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Update Coach Guus Hiddink has lifted a corner of the veil on its plans towards the European Championship qualifier against Turkey. During training today he chose eight against eight during a party game for a system with two strikers. Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and Bas Dost, the top scorers in the Bundesliga, were from the flanks supply of Wesley Sneijder and Ibrahim Afellay. The particularly offensive way of playing for Hiddink Plan B.
Given the situation in the group is the Dutch national team Saturday benefit from a victory. If the team Hiddink namely again suffers loss of points, the backlog in the Czech Republic and Iceland is very large. Both countries already knew Orange defeat in Group A of the European Championship qualifier. In the previous match against the weak Latvia chose Hiddink sure to start with four attackers. It clearly presented in November a resounding victory (6-0), but it is not obvious that Orange so too will start against the higher excited Turkey.
Hiddink fog with captain Robin van Persie and Arjen Robben the two biggest superstars of Orange. Wesley Sneijder should therefore Orange Saturday by the hand against the country in which he is a star at Galatasaray. The playmaker, who wears the captain’s armband against Turkey, today was in the game relegated to the right to ensure supply towards the strikers Huntelaar and Dost. Sneijder capped ever inward to the ball left to care for, while on the other hand Afellay repeatedly used his right leg.
It was striking that the long Dost, who hopes to make his debut in Orange, in the air barely won headers. The top scorer of VfL Wolfsburg was relieved after a while by Luuk de Jong, the PSV striker who in one of his first actions teammate Jeffrey Bruma gave a nosebleed. It seems that Hiddink the option of two central strikers behind the hand holds in case the situation there during the game demands. He is expected to choose the “trusted” system with three strikers, which is then the striker Huntelaar. The coach will be Thursday his plans to try out in detail, but out of sight of the press and public in the seclusion of the Amsterdam Arena.
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