Muscat Daily

Arab teams give pre-tournament favourites reality check at Asian Cup

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The second round of Asian Cup group games threw up a few surprises when the pretournam­ent favourites were given a reality check as physical Arab teams showed they had closed the gap considerab­ly on their more illustriou­s opponents.

Japan, four-time champions and the highest-ranked team in the competitio­n, were upset 2-1 by Iraq while South Korea nearly lost to Jordan for the first time before an injury-time own goal spared their blushes.

Iraq had a clear strategy to unsettle Japan, who struggled with the physicalit­y of their West Asian counterpar­ts in a febrile atmosphere where the crowd of largely Iraqi fans made it feel like a home game for the Lions of Mesopotami­a.

Iraq could probably have scored more if not for the injury to their striker Aymen Hussein, who scored both goals before the break but did not come out for the second half.

However, Iraq were even ef

fective without the ball, dismantlin­g Japan’s possession game with several tackles while they frustrated the Samurai Blue and resorted to tactical fouls to upset their rhythm.

“We analysed before the game and knew how Iraq would play at the start, they did play

very aggressive­ly.

“Unfortunat­ely, we couldn’t handle it, I know we need to do more,” Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu said.

Iraq coach Jesus Casas became a national hero after they claimed their first victory over Japan in 42 years and the

Spaniard said he was proud of the players he picked for the tournament.

“Since I took charge, I choose players that can be fighters but good players too. The difference in this level is you need a balance between fighting and quality,” Casas said.

 ?? ?? Jordan gave South Korea a big scare before conceding a late goal to share the spoils on Saturday
Jordan gave South Korea a big scare before conceding a late goal to share the spoils on Saturday

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