Marika Domanski-Lyfors has been tasked to take her reviving Chinese side
to the semi-finals or beyond in the upcoming Women's World Cup, a feat they are
reckoned to be dubiously capable of.
As the first ever women's football foreign coach in China, the 47-year-old
Swede was in a process of transforming the Chinese team who was left in shambles
after a string of losses in the Algarve Cup tournament and was disenchanted with
the managerial infighting which culminated in the walkout of Domanski's
predecessor Ma Liangxing.
"We could not work out on a consistent basis, especially after Mr. Ma left,"
a player complained.
"The meddling of the Chinese FA officials disrupted our training plan, the
caretaker Wang Haiming and his coaching staff could not exert their authority on
the FA officials as well as the players.
"That is the underlying reason for our fiasco in the Algarve, the losses
including a 4-1 drubbing by the minnows Iceland thrust us into a big crisis. We
did not know what we were capable of, our morale could be found nowhere," she
said.
Frightful free fall
Ma's departure defined what had been wrong with the Chinese side at the
managerial level, a scourge undermined the "Rose of Steel" who had once enjoyed
a short-lived glory.
Under the guidance of Ma Yuan'an, an illustrious figure in China's women
football, the Chinese side played in style and swept their way with a flourish
into the final of the 1999 World Cup where they lost to hosts the United States
in penalty shootout.
Then they suffered an frightful free fall highlighted by their 8-0 thrashing
at the hands of Germany in the Athens Olympic Games.
Ma Yuan'an, acclaimed as godfather of Chinese women's football, stepped down
after his side failed to qualify for the knockout stage in the football
tournament of the Sydney Olympics.
Then Chinese FA began to engage in a frenzy of coach appointings and
sackings, but never found an ideal one who could bring them glorious results.
"It's not the coaches' fault, they were scapegoats," said Zhang Wei, a Titan
magazine reporter who is following the Chinese side.
"It's the fault of FA officials who are fixated on kudos. On one hand they
wanted a submissive coach who would tolerate their intervention in the team
affairs, on the other hand, they did not belive in the coach's abilities and
always sticked their nose into the team management.
"Ma Liangxing rejected to be a lackey and was falling out with them, and
finally he grew weary of it and left citing ill health.
"The too constant change of head coaches has amounted to a farce which
unsettled the players," he said.
An FA official produced a riposte to Zhang's utterance, claiming that the
Chinese native coaches are not professional enough and untrustworthy.
"The only way to tackle this predicament was to find an established foreign
coach who can take full responsibility of the team issues, and then we would be
content of doing our own business.
"That was the reason why we chose Domanski, she proved herself when she took
Sweden to the final in the 2003 World Cup," he said.
A team too young
What Domanski took over was a young and low-spirited team with no proved
stars in the international arena, and her every public behavior was put under
close scrutiny by the local media, and especially her detractors.
She won universal approval after winning a record of four friendly victories
and one draw with the team in her fledgling stint at the helm of a new-look
Steel Roses side.
"Domanski brought into our team a lot fresh and new training methods and
communication means, she helped arrest our free fall and we're winning and
gaining in confidence," said central defender Li Jie.
"We are convinced of her coaching and she has complete authority in our team,
we are upbeat about our prospect in the World Cup. I think to reach the final
four is very possible for us," she said.
But their future suddenly looked ominously uncertain in mid-August when they
lost back-to-back friendlies to Australia in Tianjin's newly built magnificent
Water drop Stadium.
"The players seemed to be intimidated by the immensity of the sell-out crowd
and the grandeur of the stadium, they are too young to come to terms with it,"
said China's former goalkeeper Gao Hong.
"We can judge from their performance that the team is not psychologically
mature. They displayed an admirable fighting spirit, but only with that you can
hardly go far in the expectedly bruising World Cup," she said.
"China are no longer a top-class team now, physically they are not as strong
as Germany and skillfully they are no match to Brazil. They are becoming a team
with no characteristics," she lamented.
The conundrum for Domanski is that she could not find a decent midfield,
according to China's former playmaker Liu Ailing.
"I found they worked very hard, but their tactical awareness and technical
skills are not up to scratch, so they could produce very little fluent
teamwork," she said.
Her perception was shared by Shang Ruihua, who coached China in the inaugural
World Cup in 1991.
"I found their midfield can hardly operate effectively, this is a problem
that Domanski cannot solve in a short time. Now let us see what magics she can
work with the team," he said.
Ren Liping, another China's former midfielder, took a rather dim view of the
Chinese side's run in the World Cup.
"They fixed their target on the final four, I think this is something beyond
their reach as they are too young and inexperienced," she said.
An insider disclosed that a sense of discomfort was spreading inside the
Chinese setup following their last loss to Australia.
"Judged from their performance, the goal achievable for them perhaps should
be to try to qualify for the knockout stage," he said.
A blessing in disguise
Domanski remained sanguine arguing that the losses could serve as a blessing
in disguise.
"Our real battlefield is the World Cup, winning or losing in the warm-up
games count for nothing, what really counts is how we played the games. I still
believe that China is a not bad team," she said.
She drew her personal experience with Sweden to soothe her detractors,
saying: "Four years ago our Swedish side also did not perform well in the
friendlies prior to the World Cup, but when the World Cup got underway, we're
winning all the way and finally finished runners-up."
"Though China lost to Australia this time, we will learn some lessons from
it, and make some adjustments accordingly. This will be very helpful for us to
play the World Cup," she added.
Following China's 1-0 win over England on August 26 in Macau, their last
warm-up games leading up to the World Cup, Domanski announced her squad for the
World Cup including Zhang Ouying, Han Wenxia and Xia Caixia, three veterans who
had been discarded by MaLiangxing.
"This showed that Marika is counting on the veterans to play the World Cup,"
said defender Liu Yali.
"We are a young team, we need the veterans and their experience is our prized
asset. Without the veterans to anchor the team, the young players tend to make
easy mistakes which could ruin our whole campaign," she added.