Khaleej Times

Qatar’s W. Cup dreams in tatters after defeat

- AFP

doha — Qatar’s 1-0 home defeat against Iran has left the hugely ambitious country’s 2018 World Cup dreams in tatters.

The result means Qatar, chosen as the host of football’s biggest tournament in 2022, are bottom of Group A with just four points from six games.

With four matches to play, Qatar are 10 points behind leaders Iran and six points adrift of South Korea who occupy the top two spots which guarantee automatic qualificat­ion to Russia in 2018.

Even their hopes of finishing third, where Uzbekistan sit with nine points, and where they would progress to a last chance play-off now seem remote.

They are even four points back from Syria, a nomadic team, without key players, who have to play their “home” matches in Malaysia due to the ongoing civil war.

“I had big expectatio­ns for today’s result, really I am very sad,”

I had big expectatio­ns for today’s result, really I am very sad Jorge Fossati

said a forlorn Qatar coach Jorge Fossati after watching his team lose to a Mehdi Taremi goal.

The sense of disappoint­ment was clear as fans filed from the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha.

One of those was senior World Cup 2022 organiser, Nasser Al Khater. But as much as the internatio­nal focus on Qatar centres on 2022 — from its controvers­ial choice as host, to corruption and migrant worker abuse allegation­s — at home the nation was desperate to qualify on merit for the finals in Russia.

Khater’s colleagues in Qatar had talked openly about the importance of qualifying for Russia.

That tournament represents the last chance for Qatar to qualify for a World Cup before automatica­lly playing as hosts in 2022.

Qualificat­ion, still mathematic­ally possible, would have shown doubters that Qatar is a genuine football nation.

The flipside is that now their almost certain failure to qualify means Qatar is open to several more years of inevitable sneering that their place among football’s elite come 2022 was secured only by the country’s incredible wealth.

Just last month, the country’s finance minister reinforced that view by revealing that Qatar is spending almost $500 million every week on major infrastruc­ture projects for 2022.

Just how serious their ambitions were for next year’s tournament was reinforced by their dramatic decision to draft in current coach Fossati after a poor start to the latest round of qualificat­ions.

Ruthless Qatar football bosses sacked previous coach Jose Daniel Carreno despite him overseeing seven wins in eight World Cup games, including a record 15-0 victory against Bhutan.

There have been plusses with the discovery of young local star Akram Afif, a forward who this season became the first Qatari to play in La Liga with Sporting Gijon.

But the fallout if Qatar’s eliminatio­n is confirmed could be dramatic. Already there have been murmurings about a new policy to bring through players, concentrat­ing on locally-born players rather than relying heavily on naturalise­d Qataris.

And Fossati’s position would come under threat once and if their eliminatio­n is confirmed.

Failing to qualify for 2018 is one thing but the planning to avoid further embarrassm­ent in front of the rest of the world in 2022 is quite another. —

 ?? AFP ?? Iran’s Saeid Ezatolahi (centre right), tackles Qatar’s Rodrigo Tabata during the World Cup 2018 Asia qualifying match. —
AFP Iran’s Saeid Ezatolahi (centre right), tackles Qatar’s Rodrigo Tabata during the World Cup 2018 Asia qualifying match. —

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