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Chinese Class - China coach tries to save job in Asian Cup

Sports / Soccer

China coach tries to save job in Asian Cup

(AP)
Updated: 2007-06-30 21:52

China coach Zhu Guanghu hopes to save his job in the Asian Cup.

In truth, it may be too late.

China has taken several batterings going into the continental
championship: a 2-0 loss to Australia, a 1-0 defeat by a weak Thailand,
and 4-1 loss to the United States against a patchwork American team.

Zhu acknowledges he's been told by Chinese soccer officials to get to the
final four - or else - in the Asian Cup, where China plays in Group C
against Malaysia, Iran and Uzbekistan.

Shadowing Zhu's failure has been the success of China's under-23 coach
Ratomir Dujkovic, who took over the Olympic team after leading Ghana to
the second round of last year's World Cup in Germany.

Dujkovic's team has been winning, and some guess the Serbian coach will
eventually take over the national team no matter what Zhu does in
Malaysia.

Local newspapers are taking sides - against Zhu and in favor to Dujkovic.

"It is clear the national team has not made any improvement and the
tactics and style of play are still a mess under Zhu," the Beijing
Evening News said.

Titan Sports offered this: "Nobody is optimistic about the national
team's prospects at the Asian Cup ... It's up to the China Football
Association to make the right decision and replace (Zhu) as soon as
possible."

Zhu has been under pressure since taking over in March 2005 for Arie
Haan, who quit after his team failed to qualify for the 2006 World Cup.
China has reached only the World Cup finals only once, but lost all three
games and failed to score in the 2002 event co-hosted by South Korea and
Japan.

Still, Zhu claims victories aren't far off.

"I have to take responsibility for the defeats," he said after losing to
the Americans. "But I believe we are always improving and it will not
take long for us to win a match."

Playmaking midfielder Shao Jiayi, who plays in Germany for Energie
Cottbus, has also tried to sound optimistic, picking China among the
tournament favorites along with Australia, South Korea, Iran and Japan.
Japan is the defending champion, beating China 3-1 in the 2004 final when
the Chinese were tournament hosts.

"Losing in pre-tournament friendlies is n also named Manchester United's
Dong Fangzhuo among five forwards.

The major absence from the team is out-of-form Li Jinyu, a top scorer
with Chinese Super League champions Shandong Luneng. He scored 26 goals
last season.

China Squad: Goalkeepers: Li Leilei, Yang Jun; Defenders: Du Wei, Sun
Xiang, Zhang Yaokun, Li Weifeng, Sun Jihai, Zhang Shuai, Ji Mingyi, Cao
Yang; Midfielders: Shao Jiayi, Li Tie, Zheng Zhi, Zhao Xuri, Wang Dong,
Zhou Haibin, Zheng Bin, Mao Jianqing; Forwards: Han Peng, Dong Fangzhuo,
Zhu Ting, Qu Bo, Wang Peng. Extras: Xin Feng, Li Yan, Xu Yunlong, Du
Zhenyu, Tao Wei, Chen Dong, Zong Lei.

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