Azkals fall short vs China in resumption of Asian Qualifiers campaign


China's Wu Lei (L) and Philipines' Bernd Schipmann (R) fight for the ball during the Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification football match between between China and Philippines at the Sharjah Football Stadium in the Sharjah in the UAE on June 7, 2021. (Photo by Karim SAHIB / AFP)

The Philippine Azkals’ return from a 19-month absence ended with a 2-0 loss to China in the resumption of their World Cup/Asian Cup Qualifiers campaign Monday, June 7 (early Tuesday, June 8 Manila time) in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.

A penalty conceded by goalkeeper Bernd Schipmann set up a Lu Wei opener in the 56th before Wu Xinghan doubled the lead for the Chinese booters in the 65th to crush the Azkals’ hopes of at least equaling the outcome of their previous meeting less than two years ago in Bacolod City.

Instead, China gained a big cushion in the race for second spot in Group A with 13 points, six clear of the Philippines which remains in third place but all but assured of missing out a spot in the third round of the World Cup Qualifiers.

The Azkals play Guam on Friday, June 11 and Maldives on Tuesday, June 15, needing to gain all three points in both games to seal their spot in the third round of the Asian Cup Qualifiers.

Coach Scott Cooper’s side did put up a solid showing despite the short training camp in Doha, the withdrawal of several players for various reasons and the change of venue from Suzhou, China to Sharjah that led to further delays in the joint qualifiers.

But it was the Azkals who gave themselves a chance to strike first despite the loss of debuting Michael Kempter and veteran Kenshiro Daniels to injuries in the first 20 minutes.

Mark Hartmann had a pair of opportunities to find the back of the net in the first half, including a header that was batted away by Chinese keeper Yan Junling.

One debutant earned plaudits from those who witnessed the match as defender Jefferson Tabinas had a valuable showing at the back to prevent China from making clear chances at a goal.

But the scoreline would change in the 56th when Schipmann clipped Lu Wei as he was going for the ball inside the box, prompting South Korean referee Hee Gon Kim to point at the spot.

Lu Wei, who plays club football for Spanish second division side Espanyol, calmly converted the penalty to put China ahead.

China got the second goal nine minutes later when Tang Miao sent a tight cross to an unmarked Wu for a left-footed volley from close range.