Indonesia lean on Dutch-born contingent in quest for World Cup return

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FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - World Cup - AFC Asian Qualifiers - Group F - Indonesia v Philippines - Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia - June 11, 2024 Indonesia's Thom Haye celebrates scoring their first goal with Asnawi Mangkualam REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan/File Photo

Indonesia's Thom Haye celebrates scoring their first goal with Asnawi Mangkualam in the 2-0 win over the Philippines.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Indonesia’s challenge for a first World Cup appearance in almost 90 years takes on a distinctly Dutch flavour when Shin Tae-yong’s side face Saudi Arabia on Sept 5, hoping to ignite dreams of a long-awaited return to the game’s greatest stage.

Not since their debut in 1938 has the archipelago, then known as the Dutch East Indies, appeared at a World Cup. But with the Finals growing to 48 teams in 2026, efforts to return have quickly gathered momentum.

Nine players in the squad who defeated the Philippines in a qualifier at a sold-out Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta in June were born in the Netherlands, from whom Indonesia gained independence in 1949.

“It’s a boost for everyone that we can go to the next (third) round,” said Amsterdam-born midfielder Thom Haye, who scored the opener in the 2-0 win over the Philippines.

“I think in the last months we have seen a little bit of a change in the dynamics in the team. We’re getting stronger, you really do see us growing together as a team and it’s really important that we believe we can achieve these results.

“Everything starts with belief first and then I think you become stronger and stronger.”

The team’s performances – they have made it to the third round for the first time and are the only South-east Asian nation to do so – have certainly provided a boost for Indonesian football after a series of damaging incidents tarnished the country’s standing.

A Fifa ban due to governmental interference saw the country excluded from qualifiers for the 2018 World Cup, while 135 people died in a late 2022 crush in Malang when police fired tear gas to disperse rioting fans.

Six months later, Indonesia made further headlines as the nation was stripped of the right to organise the Under-20 World Cup due to opposition from local politicians to Israel’s participation.

Central to the mood shift has been Erick Thohir, a former owner of Italy’s Inter Milan who took over as the football federation president in early 2023 and who has fast-tracked plans to tap extensively into the diaspora.

As a result, South Korean Shin, who led Indonesia to the last 16 of the Asian Cup in early 2024, will take their strongest squad into the Asian qualifying third round.

There Indonesia will face a daunting challenge against Saudi Arabia, Japan and Australia, as well as Bahrain and China, in the quest for one of two automatic World Cup berths from Group C.

“As a team we can be really proud of the last months, of the results we’ve had, so of course we’re really happy we have gone through,” added Haye.

“But it doesn’t stop here. We believe in each other and the possibilities we have, so in the next round we want to show who we are. I’m looking forward to the next group and the teams and it’s a challenge. But I like challenges, so that’s good.” REUTERS

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