This appears in the Sunday July 3, 2011 edition of the Business Mirror.
Sunday can’t come soon enough for the Azkals match
by rick olivares
The general consensus is, “It’s good to be home because we’re going to play our style of play on our home field and get a win.”
The Philippine Men’s Football National Team arrived last night on board an Emirates flight after a long sojourn abroad while training in Germany and playing it’s first ever World Cup Qualifiers match in Sri Lanka.
Back on home soil, battling jet lag and disappointment about not getting a win in Colombo, the players couldn’t wait to get it on.
“Sana linggo na,” said team co-captain Emelio “Chieffy” Caligdong while picking up some sports apparel at the Mizuno head office in Magallanes Village in Makati. “Babawi tayo dito.”
It isn’t only the players who are excited. All 12,870 tickets have been snapped up. Some 2,000 tickets (the share of Sri Lanka that was returned for the match) went on sale last Monday morning. Thirty minutes later, it was sold out. “We’re doing what we can at the last moment to accommodate more fans,” said Local Organizing Committee Chairman and Philippine Football Federation Treasurer Bonnie Ladrido.
The 12,870 seats is less than the 16,000-plus capacity of Panaad Stadium in Bacolod which the Azkals previously called home. Beginning with the July 3 match against Sri Lanka, the Azkals will begin playing at the refurbished Rizal Memorial Football Stadium which the Philippine Football Federation has pumped some Php 8.4 million. “The field was taken care of by La Salle. We worked on the seats, the bleachers section, the dugout, the media room, and the comfort rooms,” expounded Ladrido. “Should we advance to the next round against Kuwait, we will play our home game on July 28 at the Rizal Memorial Football Stadium again.
Some 400 of those seats, albeit in the center bleachers section, have been allotted to the Kaholeros, the booster group tasked with coming up with chants, cheers, and beats for the burgeoning football scene that has seen a massive spike in popularity following the Azkals’ success in last year’s Suzuki Cup where the Philippines entered the semifinals for the first time in the 16-year history of the competition. The Kaholeros made their unofficial debut during last month’s exhibition match between the United Football League All-Stars and the Azkals in which the latter won 4-3. “We just wanted to introduce the basic beat where any chant can start,” said PFF Fan Management Committee Head Richard Joson who gained notoriety during the Azkals’ match in Panaad last February when he ran onto the track surrounding the pitched dress in a blue wig and blue and white face paint. “The Blue-haired Freak was born that day,” said Joson.
The Kaholeros will be introducing a unique music instrument in the “aquadrum” which is actually a water jug used for coolers and dispensers. “It makes a unique percussion sound,” added percussionist Paul Zialcita, the man behind the beats. “If Africa contributed the vuvuzela to football lore, then the aquadrum is ours.”
The July 3 match also has a special significance.
“It’s a chance for us to make Philippine football history,” added striker Phil Younghusband who was pulled out early in the second half for Fil-American Nate Burkey. “And for the first time to play in Manila. We want to display our talent and full potential.”
Playing in it’s first ever World Cup Qualifiers match at home, the excitement is at a fever pitch. Over a hundred journalists from all over the world will be covering the game. As of Friday afternoon, journalists and photographers from Sttutgarter Sportkurier, the British Broadcasting Company, Reuters, European Pressphoto Agency, Reuters, Xinhua News Agency, and Sri Lanka will be joining their local counterparts in covering the game.
According to the Philippine Football Federation, the number of foreign accreditations means that interest in Philippine football is soaring not just at home but abroad. “We’ve seen that when Jason de Jong was playing for the Azkals and Irfan Gonzales was playing for Indonesia,” said PFF President Mariano V. Araneta. “The Dutch media covered and wrote about their two native sons even if they were also suiting up for the countries of birth by one of their parents. It shows that football is truly a global game.”
There are reports that no less that President Benigno Simeon Aquino III will be in attendance as well as other government officials and showbiz personalities.
“It’s a big game no doubt,” said central back Rob Gier, whose deflection of a Chathura Gunaratne free kick dipped in past Philippine goalkeeper Neil Etheridge for Sri Lanka’s stunning first half goal, was in high spirits. “Is there pressure? But we’re ready. And with a better pitch to play on, we’ll be able to move that ball up and down the field. Schrocky (midfielder Stephan Schrock) will have room to show what he can do.”
The poor quality of the Sugathadasa Stadium pitch in Colombo somewhat stifled the Azkals’ attack while negating their speed up and down the field. “You can’t make a full run because it’s uneven,” described right back Anton del Rosario. “On the day of the match, they were still patching up holes on the ground! Incredible!”
The Philippines came away with a 1-1 draw; a result that is still acceptable because in the event of a scoreless draw in Manila, the away goals rule of a double count for scores is in effect. For the Philippines to advance to the next round where Kuwait awaits, they have to win or hold Sri Lanka to a scoreless draw.
“We’re definitely going for a win,” pronounced del Rosario.
Burkey, a former midfielder for Virginia Commonwealth University in Virginia, USA, scored off a rebound of a Caligdong free kick that hit the lower area of the crossbar that James Younghusband was unable to head in.
James Younghusband agreed with younger brother Phil: “We should be better than we were in Sri Lanka.”
With a gimpy Angel Guirado, Philippine head coach Michael Weiss is said to be mulling going with Ian Araneta to start the match and go with his veterans.
“Kahit sino,” offered Araneta who came off as a second half substitute for Burkey and who had a decent scoring chance. “Ang importante bigay todo at panalo. Malaking karangalan ‘to para sa bayan.”
With some of the media folks covering the match on Sunday.
Mulders and Ian Araneta will be up front, Guirado and Phil are injured.. pero sino kaya ang sa LB. pwde kaya si sabio? injured din si Gener.
ReplyDeleteRick it's really global. Nate Burkey's score in Sri Lanka was covered in different local newspapers in Washington, and they're claiming Burkey as the "American who scored for the Philippines." Some americans commented why USSF let this "gem" go?
ReplyDeleteHopefully this will give light to some filipinos who are anti "half filipinos or fil-foreigners", if there's really such a thing. Here in the US if you're american, you're american no distinction, end of discussion. Monica Seles who was born in Yugoslavia (called as such that time), was naturalized and represented US in the Olympics. No distinction at all. Some filipinos are really pathetic racists, ignorant at it's best.
Filipinos all over the globe are supporting the Azkals. Hopefully they can have friendlies here against US NT, for sure we the filams will shell out dollars just to cheer our boys in the stadium.
Thanks!
couldn't agree more. let's remember that the ultimate slogan of FIFA is "NO TO RACISM!" so let's not be racist on our half-pinoys as they liked to be in the Philippines. and they are even trying to memorize our national anthem. it's all about Filipino pride.
ReplyDeleteSome People na hindi pabor sa mga Phil - foreigners should understand that , filipino's are global, they are filipino's everywhere around the globe. I hate to say this but filipino's are generally racist. Ayaw sa Phil-foreigners dahil sa hindi daw pure blood, at kulang sa puso kung mag laro.. pero they don't understand that's how it is.
ReplyDeletewhere is Jason De Jong ? sayang nag ka problema sa kanya ang azkals.
ReplyDelete