India's Shillong Setback: How Second-Half Strikes Sunk Women's Team

The Indian women's football team faced a disappointing 0-2 defeat against Iran in their opening Tri-Nation friendly match. Iran dominated from the start with better composure and physical presence on the ball. Substitute Sara Didar proved decisive with two second-half goals that broke India's resistance. This match marked India's return to action as they prepare for next year's AFC Women's Asian Cup in Australia.

Key Points: India Women Fall 2-0 to Iran in Shillong Football Friendly

  • India's defense struggled throughout the match against Iran's composed attacks
  • Substitute Sara Didar scored both goals in 64th and 74th minutes
  • First half ended goalless despite Iran's early dominance and chances
  • Match served as preparation for upcoming AFC Women's Asian Cup in Australia
2 min read

Iran's second-half strikes sink India in Shillong in Women's friendlies

Indian women's football team suffers 0-2 defeat against Iran in Tri-Nation friendly as substitute Sara Didar scores twice in second half at Shillong.

"The Blue Tigresses looked off-colour and tentative. Iran, by contrast, were composed, physically superior on the ball - Match Report"

Shillong, October 23

It was a bitter evening for the Indian senior women's team as they slumped to a 0-2 defeat against Iran in the opening match of the Tri-Nation Women's International Friendlies at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Shillong on Tuesday.

Two second-half goals from substitute Sara Didar sank the hosts and handed Iran a victory after the first half ended goalless, as per the AIFF website.

For India, the match was a return to action after a historic AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification campaign earlier this year and the first challenge in their preparations for next March's Asian Cup in Australia.

The Blue Tigresses looked off-colour and tentative. Iran, by contrast, were composed, physically superior on the ball, and dictated the rhythm of the game almost from the outset. Every time the visitors attacked, India's defence wavered.

The tone was set as early as the fourth minute. A routine cross was fumbled by Panthoi, allowing Fatemeh Shaban Ghohrood to pounce on the loose ball. Only a desperate clearance from Phanjoubam Nirmala Devi prevented Iran from taking the lead, the ball glancing the post and going out of danger. Iran grew in confidence, stringing together flowing moves, while India struggled to build anything meaningful in the final third.

Iran's persistence paid off in the 64th minute. Melika Motevaliitaher floated in a precise cross from the right, and India's backline switched off. An unmarked Zahra Ghanbari rose to head against the crossbar. The ball fell kindly for Sara Didar, also unmarked, who acrobatically smashed home the rebound.

In the 74th minute, Nongmaithem Ratanbala Devi misjudged the bounce of a routine clearance at the top of the box, allowing Didar to snatch the ball. The forward showed no hesitation, rifling a low strike past Panthoi to make it 2-0 and break Indian resistance again.

As the clock ticked down, India's lack of cutting-edge became painfully clear. Their first real test of Iran goalkeeper Raha Yazdani came only in the 89th minute, when Lynda Kom Serto's low free-kick was parried away.

The visitors even came close to adding a third in stoppage time, with Ghohrood racing down the left and rattling the post. By then, the match had long slipped away from India, who play their next game against Nepal on October 27. Iran will meet Nepal on October 24.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The goalkeeper Panthoi had a really tough day. That fumble in the 4th minute set the tone for the entire match. Hope the coaching staff works on these basic errors before the Asian Cup. We have good players, just need better organization.
A
Arjun K
Let's not be too harsh on the team. Iran is a quality side and these friendlies are exactly for identifying weaknesses. Better to lose now and improve than face these issues in the Asian Cup. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
S
Sarah B
The article mentions we only tested their goalkeeper in the 89th minute? That's really concerning. Our attacking players need to be more clinical and create better chances. Hope they bounce back strong against Nepal!
V
Vikram M
Respectfully, I think our coaching staff needs to reconsider the strategy. Playing too defensively against stronger teams isn't working. We need to be more proactive and take the game to the opposition. The girls have the talent, just need the right tactics.
K
Kavya N
Shillong is such a beautiful place for football! Sad that we couldn't get a win for the home crowd. But these matches are crucial preparation. Let's support our Blue Tigresses through thick and thin 💙

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