Asian Football Cup

Jan 23rd, 2009, in IM Posts, by Burung Koel

View the original article here.


15 Comments on “Asian Football Cup”

  1. Haedi Says:
    January 23rd, 2009 at 11:38 am

    Indonesian team is still below of australia ability, but don’t fail first, before you show the spirit and your skill in the ground, we pray for you
    Reach your achievement as high as possible.

    thank you, God will be with you amin..!

  2. hedi Says:
    January 23rd, 2009 at 12:34 pm

    Bambang Pamungkas has been playing under his best performance recently. However, technically, it will be hard to beat The Oz even they will play most A-League stars. All Indonesian players need is playing for the best they can. Forget about the result. Supporters will be behind them.

  3. sputjam Says:
    January 23rd, 2009 at 12:49 pm

    Bambang is first class. But Indonesians and other ASEAN players are not good at holding the ball and creating spaces. Also players are not physical enough. Not using their upper body to push the opponent out of the way. Maybe we are just too polite to play physically.

  4. Patrick Says:
    January 23rd, 2009 at 12:50 pm

    The Indonesian team has to learn to think like winners and not like a team preparing for the inevitable loss!

  5. Burung Koel Says:
    January 23rd, 2009 at 2:57 pm

    I don’t know about you, but this is a potential ‘banana skin’ for Australia. The performance of Sydney FC against Persik in the Asian Champions League is a case in point. Persik did enough to take 3 points in Solo, which effectively put Sydney out.

    Game On!

  6. Achmad Sudarsono Says:
    January 24th, 2009 at 1:30 pm

    It will be really funny if the crowd goes Amok and lynches the umpire. Also really funny if Bonek storm the field and assault the Australians… he he .

  7. fullmoonflower Says:
    January 24th, 2009 at 11:57 pm

    hihihihihi……. it will be the funniest moment for this month :lol:

  8. Chris Says:
    January 25th, 2009 at 8:49 am

    I agree with Burung Koel, Australia might find the weather a bit difficult (as it did in Thailand at Asian Cup 2007), so look for a fast finishing Indonesia.

    I disagree with Achmad, again.

    If you’re wondering, in 2003 some errr… enthusiastic Uruguayans sent a “welcome party” to the Montevideo airport for the Australian team before their World Cup qualification game, so we’ve been there before.

    One more piece of trivia: Australia played Indonesia in an international friendly in Perth in 2005, as a fund-raiser for tsunami relief. While it was full of good will and not the most serious game, some soccer journalists criticised Australia for only winning 1-0.

  9. Rob Says:
    January 27th, 2009 at 5:30 am

    I hope it is a good game and may the best team win.

  10. Burung Koel Says:
    January 27th, 2009 at 4:10 pm

    Keep an ear out for the chants of the Aussie supporters section. In Germany for the 2006 World Cup, the green and gold army taunted English fans with this little ditty:

    “Posh Spice is a slapper,
    Posh Spice is a whore.
    When she’s f-cking Beckham,
    She’s thinking of Craig Moore…”

    And Craig will be captaining Australia tomorrow night.

  11. tuwaga Says:
    January 28th, 2009 at 9:47 am

    I dont think any oz will be stupid enough to taunt 90k+ crowd. If so, they deserve to get bashed.

  12. Burung Koel Says:
    January 29th, 2009 at 4:10 am

    Match Report:

    Nil-nil is a result that will satisfy both sides. For Indonesia, it was a game where they matched Australia in most facets, although the lack of physicality in midfield was a problem. Some sloppiness at the back (including from goalkeeper Markus) could have been costly, and tightening ball control and making passes count is something that could be improved. The withdrawal of Budi Sudharsono and his replaceemnt by defender Erol Iba for the last 10 minutes showed Benny Dolo was happy with a draw.

    For an Australian team with 9 players making their international debut, it was a composed performance in front of a noisy but good natured crowd. The squad had only one training session before the match, and it showed at times, with an inability to find players in forward positions. Although Indonesia’s back four, well organised by veteran Charis Yulianto, kept a tight grip on danger man Archie Thompson for most of the game.

    Looking ahead, there is a chance that both teams could qualify from the group, as neither Oman nor Kuwait look terribly dangerous. Australia will have their overseas-based players back for the later rounds.

    Last night, I thought Paul Reid ran tirelessly all game for Australia, and was my man of the match. I liked Boas when he had the ball at his feet, and he was able to match the Australians physically, but he runs into blind alleys too often.

  13. Lairedion Says:
    January 30th, 2009 at 1:12 am

    I couldn’t believe it when I heard it but it’s true.

    Indonesia officially joins the race to host the FIFA World Cup, either in 2018 or 2022. It will face competition from two “adverseries/foes”, Australia and a joint Dutch-Belgian bid, among others.

    Read all about it here.

  14. Chris Says:
    January 30th, 2009 at 7:47 am

    Thanks for the info Lairedion.

    Is the director of PSSI (the Indonesian football federation) still in jail for corruption – for the second time ? Even Seth Blatter has asked the PSSI to remove him from office, so I doubt the bid will get very far.

  15. Burung Koel Says:
    January 30th, 2009 at 8:40 am

    I don’t know, RD. If that’s true, it might be the first time Sepp takes any action on corruption in national football associations. He relies on dodgy mates like CONCACAF’s Jack Warner to keep him in power. Maybe the PSSI guy voted the wrong way at FIFA.



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