Reds retake top to compound Kosmina’s woes
By Daniel Brettig, 4 Jan 2009 Daniel Brettig is a Roar Guru
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- A-League, Adelaide United, FINA, football, John Kosmina, Melbourne Victory, Pim Verbeek, Socceroos, Sydney FC, Travis Dodd
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Adelaide United returned to the summit of the A-League while also consigning former boss John Kosmina’s Sydney FC to another week of uncertainty with a 2-0 victory at Adelaide Oval on Saturday.
Left winger Cassio opened the scoring with his fourth goal of the season, passed home in added time at the end of the first half, and substitute Alemao made the result safe by netting artfully on the break as a desperate Sydney pushed forward.
That was enough to earn United their win over opponents who were undoubtedly committed yet lacking in the cutting edge required to breach the Reds defence.
Sydney’s defeat gave them a quartet of losses from as many matches, and left them a forlorn six points out of the league top four with only three fixtures remaining.
Kosmina was already thought to be under pressure to keep to his post and there is sure to be more speculation this week in the wake of his unhappy return to Adelaide.
The Reds, meanwhile, are in fine shape ahead of their pivotal encounter with title rivals Melbourne Victory at Telstra Dome on Tuesday night.
They were well served by Kristian Sarkies, who followed up his appearance on the scoresheet last week by providing the assists for both United goals, evidence he is finally getting comfortable after a slow start at the club.
Centre-half Sasa Ognenovski showed few signs he was distracted by the Korean clubs chasing his signature in a typically stingy display.
Watched by Socceroos boss Pim Verbeek among a handsome holiday crowd of 23,002, Sydney had played with the sort of early spunk befitting of a team playing for their season to prevent United from working to their strengths.
But as they have done for several weeks, the visitors were unable to cap tactical proficiency with a crisp finish, and United came ever closer to nabbing the lead.
Wide men Cassio and Travis Dodd grew in influence and eventually they broke through in the shadows of halftime.
Dodd’s dribble into the box saw the ball break to Sarkies, and his shrewd centre found Cassio with enough space to slide beyond Ivan Necevski from close range.
Much of the second 45 minutes unfolded in United’s half, but the home side blunted most of Sydney’s attacks with ease and it was no great surprise when Sarkies’ visionary ball over the top allowed the fresh Alemao to dink home a second.
Matthew Jurman was sent off in the dying moments for a second yellow card to add to Kosmina’s discontent.
Kosmina said the result had put paid to Sydney’s faltering season.
“Yeah I don’t think we can get there,” he said.
“We’d need a lot of luck with other results, the best we can get is 29 points, so you’d basically say we’re history.”
Adelaide coach Aurelio Vidmar was pleased to see conjecture over Ognenovski’s likely offshore future had not reduced his value on the park.
“I said yesterday that there’s certain players when something like that happens it can affect them, but certainly Sasa’s in the category where it doesn’t matter what’s happening on the outside he can still get onto the pitch and focus 100 per cent,” he said.
“He was very good tonight but we had a lot of good contributors – there was no-one outstanding, but certainly a very good group effort.”
Both Adelaide captain Travis Dodd and Sydney skipper Steve Corica were critical of a billard table-like surface, complete with cricket pitches, that often saw the ball run out of reach, making weighted passing virtually impossible.
© AAP 2012Recommend this story.
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- A-League, Adelaide United, FINA, football, John Kosmina, Melbourne Victory, Pim Verbeek, Socceroos, Sydney FC, Travis Dodd

January 4th 2009 @ 10:23am
Koala Bear said | January 4th 2009 @ 10:23am | Report comment
Sam,
Tho if it were GCU I wouldn’t mind… I just hope that the Vics never win it.. but I’m sure I have nothing to worry about there …
in the mean time it’s SFC .. I live on the Gold Coast and I’m excited about the GCU FC .. However, as they say you can take the boy out of Sydney, but you can’t take Sydney out of the boy.. Yes the first Australian Football club to win the FIFA WCC hopefully before I die …
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KB
January 4th 2009 @ 10:30am
Sam said | January 4th 2009 @ 10:30am | Report comment
KB
Yes SFC for now. From what I can see they are still very popular all over Sydney (even the West). If they can play some decent football and reduce the costs of going to matches (parking, meals, tickets) I’m sure they could average 15,000+ easily. Something for the FFA to look at.
January 4th 2009 @ 10:50am
Koala Bear said | January 4th 2009 @ 10:50am | Report comment
Sam,
you are right; the cost .. This may have something to do with the Eastern Suburbs RL being the main Tenant..?? Not sure…
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KB
January 4th 2009 @ 11:00am
Col said | January 4th 2009 @ 11:00am | Report comment
sorry i just switched across for a minute hope you don’t mind, but I just wanted to add here that Central Coast Mariners do have a supporter base solid from Hornsby to Wyong…this is how the Mariners have been marketed, supporter base from Hornsby in the south..and it appears to be working, as the Hornsby mayor Nick Berman has come out saying this is Mariners territory and has been since they formed..formerly the old Northern spirit terrirtory in the NSl..just wanted to add that, now i will move back.. cheers..
January 4th 2009 @ 11:08am
Sam said | January 4th 2009 @ 11:08am | Report comment
Col
You are probably right in some respects although when you get to Hornsby the lines are a bit blurred. Same as Northern Beaches although I think that this is where Mariners are entrenching themselves. In the long run SFC will be a Eastern Suburbs, Inner city, Southern Sydney and Shire team. West will be West Sydney. This is better because you are probably getting to more people around Sydney.
eg Many Hornsby people probably find it easier to get to Bluetongue Stadium than SFS.
January 4th 2009 @ 12:12pm
Koala Bear said | January 4th 2009 @ 12:12pm | Report comment
Col,
Maybe we could expand on that and call it Australia United FC to kill destroy Melb Victory FC…
I dosen’t really matter; as long as The NSW united FC when we oppose the Melb Vic FC we smash them…
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KB
January 4th 2009 @ 12:15pm
Sam said | January 4th 2009 @ 12:15pm | Report comment
KB
NSW are leading the titles 2 to 1 against the Victorians. Sydney & Newcastle both won titles
Also Mariners in 2 grand finals. That is why NSW is the heartland
January 4th 2009 @ 12:23pm
Col said | January 4th 2009 @ 12:23pm | Report comment
Mariners will take it out this year..you know the phrase A League was coined by David Hill when he was in charge of the game back in the late 90s..just alittle trivia for you, .and you are correct a lot of Hornsby Bushland Shire residents do head to Gosford for the games,and support the Mariners, it’s 15 minutes from Hornsby to the Hawkesbury river …..it’s much easier and a nice drive for us..
January 4th 2009 @ 12:27pm
Koala Bear said | January 4th 2009 @ 12:27pm | Report comment
You said it Sam…
Dave,
I think that’s what Sam is getting at.. “Are you watching Victoria” …
I remember a FA final years ago — when Liverpool faced up to Everton and the chant was.. “Are you watching Manchester ! ! ! “..
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KB
January 4th 2009 @ 12:32pm
Pippinu said | January 4th 2009 @ 12:32pm | Report comment
I agree that NSW is the heartland. Create more provincial clubs, the more the merrier. More cannon fodder for clubs with realisable aspirations.