DOHA —
Qatar’s World Cup team will emerge from four months in near-lockdown on Friday
to take on Canada with most of their fans nervously watching from afar.
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All their games
since June 2 have been behind closed doors and the Qatar Football Association
has even kept sponsors away from training camps in Spain and Austria as they
prepare players for a baptism of fire — a World Cup debut on home territory —
in 60 days.
Having spent tens
of billions of dollars preparing for the first World Cup in an Arab nation,
Qatar is desperate to see the national side get past the first round where they
are grouped with Netherlands, Senegal and Ecuador.
But they lost 3–0
to a Croatia under-23 team behind closed doors on Tuesday. And while public
games in
Vienna against Canada on Friday and Chile on Tuesday are only
friendlies, they will still be seen as a key test of how much steel Spanish
coach Felix Sanchez has put into the side.
Team spokesman Ali
Salat told AFP that Sanchez and the QFA had agreed to keep the 30 players away
from Qatar and the prying eyes of intrigued rivals.
“The coach and the
federation were in discussion over the past season. This was agreed.”
Sanchez and the
players will briefly return to Qatar in early October and will hold an open
training session before returning to Spain for more isolation before the World
Cup starts, Salat said.
Qatar are the
bottom ranked team in Group A — 48th on FIFA’s list. Sanchez was named coach in
2017 on a mission to make an impact this year.
‘They need to
sacrifice’
Qatar failed to reach the 2018 World Cup but won the Asian Cup in 2019 and
reached the semifinals of the CONCACAF Gold Cup last year.
With many eyes on
2019 Asian player of the year Akram Afif, Qatar’s fans are praying for a repeat
of South Korea’s dream run to the World Cup semi-finals when they co-hosted the
event in 2002.
Former national
player Mohamed Mubarak Al-Mohannadi said Qatar must beat Ecuador in the opening
game on November 20 to stand a chance of reaching the last 16.
“They are preparing
for a World Cup for the first time in their lives. These players are
sacrificing their time, they are staying away from home, from their families,”
Mohannadi told AFP.
“To go abroad for
this amount of time is difficult but the players know their mission. The
federation and coaches explained it and they are ready. They need to
sacrifice.”
“Qatar people will
come out to support, but they want to see quality football that they can cheer
and be proud of.”
Mohannadi believes
that the World Cup will provide a crucial boost to the Qatari league which has
been dominated by Al-Sadd and Al-Duhail for the past five years.
Both have slumped
this season, however, as key players are with the national squad. Stadium
crowds have increased and Mohannadi said this was because other teams are
getting a chance to win.
“If my team can come close to a top place I would be happy
and I will take my family to support them. If they are losing no-one wants to
go to the stadium. Now more people are enjoying the stadiums.”
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