Dour attacking football offers little to dispel fears UAE are falling away from Asia's giants

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  • Even in the white-hot arena of competitive sport, there are ‘good’ and ‘bad’ losses.

    For the UAE and their conservative new coach Alberto Zaccheroni, a moribund penalty defeat to outsiders Oman in the Gulf Cup final is to be banded firmly in the latter category. The oppressive negatively surrounding the Whites reached its nadir during another 120 scoreless minutes in Kuwait City, being outplayed by an uncelebrated nation who chose not to select their only star – veteran Al Hilal goalkeeper Ali Al Habsi.

    Less than three months into his tenure, the pressure is on for the ex-AC Milan, Juventus and Japan tactician to show he is the man to lead the Whites to glory at January 2019’s Asian Cup. If this stodgy and strangulated approach is the blueprint moving forward, a decision has been made that success can only be earned in mind-numbing fashion when Asia’s heavyweight descend on the Emirates.

    Al Ain creator Omar Abdulrahman is the obvious villain from a harrowing showpiece in which flimsy efforts from 12 yards during the 90th minute and subsequent shootout denied his side unmerited victory. Questions about the gifted Amoory’s character will now only increase in volume at a time in which he has only six months left on his contract and a move abroad should be near.

    Yet, a third triumph in the regional tournament would not have been warranted. Neither on the evidence of last night or in a tournament at large which has included a perfect five clean sheets but no goals from open play.

    The Whites’ draining results could be mistaken for digital code; 1-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0. In more brutal terms, a side containing several of Asia’s most-celebrated players scored once in roughly 510 minutes of action – even this coming from 12 yards by Al Jazira striker Ali Mabkhout in the opening 1-0 victory against Oman in Group A.

    This analogue output is troubling when the talent at hand is considered. Abdulrahman and – still at the time of writing – Jazira forward Ahmed Khalil are recent AFC Players of the Year, while Mabkhout raced to top-scorer honours during the preceding 2014 edition and 2015’s Asian Cup.

    That all three came into the competition with pre-existing injury problems is mitigation. So is the fact electric winger Ismail Al Hammadi was only fit enough to be an impact substitute following a serious knee problem of his own.

    Oman's player Ahmed Mubarak holds the trophy next to his teammates after his team won the Gulf Cup of Nations 2017 final football match between Oman and the UAE at the Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad Stadium in Kuwait City on January 5, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / GIUSEPPE CACACE (Photo credit should read GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP/Getty Images)

    Oman celebreate their cup success.

    The timing of these blows was unfortunate for Zaccheroni, as was the felling of dynamic Jazira full-back Mohammed Fawzi who is a huge fillip to his 3-4-3 formation.

    Yet, some of the choices on show in Kuwait in the past few weeks must have caused concern to a UAE Football Association which saw three coaches at the helm in a tumultuous 2017.

    Zaccheroni singularly failed to fill the gap left by yet another injury to midfield conductor, Amer Abdulrahman. In his absence, there were spells – repeated for much of last night’s second half – in which an unnecessary three defensive midfielders were on the pitch.

    It was also alarming to see his squad not include burgeoning Jazira playmaker Khalfan Mubarak as an invigorating option off the substitutes’ bench.

    None of this is a surprise. Zaccheroni’s dour reputation has been earned over decades.

    The UAE FA have entered into a Faustian bargain with the 64-year-old. Success will come with severe boredom.

    This is clearly a cost they are willing to pay.

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