Asante Kotoko goalkeeper, Felix Annan has conceded that Sunday’s 3-0 loss to Etoile and the subsequent elimination from the Champions League was occasioned by the team’s failure to perform at the level they wanted.
According to the captain, the loss was a bitter swallow which must be taken anyway with the hope of doing better next time.
“It is a very painful defeat. We are not going to blame officiating or anything. We weren’t really at our best. I think our best was not enough. We had so much hope coming into the game after the first leg. It is unfortunate we couldn’t qualify to the group stage which we all wanted but this is the game. This is what football is made up. Sometimes there are ups and downs,” he told Kotoko Express.
Annan urged his teammates and disappointed fans to let go the pain. “We just have to pick ourselves up. We have the chance to be in the Confederation Cup play-off. We just have to put it behind us. It’s hard to take. We have disappointed a lot of fans. It is very painful’ he admitted.
He spoke of how bad the players felt after the game and insisted that, there was the need to bounce back in the Confederation Cup. “The mood in camp is really down. We just have to pick ourselves up, recover and do well in the Confederation playoff. We have to move on and do well in the Confederation Cup.”
In a game that saw Etoile being handed dubious penalty, Annan couldn’t hide his opinion on the performance of the referee while calling for fair play in the game. “I was disappointed. We are making Africa football look so bad. Sometimes, you look at such decisions and you want to say, this is not true. I don’t know what CAF will do about this but there must be fair play in football.
The goalie further explained why he confronted the referee after his bad penalty decision. “I hope there can be a solution to it because every team invests and try to do their best and your quality has to show, not a referee deciding the game.
“As I have said, even though the officiating was bad, I don’t think we were any better. What we wanted to do; I don’t think we did it. As captain, I wanted the referee to know that, what he was doing was not right. We had worked a lot and we were there for business. That’s why I approached him to tell him, he was unfair.”
source: Ghana Crusader