Turkey coach laments early exit but says players showed heart and soul

Soccer Football – FIFA World Cup 2026 – Group D – Turkey v Paraguay – San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, U.S. Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella with a dejected Merih Demiral after the match IMAGN IMAGES.

 

FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group D - Turkey v Paraguay

 Soccer Football – FIFA World Cup 2026 – Group D – Turkey v Paraguay – San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, U.S. Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella is shown a yellow card by referee Ivan Barton IMAGN IMAGES .

 

FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group D - Turkey v Paraguay

Soccer Football – FIFA World Cup 2026 – Group D – Turkey v Paraguay – San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, U.S. Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella.

SANTA CLARA, California, June 20 (Reuters) – Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella said he was shocked by the team’s World Cup elimination at the ​hands of Paraguay on Friday but held nothing against his players ‌after another fruitless night in front of goal.
Turkey failed to overhaul the 10-man South Americans, losing 1-0 despite 32 goal attempts, to crash out with a ​match to spare.
“The other team ⁠gets their moment and scores.
“It’s really shocking to say goodbye ​to the World Cup after only two matches.”
Paraguay struck with the fastest ​goal of the tournament so far when Matias Galarza lashed home from long-range on 64 seconds.
Turkey, widely tipped to challenge the U.S. for top spot in ​Group D, were also wasteful in their first match against Australia, ​losing 2-0 despite firing off 30 shots and dominating possession.
“We could certainly have ‌been ⁠more accurate, but I don’t feel in a position to hold anything against the players,” said Montella.
“I love these players even more than I did before because they showed heart and soul.
“Football is not ​logical. That’s what ​makes it the ⁠most beautiful sport in the world.”
It was a bitter night for Turkey fans, 24 years after ​their previous World Cup when they made the 2002 ​semi-finals in ⁠Japan and South Korea.
Montella said Turkey needed to qualify more regularly for big tournaments.
“Perhaps, even unconsciously, the pressure of playing in a major ⁠tournament ​after such a long absence affected us,” ​he said.
“We need to develop the habit of participating in major tournaments. I believe ​things will improve from there.”
Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Peter Rutherford.

 

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