Philippine Daily Inquirer
SINGAPORE—Unfazed by the thought of 
playing in enemy territory in its most important match in tournament history, 
the Philippines aims for a maiden championship appearance against three-time 
winner Singapore in the second leg of the AFF Suzuki Cup semifinals Wednesday at 
Jalan Besar Stadium here. 
The two sides battled to a scoreless draw 
in Manila last Saturday, which means a goal by the Azkals here could pile up the 
pressure on the Lions, who are heavily favored to advance considering their 
wealth of experience. 
The Azkals’ chances haven’t been better, 
though. Two years ago, in a similar stage, they were down 0-1 on aggregate to an 
Indonesian side backed by about 70,000 supporters in Jakarta heading into the 
second leg. 
This time, the Azkals will have to deal 
with an 8,000-strong crowd, playing in a faster artificial pitch, and a squad 
with a winning tradition. 
A scoring draw would be enough but 
experienced defender Rob Gier thinks it would be foolish for the Azkals to take 
that mindset. 
“We don’t want it to end tomorrow night 
(Wednesday night),” said Gier, referring to their Suzuki Cup journey. 
The Lions have the dual task of scoring 
and preventing the Azkals from doing the same. If the match stays goalless after 
regulation, extra time will be needed with a penalty shootout as the ultimate 
decider if no team finds the back of the net. 
“We’ve always been saying that this is 
what we’ll all be waiting for,” said Azkals manager Dan Palami. “We don’t want 
to settle for just another semifinal appearance.” 
“This is the best chance we will ever 
have,” said striker Phil Younghusband. “The good thing about our team is that 
whether we are home or away, we still feel we can win the game.” 
The Azkals took time to settle on the ball 
in the first leg in Manila, where the Lions dominated the opening 45 minutes. 
With their midfielders finding their rhythm, the Azkals showed some attacking 
bite in the second half. 
“One of the plus things about the last 
game is that we know we could still play better,” said Younghusband. 
One thing constant for the Azkals in the 
tournament has been their solidity on the defensive end with Gier and Juani 
Guirado manning the fort. 
Jerry Lucena returns to the side since the 
1-0 win over Vietnam in the group stage in Bangkok and Azkals coach Michael 
Weiss sees the Fil-Danish standout as a stabilizing factor in the middle. 
Weiss said the Azkals must produce the 
same kind of fighting spirit they showed in the second half of the first leg to 
stand a chance against the Lions. 
“Singapore will have a small advantage 
because of their experience, but the boys are hungry and eager to show what they 
can do,” he said.
 
 
Sana makuha natin to. Go Azkals!
ReplyDeleteWhat time ba laro? sa ibc espn star sports? wala pa rin schedule on fil time
ReplyDeleteAccdg. to Futbol24.com, kick-off is 8pm.
DeleteI smell another boring 90 minutes plus 30 extra minutes in vain for both sides and here we go, penalty shootout! And then it's gonna be the first ever experience for all the newbie football fans in PH to taste the extreme thrill of Football God's decision.
ReplyDelete