Thailand fires coach Rajevac after Asian Cup horror show

AFP
The 65-year-old Serb, who took charge in 2017, paid the price after Thailand conceded three second-half goals to slump to a shock 1-4 Asian Cup defeat to India in Abu Dhabi.
AFP

Thailand has fired coach Milovan Rajevac following a humiliating 1-4 thrashing by India in its opening Asian Cup game on Sunday.

The 65-year-old Serb, who took charge of Thailand in 2017, paid the price after the War Elephants conceded three second-half goals to slump to a shock defeat in Abu Dhabi on Sunday.

Thai football chiefs took a dim view of the team's Group A flop and acted swiftly to remove Rajevac the morning after.

"The result is not what is expected of the Thai national team and that our supporters deserve," Thailand's FA president Somyot Poompanmoung said.

"Like all Thai football fans across the country, I am also disappointed with the result. But as president of the football association, I cannot stand still with this problem."

Former assistant coach Sirisak Yodyardthai will assume control of the team when it faces Bahrain and hosts United Arab Emirates, Thai officials added.

Rajevac, who has had spells in charge of Algeria and Qatar, famously steered Ghana to the quarterfinals of the 2010 World Cup where it was beaten on penalties by Uruguay.

But he was left shell-shocked by Thailand's horror show against underdog India, whose veteran striker Sunil Chhetri scored twice, overtaking Lionel Messi's 65 international goals in the process.

Thailand fires coach Rajevac after Asian Cup horror show
AFP

Thailand head coach Milovan Rajevac looks on during their Asian Cup Group Group A match against India at the al-Nahyan Stadium in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on Sunday.

Lamenting his side's abject display, Rajevac admitted that India was a worthy winner.

"They were phenomenal — they ran more, were more aggressive and wanted it more," he said.

"They absolutely deserved to win. But we underperformed, especially in the second half."

Rajevic has been criticized for his defensive style but the Serb clearly felt otherwise after watching Thailand over-run by a hungry India side.

"It's not always about technical ability and skill on the ball," he said. "We lacked power, strength and aggression. We need to put more pressure on the ball and show more passion."

Thailand, appearing for the first time since co-hosting the Asian Cup in 2007, has now won just one of 21 games at the continent's showcase competition.

Cricket-mad India finds itself as the unlikely leader of Group A thanks to its first Asian Cup win in 55 years.

The Emiratis were held 1-1 by Bahrain in Saturday's curtain-raiser.


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