India, who had beaten Sri Lanka (2-0) and Nepal (4-1) to top Group A, had hardly broke a sweat till now but Maldives are a side which the Stephen Constantine-coached home team ill-afford to take lightly when they clash at the Greenfiled Stadium at Kariavatton tomorrow.
Maldives are one of the better sides in South Asia. Rather, they are the second most successful side in the regional tournament, having won the title once (in 2008) and ended runners-up thrice (1997, 2003 and 2009).
Maldives, where football is a top sport, will also have at least a few hundred supporters at the stands tomorrow as their national airlines, in collaboration with their national federation, have arranged flights for the fans to fly in here for tomorrow's semifinals.
The home side though will have the psychological advantage as they have beaten Maldives in all the knock-out matches the two sides have played in the tournament. India have also been unbeaten in the tournament so far while the tinly island nation lost to Afghanistan (104) in their final group fixure.
For India, in-form striker Robin Singh has been ruled out of the remainder of the tournament and it will have to be seen tomorrow whether the home side feels his absence or not though 18-year-old Chhangte Lallianzuala had nicely filled in his place with a double strike against Nepal on Sunday.
Mizoram's Lallianzuala had grabbed with both hands the chance he got in his second international match by becoming the youngest ever goalscorer for India but it's to be seen if Constantine starts him tomorrow or not.
The head coach himself has said at the post-match press conference that Lallianzuala still has a long way to go.
The back-four could be the weak link for India, if at all it has one. With the injury and ruling out of Sandesh Jhingan and Anas Ethadodika, India are without two best defenders currently.
Constantine fielded new combinations at the backline and the coach himself had spoken about this in a post-match press conference.
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