China saved by goalie howler in narrow win over Kyrgyzstan

AFP
A spectacular goalkeeping blunder helps Marcello Lippi's China to rally to a narrow 2-1 victory over minnow Kyrgyzstan in their Asian Cup Group C match in al-Ain.
AFP
China saved by goalie howler in narrow win over Kyrgyzstan
AFP

China's Wu Lei (center) in action during the Asian Cup Group C match against Kyrgyzstan at the Khalifa bin Zayed Stadium in al-Ain, United Arab Emirates, on Monday

A spectacular goalkeeping blunder helped Marcello Lippi's China avoid a humiliating defeat as it came from behind to narrowly beat minnow Kyrgyzstan 2-1 at the Asian Cup on Monday.

The Central Asians, ranked 91st in the world and playing their first major tournament, bossed the first half and deservedly led 1-0 at the break of their Group C clash after Akhlidin Israilov's rasping strike in al-Ain, United Arab Emirates.

But panicky Kyrgyz goalkeeper Pavel Matiash committed the howler of the Asian Cup so far when he palmed the ball into his own net shortly after half-time, before Beijing Guo'an forward Yu Dabao grabbed the winner 12 minutes before the end.

It spared China's blushes against a team of players who ply their trade in leagues as diverse as Bangladesh and the Turkish amateur ranks, while both Matiash and Israilov are clubless.

Lippi, who is expected to depart his post at the end of the Asian Cup, said he was "enormously unhappy" at China's first half, but proud of the team's revival.

"During the first half we weren't playing well, and I thought if we keep playing like that we're going to lose the match," said the 2006 World Cup-winning coach.

"After the reaction from my players in the second half, I'm happy that we won the three points."

Kyrgyzstan coach Alexandr Krestinin refused to blame his goalkeeper and said his team would keep fighting, with games against South Korea and the Philippines to come. South Korea edged the Philippines 1-0 in the second Group C game later on Monday.

"We're not talking about the mistake from one person — it was the whole team that lost the game," said Krestinin.

"We missed chances in the first half, but this is how the game is at big tournaments and we know that."

Kyrgyzstan was far from overawed by its Asian Cup debut as it attacked from the outset at al-Ain's sun-drenched Khalifa bin Zayed Stadium.

In an open first half, China's Wu Lei had the first shot in anger but Vitaly Lux should have scored for Kyrgyzstan on 26 minutes when he fired well over after a brilliant touch from Mirlan Murzaev.

Wu Xi, set up by Wu Lei, flashed one wide three minutes later but Kyrgyzstan was causing serious problems at the other end, with 14 players packing the six-yard box for one corner.

Lux couldn't get on the end of Bekzhan Sagynbaev's enticing header across the face of goal but it wasn't long before Kyrgyzstan's imaginative build-up play created the breakthrough.

Three minutes before half-time, Murzaev's header fell perfectly for Israilov just outside the box and the out-of-contract midfielder smashed his shot in off the right post.

Moments later, Lux had a gilt-edged opportunity to make it 2-0 but he poked his shot just wide when one-on-one with China goalkeeper Yan Junling.

China came out with renewed purpose after the break and it benefited from an outrageous piece of luck when Matiash handled into his own net on 50 minutes.

Matiash attempted to palm Bernhardt Edgar's defensive header from a corner over the bar but only succeeded in batting it over the line.

It took the wind out of the White Falcons' sails and as they tired, Wu Xi and Wu Lei both came close with headers — while Matiash nearly gifted China a second goal when he fumbled a back pass.

A Chinese winner looked inevitable and it was Yu who completed the turnaround, rounding Matiash and scoring from a tight angle on 78 minutes.


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