
Uzbekistan savour sweet taste of success after sealing World Cup spot
June 6 (Reuters) - Uzbekistan coach Timur Kapadze lauded the efforts of his players after the Central Asian country qualified for the World Cup for the first time.
The White Wolves claimed their spot at the expanded 48-team 2026 finals on Thursday with a 0-0 draw in the United Arab Emirates, which guaranteed Kapadze's side a top-two finish in Group A, alongside already-qualified Iran.
Uzbekistan have tried and failed to qualify seven times since their independence after the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, suffering heartbreak in the final stage of continental qualifiers for Germany 2006 and Brazil 2014.
A genuine force in Asia since their 1994 Asian Games triumph, the Uzbekistan FA has invested heavily in youth development in the attempt to take the final step onto the world stage.
Kapadze has reaped the dividends with a young generation of players, including Manchester City's 21-year-old centre back Abdukodir Khusanov at his disposal.
"We have achieved an important result after a long and difficult journey. A lot of work was done for this result, I sincerely congratulate our people," Kapadze told Uzbekistan's online publication Zamin.
"This is not only our victory, but the victory of our entire people. Our players showed determination in every match, worked with all their might, and we achieved the result ... "
Kapadze, who played 119 times for Uzbekistan and led the under-23 team at last year's Olympic Games, was appointed coach after Srecko Katanec left because of illness in January.
"Before the game, (everyone) expressed their confidence in our team's victory and expected a good result from us," he said.
"This confidence also became a great responsibility and pressure for us. But we managed to overcome this pressure and complete the task."
Kapadze was mobbed by his players in his post-match press conference and received a congratulatory telephone call from Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev.
"In a fierce competition against the strongest teams in Asia, you demonstrated true character, unbreakable will, and professionalism," Mirziyoyev said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Belfast Telegraph
an hour ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Northern Ireland must learn to be better with the ball to shock big teams, claims Isaac Price
The West Brom ace has been brilliant at international level for his country, scoring a bunch of goals, and he tends to hit the target in honest post-match assessments as well. Keeping the ball more in away games going forward was a key takeaway from the trip to Copenhagen for Michael O'Neill's players. Without the ball Northern Ireland worked extremely hard in their 2-1 friendly defeat against a Danish side that had the vast majority of play, but Price appreciates more is required moving forward when in possession. With O'Neill's young side starting their World Cup campaign away to Luxembourg and Germany, the match at Parken provided the team with food for thought knowing they are a much more capable outfit going forward than what they showed at the weekend. Quizzed on the possession factor, Price commented: 'The gaffer said about our possession after the match. I think because when you work so hard off the ball and you're chasing the game a lot, when you finally get the ball you've got to be good enough to keep it and manipulate the ball and buy fouls and get time for your team. 'That's definitely something we've got to work on, especially when we know we're going into the World Cup qualifiers where we're going to play top opposition like Germany. We've got to get better at keeping the ball.' Denmark made their possession and pressure count in the second half with Christian Eriksen netting the winning goal in the 67th minute. At that point Northern Ireland fans were fearing the Danes would pile it on as Sweden did in March on their way to a 5-1 triumph over O'Neill's team in Stockholm. In the first half the visitors had kept Denmark at arm's length until Gustav Isaksen's fine strike in injury time, which levelled Pierre-Emile Højbjerg's sixth minute own goal. Price said: 'We knew what they were going to be like. I think we had a pretty good game plan from the start and we dug in well but their quality shone through in the second half. 'It could have quite easily gone like it did in Sweden and gone three, four, five, but we dug in well and kept it at two. 'I think their equaliser killed us a little bit. We'd worked so hard for 45 minutes and we've got our goal, and to concede so late in the first half you're going into half-time on a little bit of a downer. 'It's a kick in the teeth really, but they've got quality players and unfortunately they beat us in the end.' If that was disappointing, ex-Everton and Standard Liege player Price was full of praise for team-mate Justin Devenny. The 21-year-old Crystal Palace midfielder started in a left wing back role and delivered an impressive performance. 'I thought Justin was outstanding,' said Price. 'He's playing a different position to what he normally plays. He's been asked to do a little bit of a different job and I thought defensively he was very good.' On Tuesday, Northern Ireland return to action at home to Iceland with Price only thinking about one outcome. 'It's definitely a game that we'll look to go and win,' he said. 'We want more of the ball and to show a little bit more quality when we have the ball. 'And it's at home and I think all the team knows how well we do at home. It gives everyone a little bit of an extra boost. So, yeah, we'll be going into that game hoping to win.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
CALUM CROWE: We've reached the point of no return under Steve Clarke ... qualifying for the World Cup is now no more than a pipe dream
There was always a danger it would come to this. A danger that Steve Clarke's time as Scotland manager would turn bitter due to the feelings of anger and resentment that have festered among the Tartan Army. As the man who finally led our nation back to a major tournament, not once but twice, Clarke should be remembered fondly. Since taking charge in 2019, he has, by and large, been good for Scotland. He has presided over some terrific results and given the fans some brilliant memories along the way. But it's plain for all to see that his time is up. He's finished as manager. There is no real joy or celebration to be found in that assertion. It's just a painful reality and a reflection of how the national team have unravelled over the past year. Scotland will start their bid to reach the next World Cup very shortly, with the qualifiers starting in September. But there is no genuine prospect of Clarke taking this team to the finals in America. Instead, with a new campaign now only round the corner, Scotland are in the death throes of his reign. He looks like a busted flush and we are about to see another World Cup dream go down the drain. It is a bizarre state of affairs. With SFA chief executive Ian Maxwell and president Mike Mulraney seemingly in awe of Clarke, we are handcuffed to a manager who is patently no longer up to the job. Before Euro 2024 got under way last summer, Mulraney gave an interview in which he described Clarke as the 'perfect Scottish manager'. Just a fortnight later, after a pitiful showing across the three matches had seen Scotland eliminated at the group stage, few supporters would have shared that sentiment. For the second tournament in succession, Scotland stunk the place out. Clarke had shown a lack of ambition as manager and was tactically out of his depth. That was the time for him to go. A mutual parting of the ways at that stage would have seen most Scotland fans happy to shake his hand and thank him for all the good times, despite what happened in Germany. Instead, he was allowed to carry on. After disappearing from public view for a few months after the Euros, he eventually popped up again and started telling us how he was '75 per cent' sure he will leave after the World Cup campaign. That's not his decision to make. Or at least it shouldn't be. Not if he worked in an organisation with genuine accountability and an appetite for progression. The whole episode was embarrassing. Rekindling bad memories of how things panned out under Gordon Strachan, we were given the patronising impression that Clarke was somehow doing everyone a favour by remaining in charge. The 3-1 home defeat to Iceland last Friday night felt like a new low in the relationship between Clarke and the fans, with boos ringing out at full-time. It's perhaps just as well that Hampden was barely half-full, owing to the fact that tickets were priced as high as £40 — yes, forty quid — for an end-of-season friendly against a team ranked 74th in the world. The SFA tried a package deal to price the game in with the three home World Cup qualifiers later this year, but it didn't really work. To try and charge punters £40 to watch a friendly against Iceland was a nonsense. But that's by the by. In terms of on-field matters, it was inevitable that the headlines would focus on the calamitous performance of young goalkeeper Cieran Slicker on his debut. A young keeper who is third-choice for Ipswich Town should be nowhere near a Scotland squad, regardless of injuries to other players. His nightmare ended up taking the focus away from the fact that, once again, Scotland's general performance was utterly dreadful. Clarke only dodged the spotlight due to Slicker's misfortune. He got away with it, when, in reality, he had been every bit as culpable for the defeat as the 22-year-old. 'We had a bad night,' said Clarke afterwards. That was putting it mildly. Friendly or not, the performance was woeful against an Iceland side who had lost 3-1 to Kosovo and 4-1 to Wales over recent months. The fear is that the rot has now set in under Clarke. You can take it all the way back to when Scotland lost 1-0 at home to Northern Ireland in March last year. That was the night when alarm bells really started ringing. Scotland had lost momentum building up to the Euros and, barring the odd flicker in the Nations League, haven't really recovered it for any great length of time. They looked like they had turned a corner when a 0-0 draw with Portugal was followed by wins over Croatia, Poland and then Greece in the first leg of the play-off. But the way Clarke's side capitulated in the return at Hampden, losing 3-0 against a Greek side they will face in the World Cup qualifiers, was seriously worrying. Nothing they offered against Iceland did anything to dispel the feeling that Clarke has run his race as manager. Scotland now have players operating at the top level across Europe. A lot of them play under top managers for their clubs. Scott McTominay and Billy Gilmour have just won Serie A under Antonio Conte. Andy Robertson has gone from Jurgen Klopp to Arne Slot and a Premier League title at Liverpool. John McGinn plays under one of the most tactically-astute managers in Europe in Unai Emery at Aston Villa. Lewis Ferguson has won a Coppa Italia as captain of Vincenzo Italiano's dynamic and exciting Bologna side. Then they report for Scotland duty and fall under the command of Clarke, a manager whose tactics are inherently negative, unambitious and unsophisticated. His approach was fine when he was first appointed national boss, which saw him trying to steady the ship and dig the nation out of a hole. But our squad has evolved since then. Our players are better and are capable of playing a more attacking, possession-based style where they press opponents high up the pitch. They all do it with their clubs. Yet Clarke chooses to deploy them in a completely different fashion for Scotland, with Friday seeing him revert to the old system with five at the back. That formation was essentially created years ago to get Kieran Tierney and Andy Robertson into the same team. We should have moved beyond that now. Our squad is in a different place. We have guys like Lewis Ferguson and Ben Doak crying out for selection, two players who would make a difference in midfield and the final third. When Doak is fit again, he should be one of the first names on the team-sheet. Neither Robertson nor Tierney have shown the form to warrant being an automatic pick. Robertson looks like he could be replaced at Liverpool this summer, while Tierney's move back to Celtic from Arsenal is based more on romanticism than ambition. We should be past this constant clamouring to get them both in the team. The reality is that Scotland's squad has evolved and improved to the point where only one of them needs to play at left-back. The talent we have available further up the pitch outweighs the need to shoehorn Robertson and Tierney into the same team. That system is now to the detriment of the talent elsewhere in the squad. All in all, Scotland have four wins from their last 21 games. There have been 12 defeats in that time, 22 goals scored and 42 against. They will surely improve those numbers on Monday night against a Liechtenstein team who currently sit 205th in the world rankings. For context, this is a team who lost 3-1 to San Marino just a few months ago. Anything other than a Scotland win — and by a margin of a few goals — is unthinkable. Even that wouldn't do much to dispel the feeling that things have reached the point of no return under Clarke. Things have gone stale, the manager has been allowed to stay on too long, and the fans are rapidly losing faith. Any notion of Scotland being at the World Cup next year feels like a pipe dream.


Belfast Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Derry City coach and former Irish League goalkeeper sounded out for lucrative role in Middle East
Derry City's Head of Goalkeeping Michael Dougherty has been sounded out about a lucrative coaching role in the United Arab Emirates. The UAE Football Association are keen to recruit the former Glentoran shot-stopper to work with their international women's team ahead of the 2027 World Cup qualifying campaign.