Defence and team spirit will help Yemen on Asian Cup debut
Dubai: Defence and team spirit
will help Yemen strive to make their people happy in times of hardship at the
Asian Cup, according to coach Jan Kocian.
The debutants take on Iran, Iraq
and Vietnam in Group D in the UAE at a time when their country is struggling
from the effects of a three-year civil war.
“We want the best, but we know the
situation is not easy because our players in Yemen aren’t playing league games
or practicing,” said Kocian, a former Czech defender, who played for Germany’s
St Pauli and the Czechoslovakia national team in the late 80s and early 90s,
before managing Slovakia and assisting Austria in the early noughties.
“It’s not easy or even possible to
go to Yemen at this time, that’s why we have been camping in Riyadh and Doha.
“We had just 10 days together to
prepare for very strong [Asian Cup preparatory friendly] games against Saudi
Arabia and the UAE in November [they lost 1-0 and 2-0 respectively in Dammam
and Dubai],” Kocian said.
“Then we went back to Saudi and
Qatar for a camp and had one more game in Abu Dhabi (in December which they
lost 1-0 to Syria) before the Asian Cup.
“The target is not easy, we are
newcomers and want the best, normally you want to win the game and we can dream
of that as a small country, Yemen can dream of big victories against Iran and
Iraq, it’s normal, it may not be real but we will try, the target is we want to
win,” he added.
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“Maybe we haven’t got the best
players, the quality is definitely better in our opponents but we have a team
and I want this team to play good defensively and start our preparation from
defence because we cannot win the game by attack, we have to stay compact and
play on the counter.
“We are very happy to see people
from Yemen following our games in the UAE and Saudi. For people in Yemen the
situation is very bad but maybe with victory we can give a good representation
of them in the Asian Cup, because for those who stay in Yemen the life is very
hard,” he said.
“We have Iran, Iraq and Vietnam.
All teams are very strong, but we are good defensively and have good team
spirit. I won’t tell you we will win but we want to.”
Yemen’s games will be against Iran
in Abu Dhabi’s Mohammad Bin Zayed Stadium on January 7, Vietnam in Sharjah on
January 12 and Vietnam in Al Ain’s Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium on January 16.
With the new expanded 24-team
format, which has allowed previously unqualified teams like Yemen to qualify in
the first place, there exists a clause in the groups that allows the four best
third placed teams to progress. This means with an odd result, Yemen might
still stand a chance of qualifying from the group in third.