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Asian Cup | Qatar coach hailed after stunning triumph

Red letter day: Qatar swept to the first continental title in its history, beating Japan in the final.

Red letter day: Qatar swept to the first continental title in its history, beating Japan in the final.  

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Almoez Ali scored a tournament-record nine goals; The Maroons conceded only once

Qatar coach Felix Sanchez shrugged off comparisons to Pep Guardiola on Friday after masterminding a breathtaking Asian Cup football victory just three years before the 2022 World Cup on home turf.

Almoez Ali scored a tournament-record nine goals and the Maroons conceded only once as they swept to the first continental title in their history, beating Japan 3-1 in the final.

Shades of Guardiola

Almoez said he saw shades of Manchester City’s Guardiola in Sanchez, who coached Barcelona’s youth players before joining Qatar’s national academy in 2006 and working his way through the ranks.

  • Qatar players were pelted with shoes and plastic bottles by a hostile home crowd as they beat the UAE 4-0 in the semifinals

“I’ve been working with him for nine years, he’s highly intelligent,” said the 21-year-old striker.

“I compare him to Guardiola because he has the same ideas.”

But Sanchez said that Almoez only made the comment “because I’m there (listening) and he wants to keep playing”.

“I’ve worked with Almoez for a very long time and we have good relationship,” the Spaniard said. “He’s very easy to coach because he’s a hard worker and he deserves everything that has happened to him in this tournament.”

Qatar upset former champion Saudi Arabia, Iraq and South Korea during its march to the final, but they weren’t the only challenges it faced.

Superb run

The Qatar players were pelted with shoes and plastic bottles by a hostile home crowd as they beat the United Arab Emirates 4-0 in the semifinals.

The UAE then lodged a protest over the eligibility of Almoez and defender Bassam Al-Rawi which was dismissed just hours before the start of the final.

Sanchez insisted he had “no concerns” about the eligibility row and also dismissed speculation that notoriously trigger-happy Qatar might replace him with a big-name coach before the World Cup.

‘Proud’

“I’m very proud to be the Qatar national team coach. Today we made history. I’m only thinking about today. It’s a great day for me and the players and the country,” Sanchez said.

“There’s always news about this person and that person but we’re focused on our work and we have the full support of the QFA.

“ So no concerns about the World Cup, it’s in 2022 and you don’t even know what’s going to happen in two weeks.”

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