SAFF Championship: India wins 9th title; beats Kuwait 5-4 in thrilling penalty shoot-out
text_fieldsBengaluru: Gurpreet Singh Sandhu, the goalkeeper, once again proved to be the deciding factor as he blocked a critical penalty kick in the summit match to help India defeat Kuwait 5-4 in the shootout and win the SAFF Championships title for the ninth time here on Tuesday.
A sudden death rule was used since the score remained 4-4 after five rounds of penalty kicks.
Mahesh Naorem scored but a diving Sandhu saved Kuwait captain Khaled Hajiah's shot to the wild celebration of the home fans and at the India dugout.
In the regulation time, Shabaib Al Khaldi had put Kuwait in the lead in the 14th minute before Lallianzuala Chhangte equalised in the 39th minute.
Defending champions India and Kuwait had also played out a 1-1 draw in their last group match.
This was the second time India won in the penalty shootout. They had made it to Tuesday's summit clash after beating Lebanon 4-2 in the penalty shootout in the semifinal on July 1. Sandhu had also made a crucial save in the shootout then.
For India, captain Sunil Chhetri, Sandesh Jhingan, Chhangte, Subasish Bose and Mahesh converted while Udanta Singh missed.
Before the shootout drama, Kuwait held a slight edge as they pressed forward for goals often in the first half.
The relentlessness fetched the desired result in the 14th minute. Mobarak Al Faneeni released Abdullah Al Bloushi on the left wing with a deft pass. Al Bloushi found Shabaib Al Khaldi inside the box with an accurate cross which the latter slotted past India custodian Sandhu to give Kuwait a 1-0 lead.
India could have levelled the scores within a minute but Kuwait goalkeeper Abdul Rahman blocked Chhangte’s long ranger.
But Chhangte, who was named AIFF Men's Player of the Year on Tuesday, was not to be denied a second time in the 39th minute.
After a lovely exchange of passes between Sahal Abdul Samad and captain Chhetri, the latter found an unmarked Chhangte deep inside the box. Chhangte, India’s energetic No. 12, had little trouble in beating Abdul Rahman to find the equaliser.
It atoned for Chhetri’s failure to score during the regulation time for the second match in a row to an extent.
In the second half, the action continued to flow thick and fast as both India and Kuwait searched for the winner.
Both sides came close to scoring their respective second goals, but were unable to do that, as the match moved towards extra time for the second successive time for both teams.
The extra time too witnessed frenetic action from both sides. There were a couple of injuries, yellow cards to players and officials on both sides and a slew of corners.
But the decisive goal did not come through, making a penalty shootout mandatory to pick the winner.
With PTI inputs