Heartbroken Lebanese fans once again looking on as AFC Asian Cup knockout stage kicks off

The Lebanese national team during the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup Group A football match between Tajikistan and Lebanon at the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha on January 22, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 29 January 2024
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Heartbroken Lebanese fans once again looking on as AFC Asian Cup knockout stage kicks off

  • The Cedars’ elimination in the group stages mirrors failures in Lebanese society

As eight Arab nations continue into the AFC Asian Cup’s round of 16, two have been left wondering what could have been.

Oman’s exit was a surprise. The other was a heartbreakingly familiar occurrence.

Lebanon’s experience at the 2023 AFC Asian Cup can only be described as humiliating, after failing to progress to the round of 16 in the 24-team tournament.

In the final group match, debutants Tajikistan not only fought to take Lebanon’s qualifying slot, but also outplayed them in every sector of the pitch.

The result was a 1-0 Lebanon lead in the 80th minute turned into a 2-1 loss by the 92nd.

The Cedars’ fans will no doubt recall the same sinking feeling experienced after that infamous 2-1 loss to Iran during the 2022 World Cup qualifying campaign, when two stoppage-time goals robbed Lebanon of a sensational win.

In many ways, the national team’s misery mirrors the current deplorable situation in Lebanon — political division and social distress in a relatively lawless environment — which are ingredients guaranteed to hamper any sporting aspirations and progress.

This tournament was seen as offering Lebanon’s best chance of progressing from the group stages for the first time in their history, and as expected, it ended in another frustrating exit.

In fact, the Lebanese national football team has a longstanding tradition of promising hope, only for their efforts to deliver heartbreak to every single soul attached to the Cedar nation.

Capturing the attention and desire of the Lebanese people, the national team bounced back from an expected defeat by hosts Qatar in the tournament opener to earn a hard-fought, backs-to-the-wall 0-0 draw with China in their second outing.

The heroics of goalkeeper Mostafa Matar, with seven saves, and a goal-line clearance from Khalil Khamis, left Lebanon needing to beat Tajikistan for a chance to qualify automatically as the second-placed team in Group A. Spirits were cautiously optimistic given Lebanon had yet to register a goal.

The statistics alone do not reveal their ineptitude in attack. With an average of five shots on target per match, mostly strikes from outside the box, Lebanon did not make the Qatari or Chinese goalkeepers sweat.

But a new day brought new hope.

All doubts and concerns evaporated when a glorious strike, again from just outside the box, by attacking midfielder Bassel Jradi, looped over the outstretched Tajikistan goalkeeper Rustam Yatimov just two minutes after the break.

There was a euphoric response from players and fans in the Jassim Bin Hamad stadium. Back home, a people who suffered decades of hardship and torment cried and hugged in delight. The Lebanese football team’s first goal in six halves of football had delivered much-needed joy to a demoralized nation, and the prospect of unimagined success.

However, nothing is easy and straightforward if you are Lebanese. A straight and warranted red card for Kassem Al-Zein just nine minutes after the goal reminded the supporters of Lebanon’s past footballing woes.

Miodrag Radulovic’s team were immediately on the back foot, and their defensive sturdiness was tested on several occasions. Twice Tajikistan scored, only for VAR to rescue Lebanon from collapsing.

But as the old French saying goes, “jamais deux sans trois,” third time indeed proved a charm for Tajikistan, with no VAR intervention denying them an equalizer with 10 minutes left of the 90.

A tremendous free-kick grazed over the Lebanese defensive wall and beat the diving Matar. Lebanon’s hopes were firmly demolished in the second of 16 stoppage-time minutes when Nuriddan Khamrokulov slotted home the winner.

Lebanon crashed out, again.

Failure stalks Lebanese football, whether in the AFC Asian Cup or qualifying rounds for the World Cup.

The one constant is the dangling of hope, only for it to be snatched away, a recurring theme for Lebanon as a nation.

The first time Lebanon qualified for the AFC Asian Cup was when they hosted it in 2000. They were obliterated 4-0 by Iran in the opening match and only managed to draw the remaining two games against Iraq and Thailand.

The one upside was that the team battled back in both matches. They were down by two goals to Iraq and trailed 1-0 to Thailand in the second half before rescuing a point in each. The fighting spirit was present even if the Lebanese team still finished bottom of their group.

Their next appearance in the tournament came 19 years later when they recorded their first, and currently only win by thumping North Korea 4-1 in Sharjah. Again, Lebanon trailed 1-0 before equalizing halfway through the first half. It was a tournament much like the 2023 edition would be, where they failed to register a goal in their two previous matches. It remains Lebanon’s only significant win at an international football tournament.

When it comes to World Cup qualifying campaigns, it is the same old trend. Always the scent of hope that quickly turns foul.

That does not mean there has not been progress. There was that almighty near-miss against Iran at Saida Municipal Stadium in November 2021, where a win would have put them on eight points after five matches and in real contention to reach Qatar 2022.

Lebanon took the lead against the run of play in the first half through a close-range goal by Hassan Ali “Soony” Saad. Ivan Hasek’s team then activated their backs-to-the-wall defending mode.

But the collapse came nonetheless. Iran scored two goals in stoppage time to quash any dreams Lebanon had of reaching the World Cup.

From losing 4-0 to Iran in 2000, to almost beating them in 2021 showed that the team had come a long way. But a long road remains  ahead still.

Through a thorough football reeducation and an emphasis on youth development, Lebanon can emerge from the rubble of another failed journey.

There should be a strict guideline that politics and nepotism cannot be the determining factors when constructing a national team.

Meritocracy and ingenuity on both technical and tactical fronts must be the way forward if Lebanon is ever to dream of advancing out of the group stage of the AFC Asian Cup and qualifying for a World Cup.

It is still early enough to dream they will qualify for the 2026 World Cup in the US, Mexico and Canada.

Currently, they have played twice and, in true Lebanese tradition, drawn twice against Bangladesh and Palestine in a group which also includes Australia.

The top two of each group will progress to the third round of qualifying, and another Lebanese failure to do so will once again serve as a reminder of the current deplorable political and social situation in the country.

One remarkable characteristic the Lebanese possess is that they will gladly invite hope even if all indications are that the outcome will turn sour. Probably in stoppage time.

Some might call it gullibility, but it is nothing of the sort. It is an unshakeable love for their nation, and no amount of heartbreak, on or off the pitch, will ever change that.


Djokovic’s new approach heading into the Australian Open: ‘24 is not a bad number’

Updated 12 sec ago
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Djokovic’s new approach heading into the Australian Open: ‘24 is not a bad number’

  • Djokovic is starting a third season in pursuit a 25th Grand Slam singles title
  • Djokovic last won a major title at the 2023 US Open

MELBOURNE: Novak Djokovic can still crack a joke when discussing the Carlos Alcaraz-Jannik Sinner rivalry that for two years has prevented him from becoming the most decorated tennis player ever.
“I lost three out of four Slams against either Sinner or Alcaraz,” in 2025, he said Saturday, on the eve of the Australian Open.
“We don’t need to praise them too much,” he added, smiling. “They have been praised enough! We know how good they are, and they absolutely deserve to be where they are. They are the dominant forces of the men’s tennis at the moment.”
Djokovic is starting a third season in pursuit a 25th Grand Slam singles title, and has refined his approach for the Australian Open.
He withdrew from his only scheduled tuneup tournament, knowing he’s lacking “a little bit of juice in my legs” to compete with two young stars at end of the majors and that he has to stay as pain-free as possible.
Djokovic worked out how to beat Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, the established rivalry before he turned it into the Big Three and then surpassed them both.
A winner of 24 major championships — a record for the Open era and tied with Margaret Court for the most in the history of tennis — the 38-year-old Djokovic is doing everything to keep himself “in the mix.”
Djokovic last won a major title at the 2023 US Open. Sinner and Alcaraz have split the eight since then. Sinner has won the last two Australian titles. Alcaraz is in Australia determined to add the title at Melbourne Park to complete a career Grand Slam.
Despite being hampered by injuries, Djokovic reached the semifinals at all four majors last year. A torn hamstring forced him to quit his Australian Open semifinal, after he’d ousted Alcaraz in the quarterfinals.
By reminding himself that “24 is also not a bad number,” Djokovic said he’s taking the “now-or-never type of mentality” out of his every appearance at a major because it’s not allowing him to excel at his best.
“Sinner and Alcaraz are playing on a different level right now from everybody else. That’s a fact,” Djokovic said, “but that doesn’t mean that nobody else has a chance.
“So I like my chances always, in any tournament, particularly here.”
The 10-time Australian Open champion starts Monday in a night match on Rod Laver Arena against No. 71-ranked Pedro Martinez of Spain. Seeded fourth, he’s in the same half of the draw as Sinner. That means they can only meet in the semifinals here.
Fitness
Djokovic hasn’t played an official tournament since November.
“Obviously took more time to rebuild my body, because I understand that in the last couple of years, that’s what changed the most for me — takes more time to rebuild, and it also takes more time to reset or recover,” he said. “I had a little setback that prevented me to compete at Adelaide tournament ... but it’s been going on very well so far here.”
He said there’s “something here and there” every day in terms of aches and pains, “but generally I feel good and look forward to competing.”
PTPA
Djokovic cut ties earlier this month with the Professional Tennis Players Association, a group he co-founded, saying “my values and approach are no longer aligned with the current direction of the organization.”
Djokovic and Canadian player Vasek Pospisil launched the PTPA in 2020, aiming to offer representation for players who are independent contractors in a largely individual sport.
“It was a tough call for me to exit the PTPA, but I had to do that, because I felt like my name was ... overused,” he said. “I felt like people, whenever they think about PTPA, they think it’s my organization, which is a wrong idea from the very beginning.”
He said he’s still supporting the concept.
“I am still wishing them all the best, because I think that there is room and there is a need for a 100 percent players-only representation organization existing in our ecosystem,” he said.