2013 SAFF Championship final

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2013 SAFF Championship Final
Hamid Karimi holding the SAFF Title.
Event2013 SAFF Championship
Date11 September 2013
VenueDasarath Rangasala, Kathmandu
Man of the MatchMansur Faqiryar (Afghanistan)
RefereeTayeb Hasan Shamsuzzaman (Bangladesh)
Attendance6,500+
2011
2015

The 2013 SAFF Championship Final was the final match of the 2013 SAFF Championship which took place in Nepal on Wednesday, September 11, 2013, and was officiated by Tayeb Hasan Shamsuzzaman of Bangladesh. It was the 10th installment of the tournament since its inception in 1993.[1]

This final was the first time a final was repeated in the SAFF Championship and such this was a repeat final of the 2011 SAFF Championship in which India thrashed Afghanistan 4–0 in India.[2] However, in this final Afghanistan won with goals coming from Mustafa Azadzoy and Sandjar Ahmadi in the 9th and 62nd minute respectively. This would be Afghanistan's first SAFF Championship win after losing in the 2011 SAFF Championship in the final to India.[3]

Road to the final

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India entered the 2013 SAFF Championship as the reigning champion after defeating Afghanistan in the 2011 SAFF Championship. Afghanistan's best record previous was runners-up in the 2011 SAFF Championship.[4]

To the final, India struggled through and scraped by the group stage through head-to-edge edging out Pakistan from an own-goal by Samar Ishaq in a 1–0 win to the Indians. Later in the semi-finals, against Maldives, it took India until the 86th minute when Arnab Mondal opened the scoring to leave it a 1–0 win to proceed to the final.

Afghanistan, on the other hand, breezed by both Sri Lanka and Bhutan in the group stage with comfortable wins and a 0–0 stalemate with Maldives. To proceed to the final, Afghanistan won convincingly in a 1–0 win against the hosts Nepal with the lone goal coming from Sandjar Ahmadi in the 11th minute.

India entered the tournament as favorites to win but as matches progressed, many thought otherwise. Afghanistan entered the final as clear favorites to win, before the match, due to their journey and having their highest FIFA ranking, at the time, of 139. India, however, barely scraped by to the final and had a FIFA ranking of 145.

Afghanistan Round India
Opponent Result Group stage Opponent Result
 Bhutan 3–0 Match 1  Pakistan 1–0
 Sri Lanka 3–1 Match 2  Bangladesh 1–1
 Maldives 0–0 Match 3    Nepal 1–2

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Maldives 3 2 1 0 18 2 +16 7
 Afghanistan 3 2 1 0 6 1 +5 7
 Sri Lanka 3 1 0 2 6 15 −9 3
 Bhutan 3 0 0 3 4 16 −12 0
Source: RSSSF
Final Standings

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
   Nepal 3 2 1 0 5 2 +3 7
 India 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 4
 Pakistan 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 4
 Bangladesh 3 0 1 2 2 5 −3 1
Source: RSSSF
Opponent Result Knockout stage Opponent Result
   Nepal 1–0 Semi-finals  Maldives 1–0

Squads

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During the tournament, Afghanistan had the most diverse squad. While most other nations had almost all players playing for their domestic league, Afghanistan had five players playing outside of Asia with four in Europe and the rest in either India's I-League or its domestic league the Afghan Premier League. The average age of the Lions of Khorasan was 26 years of age with goalkeeper Hamidullah Yousafzai the oldest at 31 and youngest being Sidiq Walizada at 21.

India had all its players playing in its domestic I-League with four players being free agents. The average age of the Blue Tigers was 26 years of age, as well, with goalkeeper Sandip Nandy the oldest at 38 and Sandesh Jhingan the youngest at 20.

Match

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Officials

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Tayeb Shamsuzzaman of the Bangladesh was appointed the referee of the final and was assisted by Pakistani Moaid Al Sayeg and Issa Mahmoud Ahmad Al Amawi of Jordan. The fourth official was Adham Makhadmeh, also from Jordan.

Shamsuzzaman was listed as a FIFA referee in 1999. Since then, he had experience as a referee in the World Cup Qualifiers (AFC), AFC Cup, AFC Champions League, WAFF Championship and AFF Suzuki Cup.

Prior to the final, he refereed for five other games in the 2013 SAFF Championship. He was referee in Afghanistan-Bhutan and Bhutan-Maldives matches in Group A before moving to the Group B match India-Nepal. Then finishing the group stage by being the referee for Afghanistan-Maldives and the semi-final of Maldives-India.

In the games that Shamsuzzaman was the referee, he showed no more than two yellow cards in every game with that being Bhutan-Maldives and Afghanistan-Maldives. He gave the red card in the group-stage match between Bhutan national football team and Maldives national football team and giving the Bhutan goalkeeper Leki Dukpa a red card for tripping Ali Ashfaq just outside the penalty box after rushing to a one-on-one.

Details

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Afghanistan 2–0 India
Azadzoy 9'
Ahmadi 62'
Report
Afghanistan
India
GK 1 Mansur Faqiryar Yellow card 86'
DF 27 Mujtaba Faiz
DF 3 Haroon Fakhruddin (c)
DF 14 Farzad Ghulam
DF 6 Mohammad Rafi
CM 7 Mustafa Azadzoy
CM 17 Mohammad Marouf downward-facing red arrow 71'
CW 25 Mustafa Hadid
FW 9 Yusef Mashriqi Yellow card 41' downward-facing red arrow 90+2'
FW 10 Balal Arezou
FW 11 Sandjar Ahmadi downward-facing red arrow 76'
Substitutions:
MF 12 Hashmatullah Barakzai upward-facing green arrow 71'
FW 18 Ahmad Arash Hatifi upward-facing green arrow 76'
FW 30 Waheed Nadeem Yellow card 90+5' upward-facing green arrow 90+2'
Manager:
Mohammad Yousef Kargar
GK 1 Subrata Pal
CB 22 Syed Rahim Nabi
CB 4 Nirmal Chettri downward-facing red arrow 86'
CB 5 Arnab Mondal Yellow card 58'
CM 19 Gouramangi Singh (c)
CM 7 Mehtab Hossain
CM 14 Arata Izumi
CM 6 Lenny Rodrigues
CW 8 Francis Fernandes
FW 10 Jeje Lalpekhlua downward-facing red arrow 60'
FW 23 Robin Singh
Substitutions:
FW 11 Sunil Chhetri upward-facing green arrow 60'
DF 28 Dawson Fernandes upward-facing green arrow 86'
Manager:
Netherlands Wim Koevermans
Man of the Match:
Mansur Faqiryar (Afghanistan)

Assistant referees:
Moaid Al Sayeg (Pakistan)
Issa Mahmoud Ahmad Al Amawi (Jordan)
Fourth official:
Adham Makhadmeh (Jordan)

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Eight named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

References

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  1. ^ "How Afghanistan beat India to win 2013 SAFF Championships, their first international title". Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  2. ^ "SAFF Championship 2013: Team of the tournament". Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  3. ^ "SAFF Championship 2013". SAFF Championship. Archived from the original on 7 January 2015. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  4. ^ "SAFF Championship: Why India's overwhelming domination is underproductive". Retrieved 20 May 2023.

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