World Cup within Reach as Asian Qualifying for 2026 Ramps Up

Son Heung-min of Tottenham Hotspur reacts after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur in Newcastle, Britain, 01 September 2024. (EPA)
Son Heung-min of Tottenham Hotspur reacts after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur in Newcastle, Britain, 01 September 2024. (EPA)
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World Cup within Reach as Asian Qualifying for 2026 Ramps Up

Son Heung-min of Tottenham Hotspur reacts after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur in Newcastle, Britain, 01 September 2024. (EPA)
Son Heung-min of Tottenham Hotspur reacts after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur in Newcastle, Britain, 01 September 2024. (EPA)

Son Heung-min's South Korea face Palestine while Japan host old rivals China when the third round of Asian qualifying kicks off on Thursday with the 2026 World Cup tantalizingly close.

The expanded 48-team World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico is looming into view.

The 18 remaining sides in Asia are divided into three groups of six and will play home and away fixtures, with the top two from each pool guaranteed a place at the World Cup.

South Korea will aim to put a turbulent year on and off the pitch behind them with a fast start against the Palestinians in Seoul in Group B.

Iraq, Oman, Kuwait and Asian Cup runners-up Jordan are the other sides in the group.

The Koreans are on their fourth coach of the year in the form of Hong Myung-bo, following the sacking of Jurgen Klinsmann in February and spells for two different caretaker managers.

Skipper Son will undoubtedly be the Koreans' biggest threat but Hong is also looking to the future, giving a first call-up to exciting attacker Yang Min-hyeok.

The 18-year-old will join Son at Premier League Spurs in January.

"We won't have much time to practice before these qualifying matches," said Hong, who first coached South Korea at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, where they went out in the group phase.

"For us to take the next step, we'll have to work even harder, and it's important to keep developing young talent in order to be more competitive at the World Cup."

While the Koreans will expect to reach the World Cup for the 12th time, Palestine are making their debut at this stage of qualifying, despite the conflict in Gaza.

Under their Tunisian coach Makram Daboub, Palestine reached the knockout rounds of the Asian Cup for the first time at the start of this year.

Daboub's side went down to Qatar in the last 16 and the hosts went on to beat Jordan in the final to retain their continental crown.

Qatar, the 2022 World Cup hosts, are in Group A and start the latest qualifying round home to the United Arab Emirates on Thursday.

Qatar and Iran will be favorites to qualify from a group that also includes Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and North Korea.

- Mitoma threat -

Group C looks much harder to call.

In the first round of matches in that group, Japan play China while Australia host Bahrain. Ambitious Saudi Arabia, under the Italian coach Roberto Mancini, welcome Indonesia to Jeddah.

Japan and Australia both sailed through the second qualifying round with maximum points and without conceding a goal.

Japan are the highest-ranked team in Asia at 18 in the world and under coach Hajime Moriyasu they beat Spain and Germany at the 2022 World Cup, before going out in the last 16 to Croatia on penalties.

In Brighton winger Kaoru Mitoma, Japan have a player who looks back to his scintillating best and returns to the squad after a frustrating few months hindered by injury.

In contrast, China squeezed into the third qualifying round thanks to a superior head-to-head record over Thailand and have only reached the World Cup once, in 2002.

Their Croatian coach Branko Ivankovic warned that heavily fancied Japan will have a fight on their hands when the sides meet in Saitama.

"We're not going to go into any game with our hands up," he said.

The third qualifying round wraps up in June.

The sides that finish third and fourth in each group are still in the hunt for the 2026 World Cup and will go through to the fourth qualifying round.

South Korea's run to the semi-finals of the 2002 World Cup, which they co-hosted with Japan, remains the best performance of an Asian team in the history of the competition.



Emiliano Martínez: ‘Show-off? I Just Want to Win the Game'

Emiliano Martínez wants to win a trophy with Aston Villa and is striving to be the best goalkeeper in the world. Photograph: Matt Impey/Shutterstock via The Guardian Sport
Emiliano Martínez wants to win a trophy with Aston Villa and is striving to be the best goalkeeper in the world. Photograph: Matt Impey/Shutterstock via The Guardian Sport
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Emiliano Martínez: ‘Show-off? I Just Want to Win the Game'

Emiliano Martínez wants to win a trophy with Aston Villa and is striving to be the best goalkeeper in the world. Photograph: Matt Impey/Shutterstock via The Guardian Sport
Emiliano Martínez wants to win a trophy with Aston Villa and is striving to be the best goalkeeper in the world. Photograph: Matt Impey/Shutterstock via The Guardian Sport

Owing to superstition, before the season started Emiliano Martínez traded his No 1 shirt for the No 23. The number – a nod to the day his six-year-old son, Santi, was born – has proved a good omen, Martínez says, given he has won four trophies with Argentina, including a second Copa América this summer, wearing it.

Another superstition has been in play since his wife, Mandinha, gave him a pair of cuddly toy animals before the World Cup; Santi’s penguin and the giraffe of their three-year-old daughter, Ava, to carry as mascots in the dressing room, alongside a photo of his children. “I keep them with me everywhere I go,” says Martínez, whose shin pads are covered in images of his family and moments from his career. “It gives me a little bit of motivation before every game. She [Mandinha] said: ‘You are going to bring the golden cup home.’ I was 40 days away from the family, and I did it.”
For a split-second, the thought of Martínez checking he has a couple of cuddly toys in tow as part of his match-day ritual jars with his on-pitch persona, his image as – how else to say this? – the master of shithousery, often making himself public enemy No 1 in the process. At least that is the preconception many have of him. Martínez’s greatest moment was surely his sprawling save in the final seconds of extra time to deny Randal Kolo Muani and France victory in the 2022 World Cup final in Qatar. Then came his stop in the penalty shootout to thwart Kingsley Coman and the mind games to distract Aurélien Tchouaméni, who subsequently missed.

Martínez insists any dark arts are not preordained. “I think it’s natural,” he says. “I don’t think about it, I just do it. It’s in the moment. It’s something that can happen, the adrenaline kicks in and sometimes you just can’t control it. I don’t look for it, it just comes. Sometimes when you see me from the outside, you think: ‘He looks a show-off.’ But no, I’m just a normal guy, a family man. But when it is about winning I try everything I can to win the game.”

Does Martínez feel misunderstood? “Yeah, exactly ... [people who think of me being] the show-off are probably the team who doesn’t know me. When you ask all of my teammates, those in the national team, I do everything for my team, I try to help everyone in the club. The only thing that I want is the best for my club and country. That is all that I care about.”

In other words, the 31-year‑old unapologetically wants to win at all costs, though it is hard to keep a straight face when he insists he never intends to irk supporters. Jamie Vardy, who goaded Tottenham fans on Monday by pointing to the Premier League crest on his shirt, certainly enjoys a little bit of give-and-take with those in the stands. “Everyone has their own things,” Martínez says. “I never try to wind up fans, I never do that. I just try to slow things down when the game is against us; I try to kick the ball as hard as I can to the other side.

“But if you keep yourself steady and you don’t insult anyone, any religion ... I think you can do whatever you want. I don’t swear, I don’t insult anyone. I just try to help my team – that’s all. I always respect the players. I just want to win the game. I don’t cross a line, I never do.”

After making two saves in a Copa América shootout win against Ecuador in July, Martínez again celebrated by exhibiting his snaking hips. It was a similar story in Lille, in Aston Villa’s Europa Conference League quarter-final, in which he was booked twice, the second for gamesmanship during a shootout win but survived a red card owing to the small print in the Uefa rulebook. “I thought I was off,” Martínez admits, raising a smile. “I think everyone in football thought that. I was actually asking the ballboy: ‘Can you please give me the ball?’ Then I was booked for that. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. So I was lucky. Because of that I missed the semi-final at home [to Olympiakos] in front of the fans, so after all that it was disappointing.”

As Martínez talks, speaking after announcing his new contract until 2029 in front of his family and 400 season-ticket holders at Villa’s revamped club shop, his son, wearing a replica kit, arches his back into him and every now and then Ava taps him with a pair of goalie gloves. “Daddy, daddy,” she says, as Martínez discusses the merits of his longtime psychologist, David Priestley, whom he first worked with at Arsenal, Villa’s opponents on Saturday. “He brings me down when I’m too high, he lifts me when I’m too low, and I think that is someone every player needs,” says Martínez, who turns 32 next month. “It is an investment, time in the week that I have to work with him. If you see my performances, I’m never 10 [out of 10], but I’m never four. I’m trying to always be a seven.”

Villa, whose supporters chant about Martínez being the world’s best goalkeeper, would dispute those ratings of his performances. A few minutes earlier, Ramón Rodríguez Verdejo, better known as Monchi, Villa’s highly regarded president of football operations who was a goalkeeper for Sevilla in his playing days, insisted Martínez should be spoken of in the same breath as legends such as Lev Yashin, Gianluigi Buffon, Dino Zoff and Ubaldo Fillol, a World Cup winner with Argentina in 1978. Martínez, who won his third golden glove with Argentina this summer, was awarded the Yashin Trophy at the Ballon d’Or ceremony in Paris last year.
Martínez’s point-blank save to deny Leandro Trossard in a striking victory at Arsenal towards the end of last season sticks in the memory before the clubs meet again at Villa Park. Villa did the double over Arsenal last season, severely denting their opponents’ title hopes. Martínez feels “it is just another game” against his former club and “there is no way we can challenge for the title”, but is confident Villa can shock in Europe this season. “Especially with the manager we have got,” he says of Unai Emery. “He was in the semi‑final of the Champions League with Villarreal [in 2021-22]. He has won four Europa Leagues ... for Villa, it being our first time in the Champions League, it is going to be new for us, but when you have a manager and players like we have you can go all of the way.”

Martínez exerts self-confidence but is also self-critical. “Last season I wasn’t happy with myself with nine clean sheets [in the league]. Javi [García, Villa’s goalkeeping coach] showed me the stats ... I prevented goals, did more sweeping, took more crosses, but I want to the win the golden glove at Villa.

“I have changed a lot since Unai came here. Javi and Unai made me more like a centre‑back player, covering defence, sweeping. We conceded a lot of goals [last season]. If we can reduce the amount of goals we are conceding, I think we have got more chance of being in the top four and winning a trophy, something that has been missing.”

Martínez worked with “mad man” García at Arsenal under Emery and could have reunited with the pair at Villarreal in the summer of 2020, but picked Villa. While at Arsenal he was loaned to Oxford in League Two and Sheffield Wednesday, Rotherham, Wolves and Reading in the Championship, as well as Getafe in La Liga. He impressed at Arsenal but was unable to establish himself as the first-choice goalkeeper under Mikel Arteta. “I play more games now, so I’m more experienced. I’m a dad,” he says. “When I was at Arsenal I was a young lad, learning the language, learning the English life. I am a completely different person now.”

As for those superstitions, they do not stop at one or two. “Aaah, I’ve got loads,” Martínez says. “I keep my same routine: I make sure I do pilates, yoga two days before, I pray before the games, have psychologist meetings.” His shirt‑number swap is already paying off, he says, alluding to Villa’s opening-day victory at West Ham, his first there since joining the club for £20m.

Martínez’s final two appearances for Arsenal both came at Wembley, an FA Cup win over Chelsea followed by a Community Shield shootout triumph over Liverpool, and now he is targeting silverware with Villa. “I’m speaking loudly in training saying: ‘We need to win a trophy, we need to at least play a final,’” Martínez says. “This club and these fans deserve a cup run. I love it here, obviously, but I wouldn’t stay at a club where I don’t see progress. Because I want to achieve things, I want to win things, I want to keep trying to be the best goalie in the world if I can.”

-The Guardian Sport