An early assessment of all the A-League teams
By Tony Tannous, 1 Sep 2009 Tony Tannous is a Roar Expert

Melbourne Victory's Tomislav Pondeljak tackles Brisbane Roar's Charlie Miller, during round 2 of the A-League Season, played at the Ethihad stadium in Melbourne, Saturday, August 15, 2009. After full time, Victory drew with Brisbane Roar 3-3. AAP Image/Joe Castro
It’s early days, and while crowds remain an obvious concern, as the game struggles to get a word in in the lead up to the NRL and AFL finals, here’s a whip around the clubs to see how each is fairing, including a rating out of 10.
North Queensland Fury, 4.5
Finally showing signs they can mix it at this level, their performance in Adelaide was excellent. With Talay now pulling the strings and Fowler, Steffanuto and McBreen picking it up a notch or two, they finished all over the Reds. Henderson remains a concern (surely Pasfield to come in) behind a makeshift defence that has conceded too many soft goals, but at least the overall attitude was right on Friday.
Adelaide United, 5
Under the gun financially, under the watchful eye of the FFA, the pressure has been building on all at the club, and it is showing. Very fortunate to sneak a point against the Fury, they are especially weak in central midfield, where they are missing Salley, Barbiero and Diego. The defence looked solid enough, until Gold Coast came to town, prompting Vidmar to draft in Rudan and go to a back three, but that proved to be an error. Stick to a back four, go to two up front and get Reid and Barbiero paired-up in central midfield asap.
Melbourne Victory, 5
While almost everything went Ernie Merrick’s way last season, allowing him to keep a stable squad together, things have been falling apart this season, with the injuries accumulating. Muscat set the ball rolling, Berger joined him and on Friday Thompson and Hernandez were seen seeking treatment. Thankfully, a wonderful piece of business nabbed Leijer, but Merrick continues to make some strange selections, such as Brebner and Broxham starting the season in the holding roles, Ward at right back, Kemp in central defence and Broxham at left back on Friday. While they have shown some good signs, particularly in the second half against Brisbane and first half in Perth, it’s all a bit hit and miss at the moment.
Wellington, 5.5
Have conceded too many soft goals and struggled to control games via their central midfield, but the front third has a lovely balance. Bertos has been phenomenal, while the two Brits, Greenacre and Ifill have been chipping in with strong work-rates and the odd goal. Need to tighten up at the back and get Diego fit and into a more central position.
Perth Glory, 6
Promising to bring the good times back to ME Bank Stadium, the Glory has been doing well at home the past fortnight. Predictably, with so many coming in late, they started slow, but Srhroj has made a made a massive difference pulling the strings, and Coyne, Todd and Burns are starting to settle in nicely. Even Sterjovski showed good signs against Melbourne, while the two fullbacks, Neville and Sekulovski, a weakness on paper, have been doing well. Sikora is a bundle of energy and sets an upbeat tempo, while Jelic can be relied upon to pick up scraps inside the box. Plenty of improvement still to come.
Brisbane Roar, 6
Finally got a win on Saturday, but even then they made tough work of it. Must be frustrating supporting this crew, for they tend to go from the sublime to the very average, witnessed by their second half meltdowns against Melbourne and Wellington. Henrique has been the star to date, with able support from Tiatto, Miller and van Dijk. But the Roar, like Melbourne, appear beset by niggly injuries to the likes of Tiatto, Packer and now McKay. Another little worry was the poor start by Nichols.
Central Coast Mariners, 6
Have only conceded two goals, but have only scored three, two of them coming in the opening round upset in Melbourne. In truth, they should have had two more points after they all but knocked out Sydney in round three, but they followed that up with a disappointing performance in Brisbane. Defensively they are going ok, but Lawrie McKinna is struggling to find a functioning front third, evidenced by his chopping and changing. Simon, especially, is struggling to get chances. McGlinchey has looked good in the hole in front of a combative holding duo of Bojic and Hutchinson, but a lack of quality ball-players means this side struggles to control games.
Newcastle Jets, 6.5
A bit hot and cold, they have relied on some excellent tactical work from Branko Culina, especially in Sunday’s game against Gold Coast and at half time in their round two F3 derby draw, when he went man for man and wrestled the ascendancy from McKinna. While Song, Milicevic, D’Apuzzo and Kennedy have been the stand-outs, Culina is also getting handy contributions from the likes of Hoffman, Rooney, Topor-Stanley and a few others. Building a nice little fortress at home.
Sydney, 7.5
Very solid defensively, there is still much improvement, despite heading the table and being undefeated in 13 pre-season games and four regular season games. Despite playing a ridiculous amount of long balls in round three, Keller has fitted in seamlessly alongside Colosimo, while Byn has been solid at left back. Even Cole has been doing well the past couple of weeks, while Bolton has grabbed his chance since getting the nod ahead of Necevski. In attack, Sydney has shown some wonderful transition, getting me forward quickly, but they are still lacking fluency. Danning started the season on fire, but has been beaten the past couple of weeks, while Bridge, Aloisi, Brosque and Corica have been up and down. The energy from Kisel and McFlynn in central midfield has been high, but the passing, at times, has been astray.
Gold Coast, 8
Untouchable for three rounds, they came back to field in a big way on Sunday, having their colours lowered by some sound Branko Culina strategies and perhaps a bit of belief in their own publicity. Kaka and Messi for the past fortnight, suddenly the likes of Caravella and Fitzsimmons were human again, while van den Brink’s lack of pace brought back memories of the Pasha Bulker for some locals. Up until then they had been great, playing a beautiful brand of pass and move. Thwaite was the obvious exception on Sunday, while Anderson did ok off the bench.
Tony’s team of round 4 (4-4-2, manager of the week, Branko Culina)
—————–Galekovic————-
———————————————-
DeVere—–Todd—Thwaite —–Byun
———————————————
———– ——Talay——————-
——————Srhoj——————-
Bertos ————————– Henrique
———————————————
————McBreen—-Fowler———
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md said | September 1st 2009 @ 8:37am | Report comment
Good summary TT, but I cannot believe you gave Bertos & Henrique the nod ahead of Brosque. Were you watching the same Sydney – Nix game as everyone else? Brosque ran them completely ragged. The exciting thing about Sydney is the quality of the players who are on the bench or cannot even get a game.
Cheers
md
whiskeymac said | September 1st 2009 @ 9:38am | Report comment
will caceres move to wellington help the nix?
AndyRoo said | September 1st 2009 @ 10:05am | Report comment
Henrique has been a great find for the Roar.
I generally agree with your rating but oviously some teams are gaining momentum (Perth and Fury) and some teams are losing it (Adelaide & CCM). Will be interesting too see how this looks in say 5 rounds time.
mintox said | September 1st 2009 @ 10:46am | Report comment
Haver you even watched any of the Glory games or just the highlights?
Shroj has been average all season, for anything he provides going forward, there are an equal number of things that he takes away from the team in defence.
- He gives away the ball cheaply (his lost posession from a throw in when it should have been an easy posession, was the start of the build up to Victorys goal)
- He never tracks his player (if you ever watched a game you would see that when beaten he jogs back rather than pressures even when he is within a couple of metres of the player with the ball)
- His positional sense is awful, he chases around in the midfield like a headless chook, it’s no wonder he never made it further than playing in Romania.
Todd, Burns and Sikora especially, were streets ahead of Shroj on the weekend, I cannot believe you would even consider him in a team of the week.
David V. said | September 1st 2009 @ 10:09pm | Report comment
“it’s no wonder he never made it further than playing in Romania.”
Ummm Steven Gerrard made it to the top despite having less in a way of talent…
dasilva said | September 1st 2009 @ 10:22pm | Report comment
David V
I know you hate Steven Gerrard
But are you seriously saying that Wayne Shroj is a better player then Gerrard?
David V. said | September 2nd 2009 @ 10:38am | Report comment
Well, Miller, Hernandez and Culina all leave Gerrard for dead in a technical sense. It must be an embarrassment that 3 A-League players at the very least fall into that category! Shroj has shown some good signs, although not near their level, but certainly a cut above Stevie Me’s lack of technique.
albe said | September 1st 2009 @ 12:53pm | Report comment
on the Jets, i’m wondering when Branko will start with his second half defensive combo, with Ljubes holding things together in the middle. Seems to work really well. Song and Kaz look good, not sure about Kennedy in goals myself. But he’ll look better further into the season i guess.
Realfootball said | September 1st 2009 @ 1:44pm | Report comment
Agree – Ljubo has more influence on the game in the middle. With his technique and physical presence, he is a formidable midfielder. He is wasted in central defense.
chook said | September 1st 2009 @ 4:02pm | Report comment
Well said, I probably have to agree with what you have written.
I have been grinding some numbers and found that part of the A- League problem is the afternoon games.
Evening games get a better crowd average, this of course can be thrown by MV figure and I should look at it on a club by club basis, but as the season goes on the figure should settle down.
Time Played Average
3pm 6570
5.00 pm 10795
5.30pm 8212
7.30pm 15173
8pm 18258
Total 10899
mintox said | September 1st 2009 @ 4:09pm | Report comment
It’s not rocket science, people have things to do during the day AND it’s currently football season.
In Perth, the first and third home game were/are scheduled for 3pm on a Sunday afternoon, it’s pretty understandable that despite their improvement, the crowds aren’t coming as there are hundreds of amateur and social mens and womens teams across the city playing their games at that time many of which would probably go to a game (i’m missing both games because I have to play).
Midfielder said | September 2nd 2009 @ 12:05am | Report comment
Thats an interesting stat Chook
AndyRoo said | September 1st 2009 @ 4:25pm | Report comment
I would have thought Sunday 3 pm is a lot better than Saturday 3 pm
Is Saturday the norm for playing amatuer sports throught the country?
And there aren’t amny shops open Sunday afternoon.
mintox said | September 1st 2009 @ 4:31pm | Report comment
In Perth Sunday 3pm at this time of year affects 6 divisions of amateur mens + reserves (approx 144 teams), maybe half to 3/4 of the 7 womens divisions (35 to 50 teams) and the social teams that play in the arvo (any number of the 70 or so social teams) not to mention the juniors and youth teams that also play on a Sunday.
Saturday 3pm would probably be better in WA except for the fact that they will never schedule a game at that time due to that WA State League traditional kick off time of Saturday 3pm (which only affects 48 teams).
I’d prefer a Saturday 3pm, its the time of day when you’ve done everything you need to do on a Sat, can go watch a game, still get home and head out afterwards!
AndyRoo said | September 1st 2009 @ 4:33pm | Report comment
Thanks Mintox, good to know I thought the tradition of sport on Saturday free time on Sunday was nationwide.
Moot point soon as surely the Glory can’t play during the day in summer
dasilva said | September 1st 2009 @ 5:33pm | Report comment
Worrying signs for Adelaide. Let’s hope Barbiero comes back and the rumours of internal discipline problems are just rumours