
JEDDAH - While there have been some raised eyebrows around Asia over the format of a competition that allows the defending champions a bye into the quarter-finals, the fact that Al Ittihad are worthy winners of the AFC Champions League 2005 is not up for debate.
The team from Jeddah who beat Al Ain 5-3 on aggregate in the final on Saturday night, has scored 20 goals in six matches, and has played a style of attacking football that has conquered all before it, inclduing, we should add, a team from Korea, a country whose footballers are meant to be more tactically and technically gifted than those in west Asia. Busan I'Park 7-0 aggegrate defeat to Al Ittihad will take a long time to fade from the memories of all those who hold Korean football dear.
Before desposing of Ian Porterfield's side, Al Ittihad opened their campaign slowly (by later standards) with a 1-1 draw against a Shandong Luneng side boasting a 100 per cent record in the Group Stage. If the Saudis, whose domestic seasonm had yet to start at that stage, were lacking match sharpness, it wasn't long before the Jeddah juggernaut was in cruise control.
With the tie tentatively poised, Shandong traveled to Jeddah still harbouring hopes of becoming the first Chinese side to win continental honours since Liaoning won the 1989 Asian Club Championship.
Those hope were doused in emphatic fashion as Al Ittihad outlined their championship credentials with a master class of attacking football, running out 7-2 winners on the night and progressing with an impressive 8-3 aggregate win.
Al Ittihad’s reward for their impressive defeat of the 2004 China FA Cup winners was another trip out East but this time to Korea Republic where Busan, quarter-final conquerors of Al Sadd, awaited.
Korea has been happy hunting ground for Al Ittihad in the past, never more evident than when they overturned a 3-1 first leg defeat in Jeddah to defeat Seongnam 5-0 away to win the 2004 AFC Champions League.
But surely lightning couldn’t strike twice. Surely not against a Busan I’Park side whose record in the tournament had, thus far, had been nothing short of perfect: eight wins in eight games.
It was a statistic that not only suggested the Korean FA Cup holders were marginal favourites to advance to the final, it was also the longest winning run in the competition’s short history, eclipsing Pakhtakor’s six-match streak in the inaugural tournament.
But after a goalless first half, no less than five Al Ittihad players found the target as a side that had previously scored 30 times and conceded just one in the past eight games was made to look ordinary by the defending champions.
A perfunctory 2-0 win in the return fixture in Jeddah took Al Ittihad’s tally to 15 goals in four games as the Saudi giants booked their date with Al Ain, with a place at the FIFA Club World Championship at stake.
Al Ittihad's Road to AFC Champions League Glory
Final (Al Ittihad win 5-3 on aggregate)
05/11 - 2nd Leg
Al Ittihad 4 (Kallon 2, Noor 33, Job 56, Dokhi 68)
Al Ain 2 (Ahmed 55, Tejada 90 )
26/10 - 1st Leg
Al Ain 1 (Msarri 52)
Al Ittihad 1 (Kallon 86)
Semi-final (Al Ittihad win 7-0 on aggregate)
12/10 - 2nd Leg
Al Ittihad 2 (Mohamed Kallon 18, 58)
Busan I’Park 0
28/09 - 1st Leg
Busan I’Park 0
Al Ittihad 5 (Marzouk Al Otaibi 55, Mohamed Kallon 62, Tcheco 65, Saud Al Khariri 86, Hamzah Idris 89)
Quarter-final (Al Ittihad won 8-3 on aggregate)
21/09 - 2nd Leg
Al Ittihad 7 (Osama Al Harbi 19, Tcheco 34, Ibrahim Sowed 56, Mohamed Kallon 66, Manaf Abushgeer 77,
89, Redha Tukar 81 pen)
Shandong 2 (Li Xiaopeng 16, Cui Peng 61)
14/09 1st Leg
Shandong 1 (Li Xiaopeng 54)
Al Ittihad 1 (Mohammed Noor 48)
Facts at a Glance
Played: 6
Won: 4
Drawn: 2
Lost: 0
For: 20
Against: 6
Top scorer: Mohamed Kallon (6)
