lundi, janvier 31, 2011

Asia Cup 2011: Japan is the best of them all

The Asian Cup final between Australia and Japan was tied 0-0 after 90 minutes of regulation play and the first 15 minutes of extra time at Khalifa Stadium in Doha. Then Tadanari Lee came on as a substitute for the Blue Samurai, and within three minutes drove an airborne volley from Yuto Nagatomo past Mark Schwarzer into the back of the Socceroos’ net. The Aussies had a final chance to tie the game in the 119th minute when David Carney had a free kick on goal deflected, securing the 1-0 victory for Japan. Keisuke Honda was named the tournament’s most valuable player.

The goal that keeps the Asian Cup in Asia for at least one more cycle of the event was an absolutely fitting way to end the tournament in Doha, Qatar. It combined the speed and cross from the left wing by Yuto Nagatomo and the near perfection of Tadanari Lee, who volleyed the ball from just below hip height with his left foot. Such sweet timing, such coordination of minds and skills, and such promise for Japan’s future.

Nagatomo is 24, already a player with 40 caps, and already earning his fortune in Italy with Cesena. Lee is 25 but a relative unknown even in Asia. He had been on the field for little more than 10 minutes when he struck that fine shot Saturday, and maybe the fans of Sanfrecce Hiroshima were the only ones who knew of his striking qualities.

Lee, as his name implies, has family that originally hailed from what is now South Korea. He was born in west Tokyo, but his family members are among the 900,000 “Zainichi,” ethnic Koreans whose forebears were taken to Japan as wartime laborers in the coal mines and factories.
Lee played, once, for South Korea at the under-20 level. But he received his Japanese passport in 2007, joined Hiroshima in 2009 and is as clear about his status as he was when his chance came during extra time in the final in Doha. “When the ball came, I just thought I needed to smash it,” he said in the Khalifa Stadium. “I am proud of this game. I’m not Korean, I’m not Japanese, I’m a footballer.”

Lee is a player who has youth on his side, and he’s hardly alone on this team in that regard. This squad won the final without the injured playmaker Shinji Kagawa, who has had a fantastic first season with Borussia Dortmund in Germany, and it looks like the best is yet to come.

The impressive goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima, Kagawa, Keisuke Honda and others are a full decade younger than most of the Australians beaten in this tournament.

Australia, a convert to Asia for the convenience of soccer, will stage the next Asian Cup in 2015 — but first it must find successors to Harry Kewell, Tim Cahill, Lucas Neill and Mark Schwarzer.

Those battle-hardened, European-domiciled veterans had a far easier passage to the match Saturday than the Japanese, who went to extra time and penalties against South Korea in the semifinals. Their fatigue was evident from the kickoff. Their passing fluency was missing. As Japan’s coach, the Italian Alberto Zaccheroni, observed, it needed reserves of spirit, strength and ultimately the fresh mind and legs of substitute Lee.

Japan, the winner of four of the last six Asian Cups, endured one downside from the final: Some supporters who journeyed to Qatar were locked outside the stadium. They had tickets but were denied entry when the gates were closed five minutes after the match started. Organizers said Sunday that tight security was in place because members of the emirate’s royal family attended the match.

The issue of Qatar’s ability to host a major international tournament was a desert wind whipped up by the FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who stole some of the event’s early thunder when he suggested Qatar was too hot in the summer to play soccer. All this after Blatter and FIFA energetically boosted Qatar as the host of the 2022 World Cup.

Empty stands caused speculation that local interest in soccer may not be a great as in other recent (South Africa and Germany) and future (Brazil and Russia) World Cup locales. Then again, the Asian Cup does not draw visiting fans with the number and intensity of the World Cup.

Technology became a factor in driving up interest and viewership: all the games were available live and in high-definition on television, as well as on broadband and mobile devices. Last summer’s World Cup established a model for delivering big-game soccer to fans anywhere anytime on any device, and the Asian Cup extended and refined those technologies.

The two most interesting Asian leagues to track post-Doha will be the Japanese J-League and the Chinese Super League, because the former emulates European league organization and depth, while the latter may soon give a hint of a future Asian soccer giant.

Doha has changed a lot in the last few years and it will certainly continue an evolution fueled by petrodollars and a desire cast a shadow greater than one might expect from an desert nation with 1.7 million people. Qataris are gracious hosts and won the hearts of virtually everyone who attended the tournament.

With the Asian Cup, did Qatar show it is capable of hosting a World Cup? Is 11 years enough time for the country to prepare for 2022?

vendredi, janvier 14, 2011

No date change for FIFA World Cup 2022

Asian football chief Mohamed Bin Hammam on Friday 14th of January 2011 ruled out shifting the 2022 Soccer World Cup in Qatar to winter or staging tournament matches around the Gulf region.

Bin Hammam told Sky News in an interview that he was "unimpressed" by suggestions from FIFA president Sepp Blatter that the tournament could be moved to a winter time slot to avoid sweltering summer temperatures in Qatar.

He also took aim at remarks by UEFA President Michel Platini earlier this week that the 2022 tournament could be a "Gulf World Cup", with matches taking place in several countries surrounding Qatar.

Bin Hammam's stinging rebuttal of recent comments from Blatter are certain to fuel speculation that the Qatari is planning to challenge the FIFA chief at elections later this year.

"I believe Qatar can stand alone and organise the competition by itself," Asian Football Confederation President Bin Hammam told Sky.

"And I'm really not very impressed by these opinions to distribute the game over the Gulf or change the time from July to January - it's actually premature, you know, it's people's opinions and they're just discussing it on no basis or no ground," the Qatari official added.

English football clubs have said switching the World Cup to January or February would be a logistical nightmare that would need at least a two-month mid-season break to the Premier League.

Bin Hammam appeared to sympathise with European leagues likely to be affected by a date change as he continued his criticism of Blatter's remarks.

"It's not up to one, two or three members of Fifa to talk about changing the time without getting the real stakeholders' opinions," Bin Hammam added, without mentioning Blatter or Platini directly.

"I know that football in Europe has quite a history, it is quite a business involving a lot of financial, media, marketing - a lot of things," he said

"It is unfair to these people that we talk about changing the calendar or the time without their full consultation and their full approval and their full agreement - I'm actually not happy to see that happening without the real stakeholders' part of this discussion."

FIFA has said world football's governing body would need to receive an official request from the Qatar FA before any change of the 2022 tournament dates could be formally discussed.

Bin Hammam, a member of FIFA's executive committee, said no request would be forthcoming.

"We are not interested - we are very happy and we are promising the world that we are going to organise an amazing world cup in June and July," he said.

Bin Hammam's comments are the latest in a series of criticisms of Blatter, who will run for re-election as FIFA President in May.

Asked by Sky if he was planning to run against Blatter, Bin Hammam replied simply: "No comment."

Bin Hammam's reluctance to confirm his intentions are in stark contrast to comments he made in August last year, when he categorically ruled out a bid to topple Blatter.

FIFA's decision to award the World Cup to Qatar in Zurich last month has attracted a firestorm of criticism after a bidding campaign dogged by allegations of corruption.

Bin Hammam said FIFA needed to be "more transparent" if it wanted to avoid a reputation for corruption in future.

"It's (FIFA) an organisation which is more than 104 years old," he said.

"We should modernise ourselves in such a way as to reflect the real stakeholders - member associations, leagues, clubs, players, coaches," he said.

"A lot of things could be done. Maybe the actual administration can do that, they have to commit themselves to doing that.

"The structure is not helpful or useful for our world," Bin Hammam added.