Peru are one game away from back-to-back World Cup finals appearances following Tuesday’s 2-0 win over Paraguay and head coach Ricardo Gareca lauded his side who seemed set to miss out six months ago.
La Blanquirroja clinched fifth spot in World Cup qualifying in CONMEBOL with the victory over Paraguay, finishing ahead of Colombia and Chile who were eliminated.
Peru’s win means they will play the fifth-ranked team from the Asian Football Confederation, either Australia or UAE, who will meet in a one-off playoff in Doha in June. The inter-confederation playoff will also be played as a one-off in Doha on June 13 or 14.
Gareca’s side seemed a long shot to claim fifth after back-to-back 1-0 losses to Bolivia and Argentina which left them second last in the standings in October but rallied by claiming 13 points from a possible 18 in their final six qualifiers.
“We didn’t start the qualifiers well, but we rebounded well,” Gareca told reporters. “It gave us the possibility to get to the playoff spot.
“I have to congratulate the boys and thank the people for the support. It was incredible. When I renewed my contract, this is what I wanted.”
Gareca has been widely praised within Peru for his efforts, having taken over as national team boss in March 2015 and leading the side to its first World Cup in 36 years in 2018 along with the 2019 Copa America final.
The sentiment has been different for Colombia head coach Reinaldo Rueda, who achieved a rare feat of guiding two sides in qualifying who both failed to reach the World Cup. Rueda had led Chile early in qualifying before being dismissed, taking over Colombia in January.
“I think that not achieving the goal is a shame for Colombian football,” Rueda told reporters after Colombia’s 1-0 win in Venezuela which was not enough. “It is a very strong frustration. It was added, but the great result was not given.”
“I think it is very clear that my contract was subject to qualifying for the World Cup, so it is an evaluation that the board will have to do, of the work we have done.”
Chile’s failure means they have missed the past two World Cups, meaning the international careers of several of their golden generation, including Alexis Sanchez, Arturo Vidal, Charles Aranguiz, Claudio Bravo, Mauricio Isla, Gary Medel and Eduardo Vargas, may come to an end.
Chile head coach Martin Lasarte told reporters after their 2-0 home loss to Uruguay: “I think some players from the ‘golden generation’ still have something to give.”