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Laffor: Liberia should aim to make history

Liberia came through November’s first phase of qualifiers
for the 2014 FIFA World Cup™ completely unscathed. They did
not need to kick a ball after their opponents Mauritius
withdrew, allowing the Lone Stars passage into the group
stage of the preliminaries.
They now go into a rugged Group J with Angola, Senegal and
Uganda and will begin their campaign in June with a
difficult away match against the top seeded Senegalese, one
of the form teams in African football. It will be a tall
task for a side that managed just five points out of 18
possible in the preliminaries for the 2012 CAF Africa Cup of
Nations and has not flirted with qualification to a major
tournament since the prodigious abilities of George Weah led
them to the 2002 continental championships.
But African football is nothing if not unpredictable, and
Liberian captain Anthony Laffor is hoping to lead the side
to a place not even the incomparable Weah could manage: the
World Cup finals. The striker sees the side's opening
contest as vital. “We really need to do something in the
first game [at Senegal] and get a win or a draw. That would
motivate everybody in our country. We really need to get all
the people behind us,” he said.
Liberia have proven themselves decidedly tougher opponents
in front of their own supporters, so a result in Dakar would
be a spectacular way to kick off the campaign, particularly
as the Lone Stars were beaten 3-1 in the corresponding
fixture on the road to South Africa 2010. “We have good
skills, but what has let us down in the past is a lack of
concentration,” explained Laffor. “Senegal has a new side,
and the team that beat us before has gone. We too are
rebuilding our side, and with the team we have now we can go
to Senegal and get a good result. The players should know
that we need to work hard, stand up to the pressure and do
better than people expect. We must be determined to again
put our country on the map.”
The World Cup dream
Currently ranked 123rd in the world, Liberia have naturally
struggled to reach the heights that marked the Weah era. But
Laffor insists the team are on the right track. “It is true
that since [Weah] left the team, we have struggled,” said
the 26-year-old striker. “But he has his history, and we now
have to make ours. We, the youth, have to make a name for
ourselves.”
Laffor, who plays for SuperSport United in South Africa,
says there is a strong group of players in their younger 20s
looking for high-level experience in the aftermath of
Liberia’s bloody civil war. “We have a few guys playing
overseas in Denmark. We have Sekou Oliseh at CSKA Moscow and
a few playing in Malaysia. It is from the war and when
George Weah stopped playing that we don’t have any players
at big clubs in Europe that we can count on. But we just
have to do it. We are the players who are representing the
country right now. We are what the country has got.”
That no-nonsense attitude has made Laffor a natural figure
of leadership within the team, although his role as striker
also puts pressure on his shoulders. “It’s not an easy thing
to be captain, especially with so many young guys. I think
my role is to ensure discipline and get some respect for the
national team. It was an opportunity given to me and I am
willing to work as best I can.”
The players should know that we need to work hard, stand up
to the pressure and do better than people expect. We must be
determined to again put our country on the map.
Laffor on Liberia's opening qualifier at Senegal
Effort is a common theme for the Monrovia native, and he
says the team must maintain its concentration on the long
road to Brazil 2014 - even while realising what an
achievement that alone would be. “Every player dreams to be
at the World Cup. It would be a dream come true for me. We
are going to work as hard as we can towards it.”
Liberia also are preparing for the first round of qualifying
for the 2013 Cup of Nations, and there is a chance that
success there can help build momentum for the small west
African country. “We have Namibia home and away in the first
round and that is a winnable tie. Our people need to support
us in this,” he said. “The players are the technicians on
the field, but it is an affair for everyone to be involved
in.”
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