FIFA World Cup: Ecuador coach criticises date change for opening match against Qatar

Ecuador coach Gustavo Alfaro criticised the decision to change the date of the World Cup’s opening match between his side and host Qatar for giving him one less day to prepare for the tournament.

Published : Nov 09, 2022 00:04 IST

File Photo: Ecuador’s Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro gestures during the South American qualification football match for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 against Argentina, at the Isidro Romero Monumental Stadium in Guayaquil, Ecuador.
File Photo: Ecuador’s Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro gestures during the South American qualification football match for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 against Argentina, at the Isidro Romero Monumental Stadium in Guayaquil, Ecuador. | Photo Credit: AFP/DOLORES OCHOA
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File Photo: Ecuador’s Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro gestures during the South American qualification football match for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 against Argentina, at the Isidro Romero Monumental Stadium in Guayaquil, Ecuador. | Photo Credit: AFP/DOLORES OCHOA

Ecuador coach Gustavo Alfaro criticised the decision to change the date of the World Cup’s opening match between his side and host Qatar for giving him one less day to prepare for the tournament.

The World Cup was scheduled to get underway on Monday, November 21, but organisers decided in August it would be better for the host to kick off the tournament a day earlier and therefore the match between Ecuador and Qatar was moved forward to Sunday, November 20.

“I have one day less of preparation,” Alfaro told a news conference on Tuesday. “We were overtaken. We were not consulted if there was any problem in bringing forward the match from the 21st to the 20th.”

The Argentine manager questioned the amount of time he had to work with his squad compared to other teams at the World Cup as well as Qatar, whose players have been made available to the national team for five months as their championship is suspended.

“Now, I don’t want an advantage, but I do want the same rights as everyone else. The others have seven days and I have six. Why do I have six? Why didn’t they give me a day before (to work with the squad)?” Alfaro added.

Ecuador qualified after finishing fourth in the CONMEBOL qualifiers behind Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay.

Yet its arrival at the tournament was shrouded in controversy after Chile accused it of using an ineligible player in qualifying, Byron Castillo, a claim that FIFA dismissed.

Ecuador’s place was confirmed on Tuesday when the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ruled that Castillo was an Ecuadorian national.

It will be the South American country’s fourth appearance at a World Cup, after Japan in 2002, Germany in 2006 (where it had its best performance and reached the Round of 16), and Brazil in 2014.

Ecuador is in Group A along with Qatar, the Netherlands, and Senegal.

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