Soccer-Saudi coach Donis laments lack of time with squad after Uruguay fightback


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Saudi Arabia v Uruguay - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S. - June 15, 2026 Uruguay and Saudi Arabia players react after the match REUTERS/Paul Childs

MIAMI, June 15 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia coach ⁠Georgios Donis said he had not been in charge long enough to ensure the squad have ⁠the tactical flexibility needed to deal with an experienced Uruguay side after their 1-1 ‌draw with the South Americans at the World Cup on Monday.

Donis replaced Herve Renard in late April and their Group H opener at Miami Stadium was his first competitive game with the team after three pre-tournament friendlies.

"For us, within three weeks we've been ​trying to set up our game, build up our game and ⁠have a better spirit," said Donis.

"When we're ⁠faced with certain opponents, getting one point is a positive event and this is a booster for ⁠our ‌psychology.

"Currently I'm trying to learn my team, I'm trying to learn my players and get to know them. I see how they react and behave and what I've seen is that, due ⁠to the lack of time, we cannot be flexible during the ​match.

"We know how to play 4-4-2 ‌or 4-3-2-1, but we must be able to play with three midfielders or with five ⁠defenders. At the moment, ​unfortunately, we're not that flexible. It takes time to get to know how to do it."

The Saudis were on top for much of the first half and took the lead in the 41st minute when Abdulelah Alamri capitalised on ⁠an error by Uruguay goalkeeper Fernando Muslera.

Uruguay dominated after the ​interval and forced the Saudis to defend deep. With 10 minutes remaining, Maxi Araujo slid in to score a deserved equaliser.

"We can say in the first half we had good control over the play and we had ⁠opportunities to score without being very decisive," said Donis.

"In the second half, if someone analyses it, one can say that a possible scenario was that we had the lead and we thought mostly defensive. We had already scored and we wanted to keep that.

"Were we, perhaps, tired in the second half? It appeared ​to be that in the second half we didn't have the same ⁠intensity. Our opponent was able to go deeper into our half.

"We didn't show enough self-confidence to keep possession ​of the ball in order to change their tempo, so that ‌meant that we had pressure near our box. Thankfully ​we had an excellent goalkeeper and an excellent defence today.

"I'm trying to learn my team better and to see how we think."

(Reporting by Michael Church in Dallas, Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read