Africa's World Cup success leaves Asia looking for answers
BBC News ·

While African teams made significant progress in the expanded World Cup format, Asian nations struggled to replicate their success, resulting in a stark contrast in performance. …
If the expanded World Cup format turned out to be an opportunity for Africa, the opposite applies to Asia. From 27 games played, Asia's nine representatives only managed three victories at 0.67 points per game. African nations played 30 matches and won 10 at 1.33 points per game. In the final round of group games there were five Africa v Asia matches crucial for qualification. Asian countries did not win any of them, losing four. Four years ago, Australia, Japan and South Korea made the first knockout round. This time it is just Australia and Japan. While African teams have grown and improved - five qualified for the knockout phase for the first time - Asia has gone backwards. "Other than Japan, Australia and maybe Iran, every team needs to improve," said Uzbekistan head coach Fabio Cannavaro after his team lost all three matches. The consequences of South Korea's failure , ultimately caused by a shock defeat by South Africa in their final match, have been huge. South Korea President Lee Jae Myung called for an investigation into the team's poor performance, calling it "a failure of organisation and personnel". Hours later, head coach Hong Myung-bo resigned after two years in charge. Jordan, making their World Cup debut, lost all three matches, scoring three goals and conceding eight. Jamal Sellami, Jordan's head coach, gave a reason for the huge gulf in performance. "Because African players compete in the major European leagues," Sellami said. …
Original source: BBC News
Mentioned
Morocco · African · DR Congo · Australia · World Cup · Uzbekistan · South Africa · Jamal Sellami · South Korea · Fabio Cannavaro