This appears on philstar.com
The lessons of the
2014 Suzuki Cup
by rick olivares pic from AFF Suzuki Cup site
Let’s get this out of the way first – I am immensely
proud of the Philippine Men’s National Football Team. Save for the 3-nil
thrashing at the hands of Thailand in the second leg of the semifinals and even
for stretches of the 3-1 loss to Vietnam in the group stages, they played
thrilling and good football. For the first time, there was a concrete semblance
of what they wanted to accomplish and not run around like headless chickens.
They no longer had to park the bus and try their luck on the occasional counter
attack. And for that, I applaud their effort, sacrifices, as well as their
blood, sweat, and tears.
I must also commend Thailand for a terrific two legs.
I cannot feel too bad because they played beautiful football. They served up a
good old fashioned butt kicking for which there are lessons that can be taken
away from this. Painful lessons and we would do well to learn them and apply
them in time for the Suzuki Cup’s next staging for we are hosting one of the
group stages.
That was an
awesome display of speed, explosiveness, and skill.
They started out the tournament rather slowly, but
the Thais got better with every game. But that’s merely because there are so
many new players to their current national team. Once they did… (insert
expletive right here). I have never seen Daisuke Sato so thrown out of his game
that he needed to be subbed out and so early in the match.
The Thais were not only quicker; they were
explosively strong. Their 1v1 skills were excellent as they easily went through
defenders like traffic cones. Our players had to tackle them from behind
because that meant that hey had gotten ahead. And we amassed quite a number of
fouls thereby giving away a number of free kicks one of which led to a goal.
I will not assume that Philippine clubs are doing his
but I would venture to say that it would be good to include plyometrics in the
players’ training.
Pass and
go. Pass and go. Pass and go.
Overall, the Philippines’ passing game was so much
better. But against Vietnam and Thailand who did their homework by pressing
quite vigorously and consistently – a testament to their incredible fitness
level – they needed to pass quicker and make better use of the spaces. The
Filipinos were dribbling into crowds and at times forced the issue when it
would have been prudent to pass or swing the ball to the other side.
Our passing game and attack works on the slower teams
but now Vietnam and Thailand have repeatedly demonstrated how to beat the
Philippines – you have to be quicker and stronger than they are.
Attack in
numbers; defend in numbers.
Because of the immense pressure the Thais brought to
the game, the Philippines -- save for certain stretches in the match such as
the first few minutes of the second half and with time dwindling away – attacked
with not much help.
If you look at the Thais, they moved up in numbers
and defended in numbers.
We should
have won that home match.
For the second consecutive Suzuki Cup semifinals home
match, we didn’t score. You might even want to throw the Peace Cup Finals in
there. We need to win these home matches. In a previous vivisection of a
previous match, I pointed out that only once did we beat a team playing in
front of their home fans this year and that against Maldives. I do not think
they strike terrors into anyone’s football hearts unless you count their boat
ride and the sea conspiring with their football team to make life queasy and
uneasy on the Pinoys.
A scoreless draw is good but you’re marching into
their dens to steal a win. It isn’t going to be easy.
We need to turn our pitches into places like Boca
Juniors’ La Bombonera or even the Thais’ Rajamangala Stadium. We need to
electrify the atmosphere to give the lads a boost.
The Thais were buoyed by the home crowd and they
repaid it further charging what was already an electric atmosphere.
I summed it up in a Tweet and my Facebook status:
speed + power and muscle + electric home crowd = death.
We need
help up front and in the middle of the park.
It is quite obvious that Phil Younghusband needs
help. He cannot do it alone. For years we have been looking for his twin strike
partner – Ian Araneta, Dennis Wolf, Angel Guirado Javier Patiño, and a few
others. Besides, it’s always good to have more options up front to ease the
pressure on Phil.
Now we’ve got speed and options in the flanks. I like
the industry and skill from Misagh Bahadoran and Martin Steuble. Patrick
Reichelt has thrived whether starting or coming off the bench. In fact, he has
been one of the best additions to the national side over the years.
Now we need also that option from the middle that was
lost when Stephan Schrock opted not to play. Manny Ott was superb! He was a
huge loss after the qualifiers of the 2010 Suzuki Cup as he was not cleared by
his club for the group and semis stages. He’s a much much better football now
but I’ll repeat this, it is good to have more options and weapons.
But that middle – aye, there’s the gap.
In the home match against Thailand, they found a hole
in the right side of our defense. In the second leg, they attacked right up the
middle. The way they set up that first goal was brilliant. Head towards an open
and unmarked teammate – boom. Goal.
They slipped that throughball almost without any
problem.
Defensively, we’ve got some terrific ones – Sato,
Amani Aguinaldo, and Simone Rota. I have no idea if this will be the last rides
for Juani Guirado and Rob Gier but they did a great job as well.
As we have seen from years past, the tinkering with
the national side isn’t done. The team is finding new talent to shore up the
holes and play prominent parts. Who would have thought that Aguinaldo would be
the heir to Aly Borromeo in the back? Ditto with the diminutive Sato who
plugged the hole vacated by Dennis Cagara and Ray Jonsson.
So we go home, beaten, bowed a bit, and with the
loss, our top spot undoubtedly in Southeast Asia. Nevertheless, the nationals
should be proud. It’s good to be seeded and hunted and that teams that once
didn’t even prepare for us consider us a threat. The loss is a sobering reminder
that more work needs to be done.
Having said all of that, I like what I see. I know
the Philippine Football Federation, national team management and the coaching staff
will not take this lightly. They will rebuild.
We will host one of the group stages of the next
Suzuki Cup… a first. Who knows. Maybe two years from now, that could be to
football what the 2013 FIBA Asia Championships were for the basketball
counterparts.
Make us dream, lads. And thanks! My sincerest thanks
to everyone.
Let’s go, Philippines. Let’s continue this surge,
Philippine football.
how about deyto? what can you say about his performance?
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