Qatar striker Mohammed Muntari's first-half goal helped the 2022 World Cup hosts beat 10-man Luxembourg 1-0 in an international friendly at the Nagyerdei Stadium in Hungary yesterday.
Felix Sanchez's side went ahead in the 12th minute through Muntari's side-footed shot. Luxembourg's Aldin Skenderovic was dismissed following a second yellow card in the 87th minute.
Qatar, who have qualified automatically for the World Cup and must rely on friendly games to prepare for the tournament, have been included as a guest team in European World Cup qualifying Group A.
The move mirrors the approach taken by France for the 2016 European Championship that they hosted. Qatar's matches will not count towards the qualification process and will be categorised as friendly internationals.
They will play against whichever team has a free date on a given matchday in Group A - which includes Portugal, Serbia, Azerbaijan, Luxembourg and Ireland.
Elsewhere, in Istanbul, veteran striker Burak Yilmaz scored a hat trick as Turkey stunned the Netherlands 4-2 yesterday in their opening game. The 35-year-old Lille forward struck twice before the break and again late in the second half to secure the win in the Group G opener just as the Netherlands was threatening a comeback.
Turkey has not qualified for a World Cup since finishing third in 2002, while the Dutch failed to reach the last tournament in Russia after also finishing third in Brazil in 2014. The Netherlands, which has finished runner-up three times at the World Cup, also missed the 2016 European Championship and their recent struggles in qualifiers reared up again at Ataturk Olympic Stadium. Yilmaz opened the scoring in the 15th minute with a shot from outside the penalty area that deflected off defender Matthijs de Ligt’s hand to beat goalkeeper Tim Krul. He doubled the lead from the penalty spot in the 34th minute after Donyell Malen fouled Okay Yokuslu.
The Netherlands looked to have cut the lead in the 45th minute, but referee Michael Oliver ruled that De Ligt’s header had not fully crossed the line before Yokuslu headed it clear. There was no video referee on hand to check.
AC Milan midfielder Hakan Calhanoglu made it 3-0 in the first minute of he second half, turning in space outside the penalty area and firing a low shot into the far corner. Trailing by three goals, Netherlands coach Frank de Boer made three attacking subsitutions and they paid dividends.
One of the replacements, Davy Klaassen, controlled a cross from Memphis Depay and turned in the same movement before firing past goalkeeper Ugurcan Cakir to make it 3-1 in the 75th minute. And another substitute, Luuk de Jong, made it 3-2 a minute later, bundling another cross from the left over the line.
But Yilmaz scored his third with a curling free kick in the 81st to seal the win for Turkey. Depay missed a penalty deep in stoppage time to compound the Dutch disappointment.
The Netherlands was without captain and center back Virgil van Dijk, who is still recovering from a serious injury to his right knee.