Fabio Capello Goalkeepers: Igor Akinfeev Joins Robert Green in Latest World Cup Goalkeeping Howler (+Video)

Fabio Capello simply has no luck with his goalkeepers.
Fabio Capello Goalkeepers: Igor Akinfeev Joins Robert Green in Latest World Cup Goalkeeping Howler (+Video)
Russia's goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev fails to save the 0-1 goal during the Group H football match between Russia and South Korea in the Pantanal Arena in Cuiaba during the 2014 FIFA World Cup on June 17, 2014. (KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/Getty Images)
6/17/2014
Updated:
6/17/2014

Fabio Capello simply has no luck with his goalkeepers.

In Russia’s opening World Cup 2014 match against South Korea, Russian ‘keeper Igor Akinfeev let Lee Keun-Ho’s long range effort slip out of his grasps and into the back of the net.

 

Yet Akinfeev is not the first of coach Fabio Capello’s goalies to let in a howler.

Back in World Cup 2010, when Capello was England’s coach, his first choice ‘keeper Robert Green also fumbled and let in a Clint Dempsey long-range shot.

Coincidentally, both of Capello’s 2010 and 2014 World Cup matches ended in 1-1 draws.

Deja vu, anyone?

Check out an AP article on Russia and South Korea.

Russia, South Korea Strangers in World Cup Opener

CUIABA, Brazil (AP) — Most players at the World Cup need no introduction to a football audience.

When South Korea plays Russia on Tuesday, however, some introductions may be in order — between the teams themselves.

“I don’t know the (Russian) names themselves,” South Korea captain Koo Ja-cheol said. “But I know their numbers.”

Koo was reacting to comments by Russia coach Fabio Capello, who said of the South Koreans earlier Monday that “it’s important not to know their names but the characteristics of the players.”

South Korea coach Hong Myung-bo was far from insulted by Capello, a man he described as a “world-famous coach I respect very much.”

In fact, he understood completely.

“It’s not easy for names of Korean players to be memorized,” Hong said. “They are difficult names.”

If anyone is playing like strangers at the moment, it’s South Korea’s defenders.

In the warm-up games for the World Cup, the South Koreans lost 1-0 at home to Tunisia — and the margin of defeat could have been much worse — before being thrashed 4-0 by Ghana in Miami last week.

Hong is one of the country’s greatest ever defenders, captaining the 2002 side to the semifinals of the World Cup on home soil, so he’s worried about what he is seeing.

“It seems like there are a lot of goals scored in the first half, since our players are young,” he said. “We are mainly focusing on concentration.”

Defending from set pieces has long been a weakness for South Korea and it is an area Russia will look to exploit.

“We had a lot of video meetings, looked at how they play, and of course they are a lot taller than we are. So it’s something we are taking into consideration,” said Koo, South Korea’s youngest captain at age 25.

“I think the (build-up) has not been easy. We have experienced difficulties. But we are confident we know what to do in the World Cup.”

The teams met in a friendly in November in Dubai, with the Russians winning 2-1.

Algeria and Belgium are the other teams in Group H.

 

 

 

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.