Daily Mirror

THE DAI OF RECKONING

Cold Father Time has finally caught up with the ageing Welsh who are no longer Boyo wonders

- FROM JAMES NURSEY in Doha @JamesNurse­y

AFTER the ecstasy of reaching their first World Cup in 64 years, came the agony for Wales.

Their ageing history boys were expected to bury Iran to move to within touching distance of qualificat­ion from Group B, having scrambled a fortunate late draw against the USA in their opener.

Much of the talk pre-match from Welsh players was of how many goals they would score, not whether they would even win.

But Wales’ World Cup dream turned into a nightmare at the Ahmed bin Ali Stadium as they crashed to a deserved defeat.

With star duo Gareth Bale and Aaron Ramsey ineffectiv­e in the heat, Rob Page’s men were always hanging on.

Carlos Queiroz’s Iran side had a goal narrowly ruled out for offside by VAR in the first half and then hit a post twice after the break.

But eventually they prevailed in stoppage time in a breathless, dramatic finale after Wales were reduced to 10 men for Wayne Hennessey’s dismissal following an X-rated challenge.

Wales were then brutally exposed by Iran, who cast aside the humiliatio­n of their opening 6-2 loss to England.

Rouzbeh Cheshmi lashed in a shot clocked at 40mph from outside the box, which sparked a mini pitch invasion by Iran’s players and staff in stoppage time.

Ramin Rezaeian lofted in another to seal victory as some of the Red Wall were left in tears with their side on only a point and staring at an early exit ( fans and players react, above).

Not even the promotion of Kieffer Moore into the starting line-up helped Page’s side much after the 6ft5in targetman changed the game against the

USA.

Both nations made their intentions clear in an open start to the game, targeting a win to boost qualificat­ion hopes.

Wales nearly made an early breakthrou­gh but keeper Hossein Hosseini did well to deny Moore’s volley from Connor Roberts’ cross in the 12th minute.

Roberts’ loose pass was then intercepte­d and Sardar Azmoun played in Ali Gholizadeh, who tapped in from close-range. Fortunatel­y for Wales, and Roberts especially, Gholizadeh was ruled offside by VAR in the 16th minute.

It did not disguise that Wales simply weren’t good enough in the first half as they failed to create many openings.

Iran continued to be the better side after the restart as Azmoun ran clear before smashing against a post with an angled, right-foot shot in the 50th minute.

Then Gholizadeh curled a left-foot shot against the other post from 25 yards in the same phase of play.

It was enough to spur Page into action as he made a double substituti­on and switched to a flat back-four. Yet despite the changes, Wales continued to hang on.

They committed men forward but it left them exposed as Saeid Ezatolahi tested Hennessey with a low shot from outside the box that the keeper did well to tip round a post.

But Hennessey was then ordered off four minutes from time (left) for poleaxing Mehdi Taremi with a misjudged kick outside his area when the striker was clean through.

It gave Iran the impetus they needed to go on and deservedly win with a magnificen­t strike from sub Cheshmi, who curled a low, right-foot shot into the bottom corner from outside the box, after sub Joe Allen’s clearance went straight to him.

The Welsh sunk to the floor in pain and hit rock bottom when Rezaeian got the ball from Taremi and dinked over sub keeper Danny Ward to leave their campaign in tatters.

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 ?? ?? BARE FACTS Gareth Bale failed to inspire Wales and now they face eliminatio­n
BARE FACTS Gareth Bale failed to inspire Wales and now they face eliminatio­n

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