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    Afcasiancup - Iran coach Amir Ghalanoei 
    claimed that a misunderstanding between himself and the referee resulted in 
    his dismissal from the bench during his side’s 2-1 win over Uzbekistan in 
    the AFC Asian Cup on Wednesday.
 Ghalanoei was sent to the stands during the closing stages of a tense 
    encounter for apparently throwing a water bottle in the direction of the 
    fourth official.
 
 However, he later claimed at the post-match press conference that there had 
    simply been a misunderstanding between himself and the match officials.
 
 “It was just something that happened in the game. At that time, I was very 
    angry with one of my players who had lost the ball easily and I shouted at 
    him,” said Ghalanoei, who became the second coach to be disciplined in the 
    tournament following the dismissal of Qatar coach Dzemaludin Musovic against 
    Japan on Monday.
 
 “But the referee thought that I was complaining about him so that’s why he 
    sent me off.”
 
 Despite his controversial dismissal, Ghalanoei was pleased to see the Group 
    C favourites start the tournament with a victory in a hard-fought encounter 
    against Rauf Inileyev’s side.
 
 The Uzbeks took the lead in the first half through a Rahman Rezaei own goal 
    but second half strikes by Seyed Jalal Hosseini and Javad Kazemian helped 
    Iran to claim all three points.
 
 “I thought that it was a good result that we started with, against tough 
    opponents that played very well,” added Ghalanoei.
 
 “The Uzbekistan coach prepared his team very well and I think that we had a 
    very good match today.
 “And I appreciate the job done by my players who did well in the second half 
    to follow my technical instructions when we changed our tactics.”
 
 While Ghalanoei admitted that his side’s performance, particularly in the 
    first half, was below par, he remains confident that they can still go on to 
    lift their first AFC Asian Cup title since 1976.
 
 “In football, there is no should or must, and we say that we must be 
    champions,” he said.
 
 “Most of the results in this tournament so far have been very close and it 
    is not easy to predict what will happen.
 
 “However, I promise that we will get better, match by match, in this 
    competition.”
 
 The Iran coach also defended his underperforming stars, like Ali Karimi and 
    Mehdi Mahdavikia, who had far from impressive performances on Wednesday.
 
 “Star players sometimes have good games and sometimes not so good games, 
    even big players like Ronaldinho at Barcelona,” added Ghalanoei.
 
 “We cannot expect good performances by our players in every match but we 
    have a plan and we are working with a team of 16 players, not 11, who can 
    play in each game.”
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