Recently, there has been a lot of buzz around the

national soccer team

commander-in-chief

Li Tie (1977-), footballer

The furor continues to rage, with renowned commentator Huang Jianxiang taking to his microblogging account of the

national soccer team

A sharp critique of the performance in the Big 12 and the coaching staff's decision-making.

Huang Jianxiang bluntly: "Some people are still looking for excuses for failure. Let's think about it from a different angle: facing a good opponent, if we have the top four of the Super League lineup, and can be equipped with three foreign aid plus an Asian foreigner, is it still unable to beat Oman? Could we be chased by Vietnam for two consecutive goals? Would we have been held to a half-time scoreless draw by Japan? Would we have gotten two goals from Australia in the first 20 minutes?

Well, this national team, which has more domestic players than clubs, plus three Brazilian foreigners and a Jiang Guangtai, is disappointing today. Where exactly does the problem lie? Is it shirking responsibility and complaining about the league and the club's lack of training, or is it a lack of commitment, never having a word to take responsibility? With Jia Xiuquan

women's soccer

It is a far cry from the "all the blame is mine" statement after the Olympic loss.

Every team inevitably has shortcomings in every game, but it is the manager's job to get his team to play consistently at least 80% of the time. However, Li Tie's teams have often played poorly 40-50% of the time, with major strategic decisions missed, tactical adjustments made improperly, and individual mistakes made frequently, all of which have occurred over the course of 40 years in the

national soccer team

A rarity in history. Stop complaining about luck, Vietnam and Oman are also complaining about bad luck, Japan is still regretting a win, and Saudi Arabia is still questioning whether that goal by Wu Xi was offside after they won!

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