2018 Suzuki Cup: Looking at the Azkals’
1-nil win over Singapore
by rick olivares
It is ironic how things have
changed since 2010 when the Philippines was deemed to “park the bus” and hit on
the counter attack while Singapore was a dynamic force.
The Philippines’ program has been
on the upswing with quality players called up to replace the retired. On the
other hand, since Singapore won the Suzuki Cup in 2012, they have not replaced
the now-retired Aleksandar Duric at the striker position or even approximate
Shahril Ishak, Mohammad Amri, or Hameed Fazrul.
And it should be noted that
Singapore has had a tough time defeating the Philippines since 2010. The last
time they convincingly defeated the Philippines in Suzuki Cup play was that 3-nil
hiding during the 1996 edition of the tournament. The next time they faced each
other was 2010 where they battled to a 1-1 draw thanks to a stoppage time goal
by Chris Greatwich and two draws since. They battled to a scoreless draw in the
first leg of the semis of the 2012 edition at the Rizal Memorial Football
Stadium after which Amri scored early in a 1-nil second leg win at Jalan Besar
Stadium in Singapore.
The two nations met again in a
scoreless draw during the 2016 tourney at the Philippine Arena.
If anything, the Philippines can
be bullish on defense at home, but more so dynamic on offense.
As expected, new manager
Sven-Goran Eriksson opted for his pragmatic 4-4-2 while his new counterpart in
Singapore Fandi Ahmad also opted for a more conservative 4-4-1-1
Resorting to the old physical tactic
Time was an opponent didn’t need
to play physical as their talent and cohesion simply overwhelmed the
Philippines. Not so since 2010. There is quality up and down the pitch with a
premium on speed and clever midfield play.
The tackles and extra motions
disrupted the Azkals’ attack. Singapore swarmed on defense for the first
15-plus minutes and eventually stopped Mike Ott’s crosses. Stephan Schrock
looked flustered as he was repeatedly knocked down.
The physical game by Singapore
resulted in two yellow cards (and in my opinion should have had at least two
more) and for much of the first half, seemingly disjointed play for both sides.
The second half saw a more
spirited effort by the Philippines. Both the adjustments and a sense of
desperation (a need to gain points in its home stand before taking on some of
the tournament favorites). Singapore resorted to physical play that once more
disrupted the flow.
It took a superb throw in from
Martin Steuble, two touches – a header by James Younghusband to his brother
Phil whose nifty flick to Patrick Reichelt allowed him to scramble past the
defense to fire past Hassan Sunny for the match-winning goal.
Solid defense by the Philippines.
Gotta love that back four that
initially featured Luke Woodland (then replaced by Daisuke Sato who came in and
made an impact), Carli De Murga, Paul Mulders, and Martin Steuble and the
midfielders who scrambled back on defense. And then you have a superb goalkeeper
in Neil Etheridge.
They left Singapore with no shots
on goal and six off target.
While we mentioned Singapore
swarming on defense, I liked the Azkals’ willingness to try and recover lost
balls. A 59% pass accuracy for the Lions as opposed to the 72% of the Azkals?
Simply superb. Can shoot much when you can’t pass the ball.
The defense on both sides made it
difficult to slip that ball into the final third. The Philippines had to make
do with shots from outside the box that tested Hassan. It was Reichelt’s sortie
that was the only one successful enough to evade the Lions’ defense.
Superb subs from Sven-Goran Eriksson.
When Woodland went down after a
poor tackle by a Singapore player, Dasuke Sato came in and provided an impact.
Ditto with James Younghusband who nearly scored as well. You can even say that
sending in Curt Dizon for Phil Younghusband with seconds to play was a nice
move to give the Azkals time to marshal their defense for one last Singapore
play.
What can be improved?
I am sure that the Azkals had
their own game plan and Singapore’s patient and physical defense disrupted
that. I believe that the best way to counter that type of play is to move that
ball up faster and to release it immediately.
I think they should constantly
test the opposing defense with quick attacks and firing when there is that
chance.
We expected Singapore to be
bullish on both ends. And the Philippines never gave up and the result was
well-deserved. Bravo! Good job.
Now on to Timor Leste.
"Time was an opponent didn’t need to play physical as their talent and cohesion simply overwhelmed the Philippines"
ReplyDeleteI'm still not used to this.
"A 59% pass accuracy for the Lions as opposed to the 72% of the Azkals?"
Also still not used to this.
Every time I'm reminded that the national team is no a pushover for other teams in SEA, I smile.