Tears, anger as China's World Cup dream fades

Captain Feng Xiaoting wept after the final whistle as Lippi, who led Italy to the 2006 World Cup title, struggled to contain his fury.

Published : Jun 14, 2017 13:40 IST , Shanghai

The Chinese coach Marcello Lippi angrily blamed the referee after Syria’s Ahmad Al Salih's injury-time free-kick secured a 2-2 draw.
The Chinese coach Marcello Lippi angrily blamed the referee after Syria’s Ahmad Al Salih's injury-time free-kick secured a 2-2 draw.
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The Chinese coach Marcello Lippi angrily blamed the referee after Syria’s Ahmad Al Salih's injury-time free-kick secured a 2-2 draw.

Marcello Lippi's China vowed to fight on after its 2018 World Cup hopes were all but destroyed when Syria's late equaliser left the team bottom of its qualifying group and with its captain in tears.

The Italian coach angrily blamed the referee after Ahmad Al Salih's injury-time free-kick secured a 2-2 draw, dealing a hammer blow to China's already remote chances.

Captain Feng Xiaoting wept after the final whistle as Lippi, who led Italy to the 2006 World Cup title, struggled to contain his fury.

"It was a very disappointing result for us, we deserved three points," Lippi said, according to the state-run China Daily.

"Our performance in the first half was not that good, but we did a very good job in the second half and turned the game around."

"Unfortunately the referee changed the game. I don't understand why he made that call. It was a fatal decision for us," Lippi said.

Lippi appeared to be referring to the decision by referee Ammar Aljneibi of the UAE to award Syria the pivotal free-kick in stoppage time. Not all decisions went against China, which was handed a lifeline with what looked like a soft penalty to make it 1-1 on 68 minutes.

Wu Xi's volley six minutes later put China in sight of victory but it was stunned when Al Salih swept home his free kick in the third added minute.

China, which is investing heavily at international, domestic and grassroots football, is now bottom of Asian qualifying Group A with just two games left.

Only the top two teams earn an automatic spot at next year's World Cup in Russia, with the third-placed side going into play-offs.

A distraught skipper Feng said: "We did so well in the second half and we almost got the win.”

"But this is football. It is so hard for me to accept the result, but we will fight to the end."

China now needs big wins over Uzbekistan in August and away to Qatar in September, and hope that other results go its way.

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