Reuters
Doha


Poland talisman Robert Lewandowski said he is preparing for the upcoming World Cup in Qatar as if it could be his last, but the 34-year-old added that he would still be physically fit to play at the next edition in 2026.
Poland’s record goal scorer Lewandowski has been in terrific form for his La Liga club Barcelona this season, having scored 18 times in 19 games across all competitions.
Poland are in Group C at the World Cup and begin their campaign against Mexico on Tuesday. They also face Argentina and Saudi Arabia.
“Is this my last World Cup? I don’t know,” Lewandowski told reporters in Doha yesterday.
“I’m preparing as if it could be my last World Cup, but I’m not saying yes, I’m not saying no. I realise that I will still be able to play in four years’ time.”
Lewandowski said that opponents are likely to focus on marking him in attack during games - a move which Poland will try to take advantage of.
“I believe the other players will take advantage of the fact that sometimes I can go down the side taking two players and the space will free up elsewhere,” he explained.
Asked about playing in the high temperatures in Qatar, Lewandowski said: “I’ve been to Doha many times before, I knew what to expect. It’s easier and more pleasant for me when I came here.
“In Sochi (at the 2018 World Cup) it was different, strange, not really comfortable. I don’t feel that here.”
Poland, who Lewandowski said are not favourites in their group, won 1-0 against Chile in Warsaw in a warm-up friendly on Wednesday before making the trip to Doha. Head coach Czeslaw Michniewicz opted to leave out some of his key players including goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny, playmaker Piotr Zielinski and Lewandowski for that game.
“Those who played in the match against Chile will be considered for Mexico,” Michniewicz said.
“The decision will be made on Tuesday, but that doesn’t mean that if someone played 90 minutes against Chile they won’t play against Mexico.”
Meanwhile Lewandowski said yesterday that Poland’s World Cup squad had been left in shock earlier this week after the missile strike in his homeland that left two people dead. A missile hit the Polish village of Przewodow near the Ukrainian border on Tuesday, killing two people.
Lewandowski and his teammates were in Warsaw at the time of the attack preparing for a friendly the next day against Chile ahead of the Qatar extravaganza.
“It was not an easy moment, everyone was waiting for explanations, for some information,” said the Barcelona forward, speaking from Poland’s training base in Doha. “Unfortunately it hit people who died. This is definitely a very difficult situation.”
Poland expect goal-machine Lewandowski, who has scored 76 goals in 134 matches for the national team, to be a marked man in Doha but the striker says this could work to the team’s advantage.
“I’m ready for opponents to be more focused on me. In the game defenders will stick to me,” said Lewandowski.
“Other players will use the fact that I go to the side and take two players with me. There will be more free space for them to enter.” He added: “This might also be our strength, to be able to use those free areas on the pitch created by opponents being too focused on me.”
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