Asian Cup 2019: Arnold to break with tradition for quarterfinal against UAE

Australia's players will not find out their team against United Arab Emirates until the day of their clash with the AFC Asian Cup 2019 host United Arab Emirates.

Published : Jan 25, 2019 00:28 IST

Australia coach Graham Arnold has decided inform announce the team to face UAE on the morning of the match, rather than the day before, so the boys have sufficient time to prove their fitness.
Australia coach Graham Arnold has decided inform announce the team to face UAE on the morning of the match, rather than the day before, so the boys have sufficient time to prove their fitness.
lightbox-info

Australia coach Graham Arnold has decided inform announce the team to face UAE on the morning of the match, rather than the day before, so the boys have sufficient time to prove their fitness.

Graham Arnold plans to break with his tradition of naming his starting line-up the night before a match when Australia faces United Arab Emirates in the quarterfinal of the AFC Asian Cup 2019.

The Socceroos take on the host on Friday in Al Ain, hoping to become the first reigning champions to reach the last four of the tournament since Japan in 2007.

The side has been made to work in its run to the last eight, recovering from an opening defeat to Jordan to progress to the round of 16, where it defeated Uzbekistan on penalties after a 0-0 draw.

RELATED| AFC Asian Cup: VAR comes into play with semifinal berths at stake

Head coach Arnold believes that spot-kick success has instilled some confidence in his side and he hopes his players can tap into their renewed belief.

He intends to inform the squad of the team to face UAE on the morning of the match, rather than the day before, so the boys have sufficient time to prove their fitness.

"We've recovered very well from the performance against Uzbekistan, the extra time and the penalty shoot-out, and the boys are in fantastic headspace," he said.

"Probably playing those extra minutes has built a lot of confidence and belief within the group. When we look back at that performance, we know there's a lot of improvement left in us and I expect a great performance [on Friday].

"Normally, I name the team the night – or the last training session – before, but for this one I decided not to. It's really around the side of recovery. We only played three days ago and I want to see the fresh players training today and I want to see the mentality and the freshness and I'll make the decision on the line-up tomorrow [Friday] morning."

RELATED|  Vietnam 0 Japan 1: Moriyasu's men reach semis as Video Assistant Referee dominates on Asian Cup debut

Tom Rogic will miss the game through suspension, while UAE will be without defender Khalifa Mubarak, who broke his leg in the last-16 win over Kyrgyzstan.

Head coach Alberto Zaccheroni admits his side will need to show some improvement in their form, regardless of injuries, if they are to progress.

"We seemed to struggle with long balls and crosses, and we also had one or two chances to score and secure the game, but we didn't convert those opportunities," he said of their 3-2 win after extra time in the last round.

"We will try to correct all the things that we believe were less positive between now and the quarterfinals."

 

PLAYERS TO WATCH

UAE – Ali Mabkhout

Only three players - Ali Daei (14), Lee Dong-gook (10) and Naohiro Takahara (nine) - have scored more Asian Cup goals than Mabkhout. He will likely need to add to his tally of eight if the hosts are to go through.

Australia – Mathew Leckie

Having managed 50 minutes as a substitute against Uzbekistan, Hertha Berlin's Leckie looks ready to start after recovering from a hamstring problem. With Rogic banned, he could well be needed.

 

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