What to look out for in Asian Cup draw

Australia go will head into the tournament as defending champions having lifted the trophy three years ago on home soil.
Updated 03 May 2018
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What to look out for in Asian Cup draw

  • Draw takes place in Dubai on Friday.
  • Tournament to kick off in the UAE in January 2019.

Russian showpiece will be put to the back of Middle Eastern football fans’ minds thanks to today’s draw for the 2019 Asian Cup.
Taking place in Dubai we will learn exactly what the region’s teams will have to do to win the second oldest continental tournament in the world next January.
Six groups of four will be pulled out of the hat, with the top two from each pool going through, as well as the best four third-placed teams.  The 24 nations have been divided into four seeding pots, meaning that the big guns such as Saudi Arabia, Japan and South Korea will avoid each other. Here we give you the lowdown on what the region’s teams will be hoping to get from today’s draw.

POT 1

SAUDI ARABIA

The Green Falcons have quite a history in the competition, winning three times and appearing in six out of seven finals from 1984 to 2007 when they lost to Iraq in Jakarta. The past two tournaments have not been quite as impressive, however, with group-stage exits. Coach Juan Antonio Pizzi will be hoping a good World Cup showing will provide a springboard to great success next January. With the tournament taking place in the UAE, fans will be hoping for a first continental title since 1996, which was won, as luck would have it, in the UAE.

Key player: Fahad Al-Muwallad — the Spanish-based winger has the ability to unlock any Asian defense.

Team to avoid: Syria — No defender will relish facing Saudi-based strikers Omar Khribin and Omar Al-Somah.

UAE

The hosts have been the dictionary definition of inconsistent recently. They followed up third at the 2015 Asian Cup with the huge disappointment of failing to qualify for the World Cup. This tournament is a perfect opportunity to kick that despair into Row Z with the event taking place on home soil. Some questions remain over coach Alberto Zaccheroni and the performance of his star player Omar Abdulrahman. But home advantage should see the team into the later stages where anything can happen — including a repeat of their appearance in the final in 1996.

Key player: Omar Abdulrahman — on home soil the playmaker could take some stopping.

Team to avoid: Of all the teams in pot four, Jordan can be the most frustrating opponent.

POT 2

SYRIA

Despite not playing at home during World Cup qualification, Syria almost made it to Russia. The team has attacking talent most Asian teams would welcome with open arms. They are hard to beat, and will be looking to go far.

Key player: Omar Khribin — the 2017 Asian Player of the Year will be looking to grab the golden boot.

Team to avoid: Saudi Arabia — the players know each other too well.

IRAQ

The 2007 champions reached the semifinals in 2015 and certainly enjoy playing in the tournament. The team’s talent is matched only by their unpredictability. Coming off a disappointing World Cup qualification campaign, Iraq can go far if they hit form at the right time.

Key player: Ali Adnan — the left-sided star struggled to settle in Italy at first, but is now finding his feet with Udinese.

Team to avoid: Australia — Iraq have struggled against the Socceroos.

POT 3

LEBANON

Looked good in qualification, the Cedars will be targeting a place in the last 16.

Key player: Hassan Maatouk — the captain’s goals took Lebanon to their first Asian Cup since 2000.

Team to avoid: North Korea — they know them well from qualifying and are better than their ranking of 112.

PALESTINE

The team impressed in qualification for a second-straight appearance, scoring lots of goals.

Key player: Jonathan Cantillana — the Chilean-born midfielder has been looking very good and is the heartbeat of the team.

Team to avoid: Japan — the Samurai Blue have won the tournament a record four times.

OMAN

Even with an almost perfect qualification campaign, the Gulf Cup champions may be able to fly under the radar and get past the group stage for the first time.

Key player: Khalid Al-Hajjri — the striker plays in the UAE league and has taken to international football very well.

Team to avoid: South Korea — Oman boss Pim Verbeek will be wary of his former team.

POT 4

BAHRAIN

The team strolled through qualification though the group was not the most challenging. Not the force of the previous decade, but have a chance to get to the latter stages.

Key player: Waleed Al-Hayam — A solid defense helped the team to the UAE and Al-Hayam barely put a foot wrong.

Team to avoid: Iran — Asia’s highest-ranked team have a good record against Bahrain.

JORDAN

An awkward team to play against. Topped their qualifying group without losing a game.

Key player: Hamza Al-Dardour — the forward is only 26, but already had 53 caps. Jordan will need his goals.

Team to avoid: Australia — lost 5-1 in 2016 to the Asian champions.

YEMEN

It was a fine achievement for the country to qualify for the first time especially having to play all games away.

Key player: Mohammed Ebrahim Ayash — the goalkeeper was the star man during qualification, and will be need to be at his best in the UAE.

Team to avoid: Yemen will not care and will simply be delighted to be at the tournament.


‘Worst’ Australian team in 15 years retains the Ashes against England

Updated 14 sec ago
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‘Worst’ Australian team in 15 years retains the Ashes against England

  • It took all of 11 days — two in Perth, four in Brisbane and almost a full five in Adelaide — not quite a record for clinching an Ashes series but not too far off

LONDON: Apparently, the worst Australian cricket team in 15 years just won the Ashes with two matches to spare against the best England squad assembled since 2011.

Long-time protagonist Stuart Broad lit the fuse ahead of a volatile contest for the longest-running rivalry in test cricket when he described the host squad as the worst to contest the Ashes in Australia since England won the 2010-11 series Down Under.

The 167-test veteran played two matches for England in that winning series.

Since then, a drought has extended to 16 losses, two draws and no wins for England on Australian soil.

Marnus Labuschagne, who produced a spectacular catch to help hasten the end of England’s dogged last-day comeback in the third test on Sunday, reflected on the pre-series pronouncements by Broad and others.

“Have to say, being called the worst Australian team in 15 years … like it’s nice to be sitting where we are, 3-0 up,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. “The job’s not done yet. We want to make sure it’s 5-0 and really take that urn.”

It took all of 11 days — two in Perth, four in Brisbane and almost a full five in Adelaide — not quite a record for clinching an Ashes series but not too far off.

Chasing what needed to be a world record for victory, England was all out for 352 in pursuit of 435, giving Australia an 82-run win. By going the distance, the third test drew a total crowd of 223,638.

The Barmy Army of traveling England supporters was in full voice as England took the record-chasing fourth innings into the penultimate session at the Adelaide Oval, but ultimately it was the Aussies crowing about yet another dramatic win.

It’s true, Australia had a patched-up squad, with skipper Pat Cummins missing the first two tests while he continued recovery from a back injury. Josh Hazlewood was ruled out for the series. That left Mitchell Starc as the only member of the regular pace triumvirate available for the first two tests. When offspinner Nathan Lyon was dropped for the second test, Starc was the only member of Australia’s longtime bowling quartet in the lineup.

He led from the front, with two man-of-the-match performances. With three of the last four wickets in Adelaide, he has 22 for the series and 51 for the calendar year.

“We just found a way, which I think is a feature of this group over a number of years now,” Starc said. “Even at times where it’s not going our way, we can find a way to get ourselves over the line.”

In the batting lineup, there were questions over who would open and who would bat at No. 3. Steve Smith led the team in the absence of Cummins in Perth and Brisbane but was ruled out of the third test because of vertigo. Usman Khawaja was rushed back into the lineup to replace him and helped hold things together in the first innings.

Cummins said the Australian players took the attitude of just playing what’s in front of them.