Asian WCup qualifying goes down to the wire

Reuters
With Iran and Japan having already booked their places, Australia, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, South Korea, Syria, Uzbekistan and China all jostle for the remaining tickets to Russia.
Reuters
Asian WCup qualifying goes down to the wire
Imaginechina

Head coach Marcello Lippi of China takes charge of a team training session in Wuhan, central China's Hubei Province, on August 29, 2017. China takes on Qatar in Doha in its last 2018 World Cup qualifier on September 5, 2017.

Seven Asian nations will discover their World Cup fate on Tuesday as the race to Russia 2018 draws to a climax.

With Iran and Japan having already booked their places at next year's finals, Australia, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, South Korea, Syria, Uzbekistan and China all jostle for the remaining tickets.

The top two teams from both Asian groups qualify directly, with the third-placed sides to battle each other for the right to enter an intercontinental playoff against a side from the CONCACAF region.

Australia's fate continues to rest in the hands of the Japanese. The Socceroos take on Thailand in Melbourne knowing victory may not be enough to ensure an automatic place should Saudi Arabia defeat the Samurai Blue in Jeddah.

"There's no more important game that I can recall over the last 10 years since we've been in Asia for qualification," Australia's stand-in captain Mark Milligan said of the Thailand game in comments on Football Federation Australia's website (footballaustralia.com.au),

Australia is third in Group B and trails Saudi Arabia on goal difference, meaning wins for both teams could see the Saudis seal their spot in Russia and Ange Postecoglou's team head into the playoffs.

The UAE, currently fourth in the group following its win over the Saudis on Tuesday, also retains a mathematical hope.

But it would need a big win over Iraq plus heavy defeats for both Australia and Saudi Arabia to claim third and a route through the playoffs.

Group A, meanwhile, has a four-way tussle for the two remaining spots that could lead to the World Cup.

Second-placed South Korea can qualify directly for an eighth successive World Cup appearance with a win over fourth-placed Uzbekistan in Tashkent.

A defeat, however, could be catastrophic for the South Koreans if third-placed Syria can upset Iran away.

That could put Syria, which is ahead of Uzbekistan on goal difference, in second place and grant it automatic passage to Russia.

A win over Iran, which remains unbeaten in this phase of qualifying, would be a stunning achievement by a side that has been forced to play all its home games away due to the civil war at home.

But Iran coach Carlos Queiroz has stressed his team will not ease up despite having already qualified for a fifth World Cup appearance.

"To think that these players are going to make it easy against Syria is to not know them, their professionalism, character and pride serving the Iranian nation," said Queiroz.

On the fringes is Marcello Lippi's China, which could yet steal a place in the playoffs if it beats Qatar away and both Uzbekistan and Syria lose.


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