DOHA : Tajikistan coach Petar Segrt is warm and affable with a booming voice but after gaining popularity for his charm at the Asian Cup, he is now turning heads after his side's dream run to the quarter-finals.The only team making their debut at the tournament in Qatar, Tajikistan were the competition's minnows and were barely given a second look when the 24-team group stage got underway.But they shocked the continent by first reaching the knockout stage before delivering the upset of the tournament by eliminating the United Arab Emirates on penalties in the last 16 on Sunday."We are now the dark horses in this tournament.
Nobody knows how far we can go. I have no limits for my players, they've surprised me again," the 57-year-old Segrt told reporters.A well-travelled coach who has taken charge of teams such as Georgia, Afghanistan and Maldives, the Croatian has become a national hero in Tajikistan in the past week.His demeanour and showmanship came across as a ploy to shift the limelight away from his young squad, and the tactic has clearly worked."It's like when you have children, you must wait for the right moment," Segrt had said when he was asked whether his personality protected his team during the group stage."Now they are ready...
I will still try to put all the pressure on me, but they must work like adults and do it themselves."Conceding only one goal against Qatar, a comeback win over Lebanon and nearly beating UAE in 90 minutes before dumping them out in the shootout is proof that his team is perhaps better than their ranking of 106 would suggest. "We are among the eight best teams in Asia," said Segrt, whose side will next face either Iraq or Jordan.CENTRE OF ATTENTIONCroatia's Segrt makes a point of