Algeria hold heads high in Brazil

22 Jun, 2014 - 03:06 0 Views

The Sunday Mail

Despite losing their opening match, Algeria fans were still beaming with pride at their team’s performance at the World Cup. Algeria went down 2-1 to highly rated Belgium on last Tuesday, yet they at least scored a goal at the finals for the first time since 1986 and were on course for a famous upset until the Europeans struck twice in the last 20 minutes.

Aware the Arab region’s hopes rest on his team, despite his own Franco-Bosnian roots, coach Vahid Halilhodzic praised his players as “heroic” and took heart ahead of the remaining Group H games against South Korea and Russia.

“We came so close to writing a glorious passage in football history,” said Algerian lawyer Brahim Kateb (37) draped in the green-and-white national flag with a red star and crescent.

Algeria was also the sole representative for the Middle East and North Africa at the 2010 World Cup, though pride was dented by failing to score and finishing bottom of their group.

There has been an injection of fresh talent since then, with the 2014 “Desert Foxes” side constructed around French-born players drawn from the massive migrant population in Europe.

Against Belgium, the Algerians showed tactical guile and steel at the back along with a willingness to drive forward, especially in the first half before they began to tire.

They also wore their Muslim faith proudly, kneeling in prayer together near the corner flag in front of their fans to celebrate Sofiane Feghouli’s successful penalty to open the scoring.

Few in global football circles noticed when Algeria recently crept above Cote d’Ivoire to become Africa’s highest team in Fifa’s rankings despite the absence of big-name stars.

“We are not a bad team at all these days,” said Algerian scientist Amr Kadi (33), hoarse from shouting his team on.”
Algeria’s World Cup appearance has helped divert attention away from worries at home over the fragile health of president Abdelaziz Bouteflika and political turmoil in neighbouring nations.

Many fans in nearby Egypt and Tunisia believe acute unrest in their nations undermined their own qualifying campaigns. — Reuters.

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