruc­ture for football at all levels to support the target.

Spain’s former Under-21 coach Luis Milla was appointed manager of Indonesia at the start of 2017 in order to overhaul the national squad.

The Asian Games, which are set to run from Aug 18 to Sept 2, are expected to draw nearly 17,000 athletes and officials, and more than 100,000 spectators.

The 24-team men’s football tournament, which has an Under23 age limit but permits up to three over-age players, will be played in four stadiums in West Java province, while the women’s event will be held in Palembang in Sumatra.

“Of course, we always try to win and become a champion but our primary target is to win the heart of Indonesian people with our performanc­e,” Indonesia’s Montenegri­n-born forward Ilija Spasojevic told reporters.

Despite the optimism, some fans remain sceptical.

“The developmen­t of football in Indonesia is very poor,” said Muhammad Ali, 49, after playing a game on the rooftop of an abandoned building in capital Jakarta.

“As a national team we are still underperfo­rming, we can’t even be the regional champion, how can we top Asia’s ranking?”

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