Butler stands by Bangladesh’s attack-minded philosophy after Maldives win
Bangladesh women's football team head coach Peter Butler has fiercely defended his tactical approach, declaring he would rather quit than change his attack-minded philosophy, following his side’s 4-2 win over the Maldives in their opening match of the SAFF Women’s Championship in Goa yesterday.
The women in red and green were 2-0 up at one stage before conceding one goal in each half to allow the Maldives to level the match at 2-2. However, they eventually secured a convincing win that also confirmed their semifinal berth.
Asked about the two goals conceded, Butler doubled down on his commitment to an attacking, high-risk style of football.
"If you want me to change, I walk out the door," Butler told reporters at the post-match press conference. "I'm there for the benefit of those girls, and I will always support those girls. And we play a game which may be a little bit risky at times -- risk to reward -- but I ain't going to change. The day it changes is when you get another coach in."
When pressed on whether his team had been exposed by the opposition's clinical counter-attacks, the English tactician strongly dismissed the narrative.
"No, no, I don't think they got beat," Butler insisted. "I think the first goal was a little bit fortuitous – off the crossbar, bounced on the line, got done on the break. And the second one, nothing to do with a high line."
Instead of focusing on defensive vulnerabilities, Butler shifted the spotlight back to his long-term vision for the development of women's football in Bangladesh, emphasising player empowerment and creative freedom over rigid pragmatism.
"We play a certain way of football. I give young players, young Bangladeshi girls -- your daughters, your sisters -- opportunities to go out there and play in a creative manner and express themselves, and I'm never going to change," he concluded.
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