Sportstar

Two of this, two of that!

Two experience­d teams and two debutants make up this group!

- ANIRUDH VELAMURI

Of the six groups at the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group C looks the most without any complicati­ons. China PR and Korea

Republic, two Asian football powerhouse­s, have been clubbed with Philippine­s and Kyrgyz Republic, who will be making their debuts.

The 2015 finalist Korea, the first team in the group to qualify for the tournament, will be on the hunt for its first title since 1960 while twice runner-up China, whose recent record in the competitio­n doesn’t read well, should have enough firepower to get past the debutants.

Korea qualified for the finals by winning its group in the second round of World Cupcum-Asian Cup qualifying, winning all eight games and scoring 27 times without conceding a single goal. China finished second in its group and qualified as the fourth best runner-up. Kyrgyzstan was runner-up in its qualificat­ion group, losing the top spot to India on head-to-head away goals scored, while Philippine­s went undefeated in its group and finished on top.

Korea had a disappoint­ing World Cup, losing its first two games before recording a memorable 2-0 win against the defending champion Germany. Since then, it has played six friendly games, winning three — including one against Uruguay — and losing none. It has one friendly, with Saudi Arabia in Abu Dhabi, lined up before its Asian Cup campaign. Son Heung-min, Asia’s most expensive export at €30 million, will be its standout player. While he did guide Korea to an Asian Games medal, he will be hoping to do better and take his country to a first domestic title since 1960 — and make up for losing to Australia in the 2015 final.

China goes into the AFC Cup on the back of an uninspirin­g run of games. It has played five friendlies in the last two months and managed to win just one.

It will wrap up its preparatio­n for the tournament with friendlies against Iran and Jordan, in Doha. Striker Wu Lei will be China’s main source for goals. The forward, who is set to make his second appearance in the competitio­n, plies his trade with Shang-

hai SIPG — alongside the likes of Oscar and Hulk.

Since qualifying for the Asian Cup, which included a victory at home against India, Kyrgyzstan has played five friendly games and has had a mixed bag of results. It has won two games and lost two, conceding nine goals in total. Its performanc­es in UAE will rest on the form of Anton Zemlianukh­in, the winger/attacking midfielder who plays in Kazakhstan. He scored six goals in the final four qualificat­ion games, helping his country take 10 points from them.

Philippine­s, unlike the other three, has played in two competitiv­e tournament­s since its qualificat­ion was secured — the AFF Suzuki Cup and the Bangabandh­u Cup, reaching the semifinals in both. In fact, its final game in the AFF Suzuki Cup was in the first week of December and, going into the Asian Cup on the back of competitiv­e games

instead of friendlies, it could be one of the better-prepared teams in this group. If anyone can upset the prediction­s in this group, it will be Philippine­s. The team will look towards Phil Younghusba­nd, its skipper, to guide it beyond the group stages in its debut appearance. He scored a penalty in the 90th minute to seal qualificat­ion with a 2-1 win over Tajikistan. That goal was also his 50th for the country.

 ??  ?? Leader of the pack: South Korea’s Son Heung-min (No. 13) is the dynamo of the team. AFP
Leader of the pack: South Korea’s Son Heung-min (No. 13) is the dynamo of the team. AFP
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Livewire: Wu Lei is the go-to man of the Chinese team.
GETTY IMAGES Livewire: Wu Lei is the go-to man of the Chinese team.

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