India U17 Team Crashes Out After Painful 0-3 Defeat to Uzbekistan

India men's U17 team suffered a 0-3 defeat to defending champions Uzbekistan in their final Group D fixture. A penalty mistake by goalkeeper Rajrup Sarkar and an own goal by Wangkhem Denny Singh sealed India's fate. Despite a strong defensive performance and a near-equalizer from Dallalmuon Gangte, India failed to advance. The loss ends India's campaign and their hopes of qualifying for the FIFA U17 World Cup.

Key Points: India U17 Crash Out of AFC Asian Cup After 0-3 Loss

  • India lose 0-3 to defending champions Uzbekistan
  • Rajrup Sarkar's penalty error proves costly
  • Own goal by Wangkhem Denny Singh doubles deficit
  • India miss chance to qualify for FIFA U17 World Cup
3 min read

AFC U17 Asian Cup: India men crash out after 0-3 defeat to Uzbekistan

India's U17 Asian Cup campaign ends after a 0-3 defeat to Uzbekistan. A missed penalty and own goal seal their fate in Jeddah.

"India's resistance was broken in the 32nd minute following a costly mistake - Match Report"

Jeddah, May 11

India men suffered a 0-3 defeat against defending champions Uzbekistan in their final Group D fixture of the AFC U17 Asian Cup Saudi Arabia 2026 at the King Abdullah Sports City Hall Stadium.

The defeat brought an end to India's campaign and another painful near miss in their pursuit of a maiden on-merit qualification for the FIFA U17 World Cup.

Needing a win to stay in contention after their heavy defeat to Australia in the opening game, the Blue Colts adopted a cautious approach against the defending champions, who dominated possession from the start and repeatedly tested the Indian defence with quick attacking movements.

Despite the pressure, India remained organised defensively for much of the first half. The backline held its shape well, while goalkeeper Rajrup Sarkar made a series of important interventions to keep the defending champions at bay.

However, India's resistance was broken in the 32nd minute following a costly mistake. Sarkar rushed out of his line in an attempt to intercept an Uzbek attack but brought down Laziz Abduraimov inside the penalty area. The referee immediately pointed to the spot, and Abduraimov calmly converted the penalty with a low right-footed effort into the bottom corner.

Uzbekistan nearly doubled their lead just before the interval when Sukhrob Sadirzhonov struck the post with a left-footed effort in the 43rd minute.

India, though, almost found an equaliser in first-half stoppage time. Gunleiba Wangkheirakpam delivered an inviting cross across the face of goal, but none of the Indian attackers could apply the finishing touch.

The Blue Colts came out with greater attacking intent after the restart and went agonisingly close to levelling the score in the 56th minute. Dallalmuon Gangte struck a superb free-kick that rattled the crossbar with the goalkeeper beaten. Heeranganba Seram reacted quickest to the rebound but failed to convert from close range.

That missed opportunity proved costly. Uzbekistan continued to threaten in attack, with Sarkar producing several fine saves to deny Sukhrob Sadirzhonov and Abubakir Rakhimov during a sustained spell of pressure.

The defending champions doubled their advantage in unfortunate circumstances in the 60th minute when Wangkhem Denny Singh inadvertently turned Makhmud Muradov's corner into his own net.

India continued to fight despite the setback, but Uzbekistan maintained control and sealed the contest in the 78th minute. Akhrorbek Ravshanbekov reacted quickest after his initial effort was blocked and fired the rebound past Sarkar to complete a convincing victory.

India U17: Rajrup Sarkar (Gk), Shubham Poonia (Abhishek Kumar, 35), Korou Meitei Konthoujam, Moosa Ashiq, Azlaan Shah (Yuvraj Kadam, 46), Raj Singh Wahengbam (Heeranganba Seram, 46), Dallalmuon Gangte (C), Lawmsangzuala, Indra Rana Magar, Gunleiba Wangkheirakpam (Adil Alungal, 81), Wangkhem Denny Singh (Rahan Ahmed, 62)

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
It's disappointing but not unexpected. Uzbekistan are defending champions for a reason - their organization and technical ability were clearly superior. Indian team defended well for long periods but individual errors like the goalkeeper's rush cost us. Hopefully this experience will help these young players grow.
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Priya S
The boys gave their best but the gap in quality is still huge. We need more competitive matches against top Asian teams, not just in tournaments but regularly. AIFF must invest in proper coaching and facilities at the youth level. At least the team showed spirit till the end.
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Michael C
The penalty decision was correct but unfortunate. Sarkar had a good game overall despite that mistake. India's attacking play in the second half showed promise - that free kick was inches away from being a stunning equalizer. A learning curve for these youngsters.
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Vikram M
🇮🇳 Proud of the fight even though we lost. Those 5-10 minutes after halftime when we attacked, I thought we might pull it off. But lack of finishing quality in front of goal has been our Achilles heel for years now. Need to fix that at the academy level. Onwards and upwards!
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Ananya R
Heartbreaking to see them go out, especially after that crossbar moment. But credit to Uzbekistan - they were clinical. India's defensive structure was better than against Australia, which is a positive sign. The own goal was pure bad luck. Hope the boys don't get demoralized and keep working hard.

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