The Port Moresby-based side have already written themselves into the record books by becoming the first Pacific team from outside of New Zealand or Australia to qualify for the prestigious event and are now hoping to raise eyebrows even further by making it past their opening play-off match on December 8.
“Papua New Guinea has never qualified for a FIFA event so we have a lot to learn from this first experience,” co-coach Jerry Allen says. “That said, we will go to Abu Dhabi to do our absolute best. I see this as a great opportunity for Hekari and Papua New Guinea to make our own impression on the world stage and show what we can do.”
Allen is aware hosts Al Wahda will be a tricky proposition though and is eager to hand coach Josef Hickersberger’s side the tag of favourites.
“The standard of football in the UAE is higher than in Oceania and I think the same can be said of Asian football generally,” he says. “I think the main quality we must look for is concentration. I will emphasise to our players that discipline, patience and concentration can make all the difference.”
That concentration was perhaps lacking in Hekari’s opening match of the 2011 O-League campaign. The champions were expected to take all three points against Vanuatu newcomers Amicale but fell to a surprise 2-1 loss. Allen, who is in joint charge of the side with Tommy Mana, and his men will hope for better on Saturday when they face Solomon Islands side Koloale in their last O-League hit out before the Club World Cup.
Whatever the result in that game, it seems unlikely that Al Wahda will take their Pacific opponents lightly in Abu Dhabi.
“We have seen in the past how some of the world’s strongest teams have suffered surprise losses to clubs with far less resources,” HE Mohammed Khalfan Al Rumaithi, president of the UAE Football Association, says. “Hekari may be a far less experienced team on the field but what it lacks in this area it makes up for in passion and commitment. I think it will be a very physical match as both clubs strive to achieve their goal of reaching the second round.”
Al Wahda are one of the most famous clubs in the UAE and are always considered among the favourites in major domestic competitions. They have prepared for the Club World Cup with a pre-season tour of Germany, during which they won four of five friendlies, including an impressive 1-0 triumph over Bundesliga club TSG 1899 Hoffenheim.
The squad is relatively unchanged from that which won the championship last season, with the only key addition being former Bani Yas and Mali striker Modibo Diara. The local hero is Ismail Matar while Brazilians Fernando Baiano and Hugo Henrique Asis do Nascimento add a bit of South American flair.
If Hekari can emerge victorious they will move through to the quarter final stage, where they will meet the winners of the AFC Champions League, the final of which is set to be contested between Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma of Korea Republic and Iran’s Zobahan. A second win would tee up a semi-final clash with Italian giants Internazionale, while a loss will see them play-off for fifth place with the loser of the other quarter-final, to be fought out between a yet-to-be-confirmed CAF winner and CONCACAF champions Pachuca from Mexico.
The Papua New Guineans will be keen to follow in the footsteps of New Zealand side Auckland City, who posted Oceania’s best ever showing at a FIFA Club World Cup last year when wins over hosts Al-Ahli and African representatives TP Mazembe helped them to a fifth-place finish.