Advertisement
Advertisement
2018 Fifa World Cup Asian qualifying
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
UAE goalkeeper Khalid Eisa saved the shot from Japan forward Takuma Asano. Photo: AFP

They have a point: Japan lodge protest over disallowed goal in World Cup qualifier defeat by United Arab Emirates

TV replays showed Takuma Asano’s shot crossed the line in before being clawed away by goalkeeper Khalid Eisa, but the goal was missed by Qatari referee Abdulrahman Al Jassim

Japan have lodged a formal protest over a controversially disallowed goal which consigned them to a 2-1 World Cup qualifying defeat to United Arab Emirates, an official said on Friday.

TV replays showed Takuma Asano’s shot crossed the line before being clawed away by goalkeeper Khalid Eisa, but the goal was missed by Qatari referee Abdulrahman Al Jassim.

It turned out to be pivotal for Japan, who were trailing 2-1 at the time and stood to escape with a draw rather than a damaging home defeat.

“We filed a protest... immediately after the game, with a claim that the shot should have been judged as a goal,” Japan Football Association spokesman Futoshi Nagamatsu said.

Watch: Was it a goal?

The Asian Football Confederation confirmed it had received a complaint which was also sent to Fifa, which oversees World Cup qualifiers. There was no immediate comment from the global body.

Japan’s coach Vahid Halilhodzic was left fuming about the Qatari referee, calling him “unacceptable”, while Keisuke Honda wondered why there was no extra official watching the goal line.

Zheng Zhi own goal spells doom for spirited China despite fightback in World Cup qualifier

“I was right at the side of the goal, so I know it was in,” the AC Milan forward said.

“I question why they did not have an [extra] referee for the final round of qualifying, in which the levels of competition are high.”

Watch: The full highlights from Japan v UAE

Competitions organised by European body Uefa have extra referees watching the goal, and World Cups and European Championships also employ goal line technology.

Japanese internet-users slammed referee Al Jassim on social media, while some also praised the calm reaction of Asano.

Japan need to finish in the top two of the six team group B, which concludes next year, to seal an automatic spot at the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Japan lodge protest over disallowed Asano goal
Post