Doha: Qatar's national football team coach Jorge Fossati has threatened to resign if a plan being considered by the country's football authority (QFA) to exclude naturalized players from the squad is implemented.
Qatar has used its immense oil and gas wealth to recruit sportspeople from around the world to bolster its national team, part of an ambitious vault onto the world sporting stage by the wealthy Arab state which will host the FIFA World Cup in 2022.
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The Uruguayan told local media Wednesday that a plan by the QFA to reduce the number of foreign-born players could damage Qatar's chances of qualifying for its first World Cup finals in Russia in 2018.
"I heard about a plan to exclude naturalized players and bring in more young Qatari players into the national team. It (discouraging naturalization) is one point I don't agree with at this stage," Fossati told Doha Stadium Plus sports weekly.
Fossati, who was hired by Qatar in September, said that if the federation went ahead with the plan he would quit.
"If the federation wants to go another way, I'll respect its decision 100 percent. And it'll be better for the Qatar national team to have another coach who supports that view."
A spokesman for the QFA declined to comment.
About half of Qatar's national team are naturalized citizens, including Rodrigo Tabata of Brazil and Uruguay's Sebastian Soria.
In a match against China on November 15, six players in the starting 11 were naturalized.
But Qatar has also said it wants to foster local interest in sport among its roughly 300,000 citizens and to field a homegrown squad when it hosts the 2022 tournament.
World football's governing body FIFA rules state that a player must have lived in a country continuously for five years after the age of 18 before representing the national side.
Qatar have won one out of five qualifying matches for the Russia World Cup finals and their next match will be on March 23, 2017, against Iran.
(With agency inputs)

Qatar coach Jorge Fossati. File photo: Getty Images