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Friday, April 19, 2024 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Sport


Indonesia’s Komang Teguh celebrates after scoring against Australia.

Al-Mannai’s last-gasp strike sends Qatar into quarters

Qatar sealed their place in the AFC U-23 Asian Cup knockout stage in dramatic fashion with a last-gasp 2-1 victory against Jordan at the Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium on Thursday. Both teams looked set to share the spoils in their second Group A encounter until Mohamed al-Mannai headed in a free-kick deep in the 13th minute of added time, with VAR confirming the goal after a review to see Qatar become the first side to qualify from the group stage.Determined to claim their first win after opening their campaign with a stalemate against Australia, Jordan put their hosts under pressure from the start and Baker Kalbouneh had a sight of goal after just 90 seconds, only to see his low shot saved.Sief Darwish then had a shot blocked before Moustafa Mashal registered Qatar’s first effort on target on 21 minutes when he met Khaled Ali’s pass with a header but it was easily held by Ahmad Juaidi.While the Jordanians saw more of the ball, they lacked a cutting edge upfront and were made to pay in the 40th minute as they fell behind. Saifeldeen Hassan started a flowing move from left-back and after surging into the centre of the pitch, he picked out Ali on the right. The winger, in turn, released an overlapping Abdulla al-Yazidi and the right-back’s attempted cross ended up in the far corner instead to break the deadlock.Conceding the goal only served to spur on Jordan and they were rewarded for a bright start to the second half when, following a VAR review, Amer Jamous was adjudged to have been fouled in the box.Aref Haitham stepped up and coolly sent Yousef Abdullah to the right and the penalty into the bottom left corner for the equaliser in the 52nd minute.The home side tried to hit back immediately two minutes later and Juaidi had to be alert to tip over a fierce strike from distance by Hassan. A good opportunity was spurned by Haitham late on after he raced clear down the left but that miss was to be severely punished as the game moved into added time.Substitutes Jassem al-Sharshani and al-Mannai combined to devastating effect after Qatar earned a free-kick on the right, with the former’s inviting delivery met by a thumping header from his team-mate to clinch all three points as Jordan were left stunned.Teguh goal helps Indonesiastun AustraliaKomang Teguh’s first half header earned tournament debutants Indonesia a 1-0 win over Australia at Abdullah Bin Khalifa Stadium in Group A to reignite his nation’s challenge for a place in the quarter-finals.Ernando Ari Sutaryadi saved Mohamed Toure’s 25th minute penalty before Komang’s close range header 20 minutes later allowed Shin Tae-yong’s team to pick up their first win of the campaign after an opening 2-0 loss against hosts Qatar.The result leaves Australia on one point from two games having drawn with Jordan in their first match of the competition and Tony Vidmar’s side needs to win against the Qataris in the final round of group matches on Sunday to have any chance of progressing.Playing in front of a raucous band of Indonesian fans, Shin’s side threatened as early as the second minute, Jeam Kelly’s rising shot deflected wide after Rafael Struick’s pull back had found the Persik forward with time to take aim.As the half entered the final minute the Indonesians took the lead. Witan Sulaeman’s corner was nodded by Kelly to Nathan Tjoe-A-On on the edge of the area and his mishit shot was headed beyond Beach by Komang from six yards out.Ernando denied Toure again seven minutes after the interval with a stop low to his right while Jacob Italiano’s attempt was deflected wide for a corner as the Australians steadily increased the pressure. Toure thumped his shot over the bar from the edge of the area with 15 minutes remaining and Vidmar introduced FIFA World Cup forward Garang Kuol in a late effort to find a way through, but the Indonesians held on.

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Damage in Israeli air base after Iran attack

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Red Bull Racing's Dutch driver Max Verstappen signs an autograph at the Shanghai International circuit ahead of the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai on Thursday. (AFP)

Hamilton doesn't need 'vindicating' over Ferrari switch

Max Verstappen again publicly committed his long-term future to Red Bull on Thursday, saying that as long as he was happy there was “no reason to leave”.There has been speculation the triple world champion could move to Mercedes to replace Ferrari-bound Lewis Hamilton next year after Red Bull team principal Christian Horner was accused of inappropriate conduct towards a woman colleague.Horner was cleared of any wrongdoing ahead of the season-opener in Bahrain but the off-track scandal rumbled on for weeks. The Dutchman Verstappen is signed with Red Bull until 2028 but suggested earlier in the season that he would consider leaving if the team parted company with long-time mentor Helmut Marko.Verstappen’s father Jos has claimed that Red Bull faced being “torn apart” if Horner remained in position. However, the paddock chatter in Shanghai this week has been firmly back on racing, something that pleased Verstappen.“After 2021 I signed a long deal with the team. The only thing I said from the beginning was that I wanted to have a quiet, peaceful environment,” Verstappen told reporters.“Lately we have been talking about the car, so I am very happy about that already.“That’s also how it should be. And of course as long as I am happy with the team, there has never been a reason to leave.”Verstappen is chasing a fourth victory in five races in 2024 but admitted the weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix will be an unknown quantity. The Formula One circus is back at the Shanghai International Circuit for the first time in five years with a sprint race tomorrow.“With the new cars of course there will be a little bit of the unknown,” said Verstappen. “Of course it is the same for everyone.”There is only one practice session on Friday before sprint qualifying, so Verstappen said it was important for the team to get the set-up nailed early. “We need to have a good FP1 where we don’t have to fine-tune too much on the car. That will really help,” he said.“Time will tell, I’m not too worried about it.”Hamilton doesn’t need ‘vindicating’ over Ferrari switchSeven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton said on Thursday he was shutting out the noise surrounding his move to Ferrari next year, saying he didn’t need “vindicating” that it was right for him.The Formula One veteran, 39, shocked Formula One in February when he said he would leave Mercedes at the end of 2024 after 12 years to join the Italian team.Hamilton was asked on Thursday ahead of this weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix if Ferrari’s strong start to the season – they have been consistently closest to the dominant Red Bulls – meant the decision to switch had been justified.“I don’t feel like I need my decision vindicating,” Hamilton told reporters.“I know what was right for me, and that hasn’t changed since the moment that I made the decision. There’s not been a moment where I questioned it. And I’m not swayed by other people’s comments.”Hamilton said he had to endure criticism before when he left McLaren to join Mercedes in 2012.“Even today, there’s people continuing to talk shit and it will continue on for the rest of the year,” he said.

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