Fahad Al-Muwallad will be Green Falcons" key man Goals could be a problem for Juan Antonio Pizzi"s side All this week we will profile the four Arab teams hoping to do well in Russia. Today we examine the credentials of Saudi Arabia. The Green Falcons are making their fifth appearance at the World Cup and their first since 2006. How they got there Saudi Arabia were pitched in Group B of Asian qualifying and were seen very much as outsiders for the two automatic spots behind Japan, Australia and UAE. But they got their campaign off to a dream start with wins in the space of a week over Thailand and Iraq, with the latter secured by two dramatic goals in the last nine minutes from Nawaf Al-Abed. They never looked back and the highlight was a 3-0 home win over the UAE. They eventually secured automatic qualification on the final day when Fahad Al-Muwallad sunk group winners Japan with a goal that will go down in Saudi Arabia folklore. Manager Juan Antonio Pizzi was handpicked in November as the man to replace Edgardo Bauza, who lasted just 69 days in charge. Ironically, Pizzi trained under Bauza at Rosario Central in 1999-2000. Pizzi arrived in the Kingdom with a wealth of experience, having coached in Argentina, Spain and Mexico and also the national team in Chile, coaching global stars such as Alexis Sanchez and Arturo Vidal. A former striker who racked up 160 goals in 364 games during a 15-year career with clubs including Barcelona, Tenerife and Valencia, Pizzi was part of Spain’s squad at the 1998 World Cup but this will be his first as a coach. Tactics Pizzi favors a 4-3-2-1 formation and this worked well against Germany. He has been playing Mohammad Al-Sahlawi as the lone striker but he is without an international goal in more than a year and the smart money is on Pizzi going with Fahad Al-Muwallad. Pizzi places lots of importance on the full backs as they are expected to provide the width, with Yasser Al-Shahrani particularly key. Abdullah Otayf will anchor the midfield and he is the linchpin of the team. Salem Al-Dawsari and Yahya Al-Shehri will provide the flair from the more advanced attacking midfield positions and are expected to chip in with goals. Key man Fahad Al-Muwallad became the first player from the Kingdom to play in La Liga when he turned out for Levante against Leganes in May — and he is fancied to build on that history-making achievement and lead the way in Russia. He will always be remembered as the player who booked World Cup qualification with that goal against Japan, but the Al-Ittihad forward has since gone on to score against Ukraine and come within a whisker of netting an equalizer against Italy. He is a crowd-pleasing talent and has all the tools (pace, power and trickery) to succeed on the biggest stage. World Cup history This will be the Green Falcons’ fifth appearance at the finals but their first since 2006. They have won only two matches at the finals — and they both came in 1994, against Morocco and Belgium, when they made it out of the group for the first and only time. Goalkeeper Mohamed Al-Deayea has made more appearances (10) than any other Saudi player at the finals while Samir Al-Jaber has played in four World Cups and scored in two, 12 years apart. Strengths The flair of Al-Dawsari, Al-Shehri and Al-Muwallad. They have been in Spain for the past six months and while they did not get the game-time everyone hoped, Pizzi feels they are fitter and stronger and will certainly not be fatigued like so many others after a long season. Saudi Arabia’s chances rest on their creative shoulders. Weaknesses Goals. The fact Pizzi named only two strikers in his squad tells you plenty about the dearth of strikers in the Kingdom. Al-Sahlawi’s record of 28 in 40 games is flattered by eight in two games against whipping boys East Timor while Muhannad Assiri scored his first international goal in seven years in February.
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