5 things we learned from Jordan’s Asian Cup semifinal win over South Korea

Jordan's players celebrate after defeating South Korea at the end of the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup semi-final football match between Jordan and South Korea. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 07 February 2024
Follow

5 things we learned from Jordan’s Asian Cup semifinal win over South Korea

  • Coach Hussein Ammouta proves his pedigree with stunning 2-0 victory that shows little should be read into pre-tournament friendlies

Jordan produced the shock of this AFC Asian Cup by defeating South Korea 2-0 to move into Saturday’s final against the winner of the other semifinal between hosts Qatar and Iran.

Here are five things we learned from the epic match.

Jordan have announced their presence to the world.

There was real emotion at the final whistle, as you would expect at the end of a victorious semifinal, especially a first one.

Jordan has long been a solid national team in Asia and have reached quarterfinals before, as well as the final round of qualification for World Cups, but for the first time they are making headlines, not just in the continent but also around the world.

For Asian fans, Jordan may have been respected, but not especially exciting; a team built on a solid defense and strong teamwork, with Amman long being a tough place to go because of the tight stadiums and intimidating crowds. This is not a team that has traditionally been box office, but this is changing. At this Asian Cup, Jordan have been exhilarating to watch.

Millions of people are waking up to the fact that this Jordan team can go all the way and are a lot stronger than the ranking of 87 suggests. Whatever happens on Saturday against either Qatar or Iran, it has already been a real ride.

Lessons learned from Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia were the better team for most of their second-round clash with South Korea. The Green Falcons scored early in the second half and looked quite comfortable until the final stages.

Then they sat deeper and deeper and invited attack after attack from the Koreans. There was no surprise when Cho Gue-sung headed home the equalizer in the 99th minute and from that moment on, there looked to be just one winner.

Jordan did not follow Saudi Arabia’s example. They kept pushing for the second goal and even when that came, they came close to scoring a third. In all, it was a brave performance.

“There is no need to respect the opponent more than necessary,” coach Hussein Ammouta said. “I looked at the statistics of the last five games. Korea conceded eight goals. We can score again. We knew we had it. Our attackers are great, but we created five chances in the first half. We were able to score on our first attack of the second half.”

Attack really is the best form of defense.

The two goalscorers deserve the headlines

Too often the players who score the goals get all the attention, but this time it is hard to disagree, as Yazan Al-Naimat and Mousa Taamari earned all the praise in the world.

The latter usually grabs the headlines for his undoubted skills and the fact that he is one of the few players in the region to play for one of the big leagues in Europe. Taamari was magnificent once again, and his goal was not only one of pace, skill and vision but also killed off any Korean hopes of a comeback.

Al-Naimat, who plays his club football in Qatar, matched his famous teammate step for step. He was a constant offensive threat and almost scored what would have been  perhaps the goal of the tournament. He then got the goal with a perfect dinked finish, one that any striker in the world would be proud of.

It was, of course, a team effort, but with forward players like this, Jordan can go all the way.

Too much should not be read into build-up results.

It is amazing to think just how under the radar Jordan were before it all started. It is hard to blame the pundits. though — the form in the build-up was truly poor. There were five defeats and two draws in the seven games in the second half of 2023 after Ammouta took the job.

Indeed, Saudi Arabia went to Amman in a World Cup qualifier in November and won fairly comfortably, and if anyone had said then that one of the two teams would be in the Asian Cup final a few weeks later, everyone would have assumed that the Green Falcons were being talked about.

Jordan started the year with a 2-1 win over Qatar, but then were thrashed 6-1 by Japan just a few days before the tournament started. Not just that but they finished in third place in the group and have since looked very good, indeed.

There were genuine doubts about Ammouta before it all started and no expectations for the team. The coach proved the doubters wrong and reaffirmed his pedigree. And the team’s exploits in the past three weeks show that football is not a science and that sometimes the common wisdom can be turned on its head.

Teamwork and tactics beats stars.

Korea have the big-name stars, such as Son Heung-min, Hwang Hee-chan, Lee Kang-in and Kim Min-jae, who play for some of the biggest clubs around. There is no doubt that there was talent in the Taeguk Warriors, but these famous names had little impact on the game.

Korea did not seem to have much of a game plan and were taken aback by the intensity of the Jordanian game. They cannot say they were not warned, as the group stage game ended 2-2 only because of a last-minute Jordanian goal.

Korea were made to look second rate, and this is partly because of Jordan preparing so well for this game, getting the tactics right and then working so hard to execute the game plan. It is not enough to have star names; you need to have everything else. At the moment, Jordan have both.


NEOM SC promoted to SPL after beating Al-Arabi 3-0 in Saudi 1st Division

Updated 22 April 2025
Follow

NEOM SC promoted to SPL after beating Al-Arabi 3-0 in Saudi 1st Division

  • A brace by Ahmad Abdo, and a goal by Saeed Bin Rahma were enough to promote the Tabuk-based club to first-tier SPL

RIYADH: NEOM Sports Club were promoted to the Roshn Saudi Pro League on Tuesday after defeating Al-Arabi Club 3-0 in the Saudi First Division.
A brace by Ahmad Abdo, and a goal by Saeed Bin Rahma were enough to promote the Tabuk-based club from the second tier of Saudi football to the first-tier SPL.
Celebrating their promotion after their win, NEOM said on X: “With the determination of heroes, we made history. Officially, Neom Sports Club is promoted to the Roshn League.”


Italy’s Serie A fixtures rescheduled due to Pope Francis’ funeral

Updated 22 April 2025
Follow

Italy’s Serie A fixtures rescheduled due to Pope Francis’ funeral

  • Lazio were to play Parma in Rome on Saturday, which has been rescheduled for Monday
  • Serie A postponed Monday’s matches after the Pope’s death

ROME: Italy’s top-flight Serie A soccer league has postponed Saturday’s three fixtures until Sunday due to Pope Francis’ funeral being held that day in Rome, it said on Tuesday.
Earlier media reports had suggested that Serie A might make an exception for Inter Milan’s clash with visitors AS Roma to allow Simone Inzaghi’s side additional rest time ahead of their midweek Champions League semifinal at Barcelona.
But the league has confirmed that the game at San Siro will now kick off at 1500 local time (1300 GMT) on Sunday.
Pope Francis, the first Latin American leader of the Roman Catholic Church, died on Monday aged 88. His funeral will be held at St. Peter’s Square in front of the Basilica of St. Peter before the burial in the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.
Lazio were to play Parma in Rome on Saturday, which has been rescheduled for Monday at 2045 (1845 GMT), while Como’s home game with Genoa has been moved to Sunday at 1230 (1030 GMT).
Serie A postponed Monday’s matches after the Pope’s death, with the games rescheduled for Wednesday, and on Tuesday Italy’s National Olympic Committee (CONI) called for the suspension of all sporting events scheduled for Saturday.


Chances of Alonso staying in Leverkusen ‘50-50’, says CEO

Updated 22 April 2025
Follow

Chances of Alonso staying in Leverkusen ‘50-50’, says CEO

  • Carro told reporters that “my gut feeling is that it’s 50-50” Alonso would stay
  • “If a team he has played for comes, we would sit down and discuss it and we wouldn’t stand in his way”

MADRID: Bayer Leverkusen CEO Fernando Carro said Monday the club had a 50-50 chance of holding onto manager Xabi Alonso amid rumored links between the coach and Real Madrid.
Carro also revealed the club had a “gentlemen’s agreement” with Alonso, allowing him to leave to coach one of the clubs he played for as a player for a fee.
Alonso, who played for Real and last year took Leverkusen to an unbeaten league and cup double, has been linked with the top job at the Bernabeu, with current coach Carlo Ancelotti rumored to be headed for the exit.
Speaking ahead of the Laureus Sports Awards, where the club is nominated for breakthrough of the year after their debut Bundesliga win last season, Carro told reporters that “my gut feeling is that it’s 50-50” Alonso would stay.
“Xabi has no exit clause, but we have a gentleman’s agreement. If a team he has played for comes, we would sit down and discuss it and we wouldn’t stand in his way,” he said.
Carro said the club “needs clarity” and “the decision needs to be in the next three or four weeks. We cannot wait until the end of the season.”
“We are not naive, the position of the coach is very important for a club and it is true that we are preparing for next season with him.
“We have worked with him every day; he is fully committed to this preparation.”
After winning the title last season, Leverkusen have fallen back slightly and sit eight points behind league leaders Bayern Munich with four games remaining.
Leverkusen were eliminated from the Champions League by Bayern and were knocked out in the semifinals of the German Cup by third-division Arminia Bielefeld
Despite the drop off, the club is still on track for its second best points total.
Carro also said he believed star midfielder Florian Wirtz, 21, “has a contract until 2027 and I believe he will play for us next year.”


Norwich sack Thorup and name Wilshere as interim coach

Updated 22 April 2025
Follow

Norwich sack Thorup and name Wilshere as interim coach

  • Norwich lost 3-1 at Millwall on Monday
  • “Jack Wilshere ... will take charge of the first team on an interim basis ” Norwich said

LONDON: Norwich City have sacked Danish manager Johannes Hoff Thorup following a poor run of results and appointed his assistant and former England midfielder Jack Wilshere as interim coach until the end of the season, the Championship club said on Tuesday.
Norwich lost 3-1 at Millwall on Monday and have slipped to 14th place in the second-tier table with 53 points.
Sporting Director Ben Knapper said: “Whilst we made this appointment with a long-term focus and in line with our wider club strategy and direction, unfortunately recent results and performances have deemed it necessary for us make a change.
“Jack Wilshere ... will take charge of the first team on an interim basis for our two remaining Championship fixtures” Norwich added on their website.
The 33-year-old former Arsenal player Wilshere has been assistant coach at Norwich since October 2024.


The Pope with ‘two left feet’ who loved the ‘beautiful game’

Updated 22 April 2025
Follow

The Pope with ‘two left feet’ who loved the ‘beautiful game’

  • Messi: A different Pope, close, Argentinian... Rest in peace, Pope Francis
  • His love of football was inseparable from his loyalty to the San Lorenzo club in Buenos Aires, where he went to watch matches with his father and brothers

VATICAN CITY: His predecessor loved Mozart, but Pope Francis’s passion was football — for him “the most beautiful game” and also a vehicle to educate and spread peace.

From Argentine compatriots Lionel Messi and the late Diego Maradona to Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Gianluigi Buffon, Francis received the greatest stars of football at the Vatican, signing dozens of shirts and balls from around the world.

And the admiration flowed both ways. Following news of the Pope’s death on Monday at the age of 88, Messi took to Instagram to pay tribute.

“A different Pope, close, Argentinian... Rest in peace, Pope Francis,” the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner posted. “Thank you for making the world a better place. We will miss you.”

Francis often recounted playing as a young boy on the streets of Buenos Aires, using a ball made of rags.

While admitting he was “not among the best” and that “he had two left feet,” he often played as goalkeeper, which he said was a good way of learning how to respond to “dangers that could arrive from anywhere.”

His love of football was inseparable from his loyalty to the San Lorenzo club in Buenos Aires, where he went to watch matches with his father and brothers.

“It was romantic football,” he recalled.

He maintained his membership even after becoming pope — and caused a minor uproar when he received a membership card from rivals Boca Juniors as part of a Vatican educational partnership.

Francis kept up to date with the club’s progress thanks to one of the Vatican’s Swiss Guards, who would leave results and league tables on his desk.

On Monday, San Lorenzo’s home page showed a large photo of a smiling pope under the club’s blue-and-red striped emblem, and the words: “Goodbye forever, Holy Father!”

Football is often compared to a religion for its fans, and Francis held numerous giant masses in football stadiums during trips abroad.

French Bishop Emmanuel Gobilliard, the Vatican delegate for the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, said he understood the crucial role played by football.

“Whether you are an amateur or professional footballer, whether you like to watch it on television, it makes no difference: this sport is part of people’s lives,” he said.

But it was not just an end in itself — Francis, a Jesuit, also saw football as a way of spreading peace and education, despite the money and corruption linked to the sport.

In 2014, the Olympic stadium in Rome hosted an “inter-religious match” for peace at his initiative.

“Many say that football is the most beautiful game in the world. I think so too,” Francis declared in 2019.

As early as 2013, addressing the Italian and Argentine teams, Francis reminded players of their “social responsibilities” and warned against the excesses of “business” football.

The pontiff’s love for the game inspired a scene in a film “The Two Popes,” in which former pope Benedict XVI and then-cardinal Jorge Bergoglio watch the 2014 World Cup final between their two countries, Germany and Argentina.

It was pure fiction, as the soon-to-be Francis gave up watching television in 1990 — the year West Germany beat Argentina in the World Cup final hosted by Italy — while his predecessor preferred classical music and reading.

His enthusiasm for football said UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin on Monday bore “witness to a joyful spirit and his ability to connect with people through warmth and a sense of shared humanity.”

Francis never mentioned the 1978 World Cup in Argentina, which took place in the midst of a dictatorship when he was a provincial leader of the Jesuits.

But he dedicated an entire chapter of his 2024 autobiography to Maradona, whose infamous “hand of God” goal helped Argentina beat England in their 1986 World Cup quarterfinal clash.

“When, as pope, I received Maradona in the Vatican a few years ago... I asked him, jokingly, ‘So, which is the guilty hand?’” he said in 2024.

And asked once who was the game’s greatest player, Maradona or Lionel Messi, the pope hedged his bets.

“Maradona, as a player, was great. But as a man, he failed,” Francis said, referring to his addictions to cocaine and alcohol.

He described Messi as a “gentleman,” but added that he would choose a third, Pele, “a man of heart.”