A Palestinian soccer club from the southern West Bank is hoping that the turnaround led by a new coach from Italy could see it reaching a top pan-Asian championship.
Today, Ahli al-Khalil, which is based in the southern city of Hebron, are set to play in the final of the Palestine Cup in what will be its first chance at winning anything in its 40-year history.
The club attributes its success to the hiring earlier this year of an experienced Italian coach.
Photo: AFP
The final will pit them against northern West Bank rivals Balata, who are sure to put up strong opposition, with the winner acceding to the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup, the regional equivalent of UEFA’s Europa League.
Entering the AFC Cup would see them facing clubs from the Middle East, East Asia and even Australia.
However, before Ahli can dream of success abroad, they must first win at home, and are looking to 46-year-old Stefano Cusin, who in January took on the task of coaching the team, to complete their successful run.
Photo: AFP
Under the direction of Cusin, who has coached clubs from Italy to the United Arab Emirates and even Libya, Ahli have improved leaps and bounds, shooting their way to the top of the table in the Palestinian soccer league.
When a contract with an Italian team fell through, Cusin decided to give the Palestinian club a go.
“I love football, and here there’s the possibility to build something special for the future,” he said at a training session in the flashpoint West Bank city.
“I was looking for something new and thought, why not Palestine?”
The choice of Hebron was a brave one. The city is home to 200,000 Palestinians with a hard core of 700 Jewish settlers living in its old town center.
It is a microcosm of the Middle East conflict, with frequent clashes between local Palestinians and the settlers, as well as with Israeli security forces.
The first obstacle to imparting his soccer wisdom was not the political situation or movement restrictions on Palestinian players, but the language barrier.
Only five of the Ahli squad speak English, and Cusin relies on one of the English speakers to translate his team talks into Arabic, both on and off the pitch.
However, often actions are enough.
“Football is a world language,” Cusin said. “You just demonstrate, you don’t have to speak.”
The players have been delighted with their progress under Cusin.
“This is the best team Ahli has ever had,” team captain Khaldun Halman said.
“He has added a lot of good things to the team, and now local players think and play like foreign players, like the greats in Europe,” he said. “With all due respect to Palestinian coaches, a foreign coach has a European approach to the game, a more universal one used by the best clubs. To me, Stefano is like [Chelsea manager] Jose Mourinho. He has many ideas, a lot he can bring to the club.”
Cusin admits it has not been easy trying to bring greater professionalism to the club in Hebron, given the political tension, but insists it can be a good thing for the city.
Cusin has instilled a work ethic never seen before, especially given that the players are not paid-up professionals and have day jobs — Halman, 26, is a practicing lawyer.
“There’s been much improvement. Today we see our players training every single day of the week,” Ahli president Kifah al-Ashraf said.
“And if training begins at five, they’ll be here at four, which has never happened before. It’s an improvement visible to everyone.”
Cusin is proud of his success in the challenge he has taken on.
“Hebron’s not Miami,” he said. “This city is really difficult. It’s a hard place for the people, and if we can give them something to be happy about, something that unites them, that gives them reason to celebrate, this is the most important thing.”
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