AFC Asian Cup 2023: Iran stars facing ‘last dance’ in semifinals against Qatar

Iran is trying to lift the trophy for the first time since 1976 and reached the last four after beating pre-tournament favourite Japan 2-1.

Published : Feb 06, 2024 18:08 IST , Doha - 2 MINS READ

Iran’s Mehdi Taremi celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Asian Cup round of 16 match vs Syria
Iran’s Mehdi Taremi celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Asian Cup round of 16 match vs Syria | Photo Credit: AP
infoIcon

Iran’s Mehdi Taremi celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Asian Cup round of 16 match vs Syria | Photo Credit: AP

Iran coach Amir Ghalenoei said several of his ageing stars are facing “the last dance” as it prepares to meet host and holder Qatar in Wednesday’s Asian Cup semifinal.

Iran is trying to lift the trophy for the first time since 1976 and reached the last four after beating pre-tournament favourite Japan 2-1.

South Korea or Jordan await the winner in Saturday’s final.

Ghalenoei will on Wednesday welcome back Mehdi Taremi from suspension after the Porto striker was sent off in Iran’s last-16 win over Syria on penalties.

Taremi is 31 and could be playing at his last Asian Cup, with team-mates Saman Ghoddos, Sardar Azmoun and Alireza Jahanbakhsh all of similar age.

Ghalenoei urged them to “use the opportunities that you have (left)“.

“For some of the players, maybe it will be the last dance,” said the coach on Tuesday.

“We are standing at a very sensitive part of history -- we have a very good chance to make history for Iranian football and the Iranian people.

“We have to use the opportunity and give everything to beat Qatar and reach the final.”

Iran came roaring back from a goal down in the quarterfinals to beat Japan.

It won it with a 96th-minute penalty after Iran’s relentless attacking unsettled the Japanese defence.

Ghalenoei urged his players to “forget about Japan” and focus on 2019 champions Qatar.

“We have to be even more concentrated than we were against Japan and we have to cover even more distance,” he said.

“I hope we can reach our first final in almost 50 years. I have big belief in our players that they can do this.”

Complex game

Like Iran, Qatar breezed through the group stage with three wins. It then beat Palestine inside 90 minutes.

But they had to go to extra time and penalties to see off Uzbekistan in the quarterfinals, and coach Tintin Marquez said the semifinal will be “a complex game”.

“We are one step away from the final for the second time in a row,” said the Spaniard, who took over from Carlos Queiroz only a month before the tournament began.

“We recognise how difficult this game will be. I didn’t know that Iran hadn’t won it for such a long time but we know we will be facing a tough team.”

Iran has scored 10 goals at the tournament so far and can call on Europe-based attackers such as Taremi, Feyenoord’s Jahanbakhsh and Roma’s Azmoun.

Qatar have its own star player in four-goal forward Akram Afif and defender Tarek Salman said it will not fear reputations.

“They have stars who play in European leagues and this gives us an incentive to give 200 percent,” he said.

“I hope we will bring joy to our fans.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment