Ecuador coach Sebastian Beccacece gestures during their opening game against Ivory Coast

Ecuador coach Sebastian Beccacece gestures during their opening game against Ivory Coast | Credit: IMAGO/DeFodi Images

Coach Sebastian Beccacece laments cruel end to Ecuador's unbeaten run

Amad Diallo struck in the 90th minute to give the Ivorians all three points in their Group E clash after Ecuador had dominated long spells of the game, hit the woodwork three times and squandered several clear opportunities.
Published on

Coach Sebastian Beccacece cut a frustrated figure after Ecuador's 19-match unbeaten run ended with a late 1-0 defeat by Ivory Coast on Sunday, saying his side had done enough to win their World Cup opener.

Amad Diallo struck in the 90th minute to give the Ivorians all three points in their Group E clash after Ecuador had dominated long spells of the game, hit the woodwork three times and squandered several clear opportunities.

"It hurts because it was an unfair defeat," Beccacece told reporters.

"I think there are very strong arguments to clearly show that the team competed very well, had the clearest chances and could have won the match, but because of one detail at the end, we leave with nothing."

Ecuador arrived at the tournament unbeaten since September 2024 and boasting one of the strongest defensive records in international football, but were punished for their inability to turn first-half dominance into goals.

"When a team is clearly superior and doesn't take its chances, it gives the opponent the feeling that it is still alive," Beccacece said.

"I never felt they deserved to win the match, but football is not about what you deserve. It's about taking your chances."

The Argentine coach was also unhappy with a second-half foul by Ivory Coast defender Guela Doue.

"We all saw what was clearly a second yellow card and a sending-off," Beccacece said. "Those are things we cannot control. They hurt, but we have to accept them."

FOCUS ON RESPONSE

Beccacece insisted Ecuador's hopes of reaching the knockout stages remained firmly in their own hands ahead of matches against Curacao and Germany.

"When you don't start the way you wanted, the anxiety appears," he said.

"But now we need more conviction than ever, more belief than ever, more confidence than ever."

The coach praised Ecuador's supporters, who turned Philadelphia into a sea of yellow throughout the evening.

"What hurts me the most and makes me the saddest is not being able to give something back to the people," he said.

"When you do enough to win, with the atmosphere that was created here, and you don't achieve it, it hurts."

(Reporting by Janina Nuno Rios in Mexico City, editing by Ed Osmond)

Ecuador coach Sebastian Beccacece gestures during their opening game against Ivory Coast
Emerse Fae hails Ivory Coast's World Cup intent after late Amad Diallo winner sinks Ecuador
Ecuador coach Sebastian Beccacece gestures during their opening game against Ivory Coast
Netherlands coach Ronald Koeman defends tactics after frustration against Japan
Ecuador coach Sebastian Beccacece gestures during their opening game against Ivory Coast
Japan coach lauds fightback but draw with Netherlands 'disappointing'
Sportshadow
www.sportshadow.com