Saturday, October 15, 2011

Cambodia come a cropper

"What's that you say, Laboravy plays out on the left wing?" asks coach Lee Tae-Hoon
Internet problems prevented me bringing you yesterday's results sooner. I'm sorry to report that Cambodia were knocked out of the MRYUIFTBIDC Cup (aka BIDC Cup) yesterday, beaten 2-1 by Thailand in the semi-final stage in front of 25,000 gutted supporters. I have to place the blame for the defeat firmly at the door of the South Korean coach, Lee Tae-Hoon, who started the game with his best player on the wrong side of the pitch, snuffing out his effectiveness and even when it was clear we weren't making any headway, he still refused to change it. He also dallied with his substitutions and one of his most ineffectual players stayed on the pitch until he finally replaced him in injury time. All in all, the coach got it horribly wrong against a Thailand U-19 team who didn't look too hot, but certainly had enough in the tank to deal with the majority of what Cambodia could throw at them. Leaving Khuon Laboravy, his skipper, on the right flank for the whole game was a bewildering decision to be frank. Laboravy tore the Laos defense to pieces in the first game, playing in his usual wide left role. To move him across the pitch, and keep him there for the whole game, nullified his game completely and Cambodia were toothless without his drive. There was no press conference after the game so I wasn't able to put that point to the head coach, so I'm still scratching my head as to why he would make such a foolhardy switch for this important game. The coach also brought Keo Sokngorn into the action on 66 minutes, but if he was fit enough to play 20+ minutes, why didn't he start with him. Sokngorn had Cambodia's best effort of the 2nd half and if he'd started, he could've made a difference. If the coach didn't believe he was 100% fit, he shouldn't even have been on the bench. So to the match itself.

All the goals came in the first 33 minutes of the match. There was a collective groan from the big crowd as Thailand's youngsters took a 4th minute lead. Thitiphan Puangjan jumped in front of keeper Sou Yaty to reach an inswinging corner to give the visitors an early lead. From another set piece, Cambodia levelled it on 8 minutes. Chin Chhoeurn swung a corner kick to beyond the far post where Sok Sovan was waiting, unmarked, and he bent down to head the ball between the upright and the scrambling goalkeeper. It was a simple effort for the youngster's first goal in senior football, which he celebrated by sinking to his knees and accepting the congratulations of his teammates. Honours even until a stroke of bad luck gifted Thailand their second, and match-winning goal. Chayawat Srinawong ghosted behind the backline and his low cross was deflected by Sok Rithy's outstretched foot, which wrong-footed Yaty and he couldn't keep the ball from rolling over the goal-line. Another large collective groan enveloped the stadium. It was a soft goal to concede especially as Thailand didn't show too much going forward, as they got bogged down in the cloying mud. Laboravy whipped in a free-kick that Thai keeper Watchara Buathong held at the 2nd attempt, but that was about it as far as goalmouth activity in the first half.

Thailand upped their efforts after the break with Yaty going low to collect a Srinawong low drive and Touch Pancharong blocking a goal-bound effort from Perapat Notchaiya. Laboravy demonstrated his frustration with a pointless booking for handball before Cambodia were handed a lifeline by referee Nagor Amir Noor from Malaysia, when he whipped out a second yellow card for a petty offence by Thai's Narakorn Kana and reduced the visitors to ten men for the final twenty minutes. It was the boost Cambodia needed, alongwith the introduction of Keo Sokngorn, but they failed to take advantage. The Cambodia coach refused to amend his gameplan and his team struggled to make any impact until a few minutes from the end. Sovan had a second far post header stopped just shy of the goal-line and with a minute on the clock, Sokngorn sent a fizzing shot inches wide, and with it Cambodia's chances of a positive result. Replacing the ineffectual Phuong Soksana with Sok Pheng in time added on just about summed up Lee Tae-Hoon's tactics, which were badly off the mark in this game.
Cambodian line-up: Yaty, Raksmey, Pancharong, Sovan, Rithy, Phearith, Sothearath, Saray (Sokngorn 66), Chhoeurn (PM Udom 77), Soksana (Pheng 91), Laboravy. Subs not used: Vichet, Rady, Daravorn, Dalin, Souhana, Veasna. Bookings: Pancharong, Sothearath, Laboravy.
Myanmar beat Vietnam in the other semi, 5-4 on penalties after a 1-1 draw, so go into Sunday's final against Thailand, whilst Cambodia will lick their wounds and head to the SEA Games, where they will find life considerably tougher.
The Cambodia starting XI who went 2-1 behind after 33 minutes: Back Row LtoR: Laboravy, Sovan, Phearith, Yaty, Soksana, Rithy. Front Row: Chhoeurn, Saray, Pancharong, Raksmey, Sothearath
The Thai U-19 team that sent their older opponents packing and skipped into the Final
The Cambodian players belt out the national anthem before the game
Sok Sovan bites his lip before the game and then scored his 1st goal in senior football after just 8 minutes

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Too bad for Cambodia.

Anonymous said...
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Erick Bui said...

Is there a third-place game?

Anonymous said...

fuck coach Lee, it is very poor performance

Andy Brouwer said...

Hi Eric. No 3rd place game, just the final.
Anon12:08 - please, no bad language.

Anonymous said...

how to move this Korean coach? very thick face coach....

JJ said...

the Cambodia team's slow start to the match cost them a place in the final...Thailand were there for the taking...most of the Thai players looked tired and generally it wasn't their best display...Cambodia woke up in the 4th minute to find themselves 1-0 down...but they responded well i thought...tried to play some good attacking passing football right til the end...which wasn't easy on that pitch!...but on the whole Cambodia dealt with the pitch conditions better than Thailand...they got the goal back pretty quickly...and then did themselves in with Rithy's unlucky own-goal...Rithy had a very good game otherwise i thought...the commanding number 5 is a real presence on the pitch...Cambodia's other outstanding player on the day i thought was number 16 Sothearat...a busy and tireless midfield worker who managed to pass the ball better on that pitch than anyone else...the skipper Laboravy did very well even out of position, and i thought that last-minute chance had fallen to him on his favoured left!...i wonder if the Cambodian coach switched Laboravy because he felt Thailand were weak at left back...that's certainly where most of the chances came from...right-back Raksmey also did well down the right...full of running and occasionally overlapping Laboravy...in all i think the team did well and had a great chance of knocking out Thailand, especially after the red card...they just needed to start the match already in top gear...if they're not too tired after their penalty shoot-out, i fancy Myanmar to surprise Thailand on sunday

Anonymous said...

Andy, do you think Booth will want to head the Cambodian national team? Anyway, I will definitely root for Myanmar as many Cambodians do. Hope they will make it and lift the cup.

GADAFFI said...

They did well to be fair. They were undone by lack of confidence. The moment Cambodians begin to believe themselves especially against their neighbors Thailand and Vietnam, they will start doing better. Technically and tactically I do not see much difference between them and other teams in the region except for the inferiority complex.