London - AFP
For an hour, the Myanmar fans were solidly behind their national team with the noise of their cheers and drums spiking whenever the players surged towards the opposing Laos goal. But as the game went on, and it became clear the players would settle for the 0-0 draw that would take them to south-east Asia\'s AFF Suzuki Cup, the crowd turned on their own team. Unthinkably, they threw their support behind the visitors from tiny, neighbouring Laos, urging them to score a goal that could have knocked Myanmar out of the qualifying tournament and further into the international wilderness. It never came, but as the final whistle blew, cheers for Laos mixed with boos for the home team as the fans, disaffected by Myanmar\'s four-decade slide to a record low in the world rankings, shuffled out of the stadium. In the immediate aftermath of last month\'s match at Thuwanna Youth Training Centre Stadium, Myanmar\'s coach Park Sung-Hwa defended the pragmatic approach. \"The supporters wanted us to win but you must understand the circumstances because a draw was enough for us to go through,\" said the South Korean. \"They supported us well during the tournament but maybe the fans were angry because we didn\'t attack at the end. We understand that the fans wanted us to win but in the end, we got a result that suited us.\" It seemed a reasonable explanation from Park, who will now guide Myanmar\'s \"White Angels\" in their opening Suzuki Cup match against Vietnam in Bangkok on Saturday. But the approach did not find favour among Myanmar\'s proud supporters, who have watched their team\'s steady decline blamed on a lack of support and facilities, and widespread, crushing poverty. \"Myanmar has a very big history in football that our fans are very proud about,\" said Ye Naing Win, the chief editor of Myanmar Special, a weekly Burmese-language sports newspaper, and who attended the Laos game. \"Our fans are very passionate about the national team so it is hard for them to understand why we can\'t get to that level again.\" Rich history Myanmar, previously known as Burma, stood among the best in Asia from the mid-1960s to the 1970s, which is regarded as the country\'s golden age for football. In that era, led by legendary coach Sein Hlaing, Myanmar won the Asian Games gold medal in 1966 and 1970, and triumphed in five consecutive editions of the south-east Asian Peninsular Games from 1965 to 1973. Myanmar also finished runners-up at the 1968 AFC Asian Cup and qualified for the 1972 Olympic Football Tournament, where they won the Fair Play Award. However, since then moments of brightness have been rare: reaching the 1993 SEA Games final, and the Asean Football Championship semi-finals in 2004. The low point came two years ago, when they were thrashed 7-1 by Vietnam at the Suzuki Cup and finished bottom of their group. \"Our fans felt very sad, disappointed and angry at our bad performance in 2010,\" admits Soe Moe Kyaw, media and communications director of the Myanmar Football Federation (MFF). There is a determination to do better this year after the appointment of Park, who guided Korean club Pohang Steelers to the Asian Club Championships in 1997 and 1998 and led his country\'s under-23s to regional titles in 2002 and 2004. The 57-year-old was installed as Myanmar\'s coach earlier this year and he\'s now trying to bring out the best in Myanmar\'s promising young players, who last year finished third in the SEA Games\' under-23 competition and reached the semis of the under-19 and under-16 AFF Championships. \"The good thing about him is that he is a realistic coach,\" says Ye Naing Win. \"He has been in the job for a while so he knows about the situation of the team and the problems with Myanmar football.\" Park knows there is plenty of work to be done if Myanmar are to avoid embarrassment against Vietnam, Thailand or the Philippines in the Suzuki Cup\'s group stages. \"We have a lot of good players available but we have to train them to play and work as a team,\" he said. \"We are working on their fitness and stamina and also on their tactics and organisation to ensure that they are ready to play in the final round.\" With three wins and a draw during the qualifiers, Myanmar rose 28 spots from a historic low of 184 to 156 in the latest FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking. But to sustain the improvement much work is needed, particularly at grass roots. \"Because of our lack of football infrastructure in Myanmar, there is not much opportunity for youngsters to learn football nowadays compared to the past.\" But for now, Park is realistic about the task facing his team at the Suzuki Cup. \"It will be very difficult because Myanmar have never beaten Vietnam or Thailand in the tournament and we need to get a win against one of them to progress to the semi-finals,\" he said. \"But we are preparing as well as we possibly can and we hope that we can do well.\"