
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
Quite ironic really, given all the talk about crowds, that the on-field standard of the A-League this season has been the best yet, and by some way.
Round three might have been a little underwhelming, but the other four rounds have been very good, with improvement in many areas, ensuring traditional powerhouses Melbourne and Adelaide are struggling to keep up.
Here are five reasons why the league has made giant strides;
The imports
In previous seasons the imports have been hit and miss, and we have often been left underwhelmed by the likes of Jardel, Zura, Wedau, Deane and Steve McMahon Jr.
Now there are success stories everywhere you look. Clubs appear to be hitting the mark thanks to the overall quality dished up from the likes of Fowler, Ifill, Henrique, Keller, Kisel, Traore, van den Brink, Byun, Jelic, McGlinchey, Doig, Greenacre and Sukha, to name some.
All but Henrique are new-comers, but adapting to the league quicker then their predecessors, which in itself says a bit about the improving technical standards, but more on that later.
Add to this vast improvement from the likes of Song and Sikora, who took a bit of time to adapt, and it’s safe to say the imports this season are definitely worth watching.
The returning Aussies
While the clubs have been hitting the mark with the recruitment of imports, they have also been doing well by targeting locals that have perhaps been unsettled in Europe.
Returning Socceroos Jason Culina, Jamie Coyne, Jacob Burns and Sterjovski were expected to do well and have generally lived up to the bargain (Sterjovski is taking longer to adapt), but it is the others that have been overseas and are now back to impart knowledge that are adding to the overall quality.
I refer to the likes of Porter, Steffanuto, Caravella, Milicevic, Talay and Srhoj. Even Haliti showed on the weekend how a few years, even on the fringes in Europe, can refine your game.
The biggest leap is that these guys are coming back earlier, with plenty to offer. This hasn’t always been the case.
The quality of coaching
Sydney has upped the ante by targeting an Eastern European and Lavicka has brought a much needed ruthless streak and level head to the local scene.
His team has shown some very good signs, especially the past couple of weeks.
Sydney’s transition from defence to attack is excellent and against Gold Coast on the weekend they even showed that Australian teams can put their foot on the ball and go backwards or square. It doesn’t always have to be forward, at a millions miles an hour.
Branko Culina and Miron Bleiberg are two others bringing greater sophistication, both in the style of football they wish to play and the type of footballers they are using.
Lawrie McKinna and Dave Mitchell have had to pull up their socks, while in North Queensland, Ian Ferguson has been getting things right the past couple of weeks. Ricki Herbert’s men have also looked good in attack.
Last seasons pace setters, Ernie Merrick, Aurelio Vidmar and Frank Farina, have some catching up to do.
The technical levels
This correspondent, on The Round Ball Analyst, has long bemoaned the over-physicality of the league, where athletes have often been valued more highly than footballers, players who can get their foot on the ball and make a difference.
I sense the pendulum has really shifted in this regard, and about time.
Credit, of course, must go to the clubs and managers for their recruitment and match-day selections.
What it means is that there are more players who want the ball to feet and aren’t afraid to play. Gold Coast have been setting the pace of course, while a team like Brisbane Roar have been left a touch behind, a point captain Moore emphasised on the weekend.
This greater emphasis on the ball rather than the man means games are far more watchable and goals far more spectacular. Better entertainment all-round, evidenced by the wonderful top-of-the-table clash on the weekend.
Hopefully, when the other codes are done and the league starts to get its share of tabloid space, fans will come out and appreciate the better work.
The tactics
I touched on the quality of coaching earlier, and generally the mentality of the coaching fraternity has been positive, attack-minded. Bravo.
There has also been a lot of positive work done on the tactical front, a subject I cover in depth in my latest Talking Tactics piece on the e-zine Half-Time Heroes, which will be out today.
Tony’s team of the week, round 5 (4-4-2, manager of the week, Miron Bleiberg)
——————–Vukovic—————–
————————————————-
T Elrich ——Colosimo—-K Dodd—–Kemp
—————————————————-
———————–Talay———————
Ifill—————-Caravella————–Song
—————————————————-
—————-Smeltz—Fowler—————-
Recommend this story.
Follow Tony on Twitter @TonyTannousTRBA

September 9th 2009 @ 9:51am
Dickroo said | September 9th 2009 @ 9:51am | Report comment
Good article!
And don’t forget that this is achieved at the background of a massive talent drain to Asian Championship League teams.
FFA should not hold the Western Sydney team back for another year.
A 12 team league will be very decent married with a major Socceroos come-back and the availability of international imports and coaches after the 2010 WC.
Season Six will be even better.
September 9th 2009 @ 9:59am
Millster said | September 9th 2009 @ 9:59am | Report comment
I agree with the above. I think this season has been really good so-far. I was excited about it before it began, and I think it is delivering all we could possibly expect of our league 5 years in.
The only area of clear disappointment is crowds, and I must admit I find some of the low figures to be quite surprising. Perhaps football’s relegation to position #2 or #3 in people’s sporting priorities especially during AFL and NRL finals, combined with the modest broader exposure (no FTA and only moderate news attention) and the GFC are biting. Added to this, it is 3.5 years since the last world Cup and still a few months to go before the South Africa excitement really starts heating up.
But at least I’m now sure that people who go to a HAL game for the first time are likely to feel positive about what they see on the park and want to go again a second time. I didn’t feel the same way about a number of matches last year (e.g. I wish the crowd for last year’s Sydney V Wellington had been even lower as the less people who saw that game the better).
PS: I’m finding myself watching lots of minutes of the Fury on the internet or Foxtel at the pub… there is something about their combination of flair, naivety and sheer bad luck that is just rivetting and for no rational reason I’d have to say I’ve already grown somewhat of a soft sport for them. Anyone else the same?
September 9th 2009 @ 10:28am
Koala Bear said | September 9th 2009 @ 10:28am | Report comment
Millster,
you have taken the words right out of my mouth with the Fury… I love an underdog and this one has a few points to prove … with God now running into form he is going to make a few pay for some of the bad reviews he received in the pre-season….
I just hope it won’t be SFC that is going to be on the end of his Fury… no pun intendant… I love to see him knock in 5 against the MV so Pippi boy will threaten to burn his MV membership card and return exclusively to his Grooky Bullies… and spare us all of his Fozzie crap, conspiracy theories, and the Championship curse crap, he is now on about…
~~~~~~~
KB
September 9th 2009 @ 12:02pm
Wilba said | September 9th 2009 @ 12:02pm | Report comment
Millster, ‘there is something about their combination of flair, naivety and sheer bad luck that is just riveting and for no rational reason I’d have to say I’ve already grown somewhat of a soft sport for them.’ Pure Gold.
Playing crap football in the pursuit of a point may avoid embarrassment but is not good for the development of the club, both players and supporters. After watching teams like the old New Zealand Knights, and a few more modern examples, lose in an absolute snooze-fest it is refreshing to see the Fury have a good old fashion crack – a bit like the Roar under Miron. I think they deserve a bit of credit for the effort and enterprise.
I am hoping that it all clicks later in the season; they string together a couple of wins, and make it into the finals. However, if this fails to materialise and they are the worst team in the comp, picking up the wooden spoon, well the A league isn’t going too bad.
September 9th 2009 @ 5:24pm
cab711 said | September 9th 2009 @ 5:24pm | Report comment
Yeah the enticement of Fury is Fowler.
Perhaps low crowds are nothing to do with current issues but past ones. Coming off the back of a very disappointing last season perhaps alot of the fans were fed up and decided to not renew their membership this year? Maybe FFA made the biggest mistake of not adding the two new teams earlier and now it is 1 season too late?
September 9th 2009 @ 10:01am
Luke W said | September 9th 2009 @ 10:01am | Report comment
I really hope any two out of Perth, Sydney and Gold Coast contest the grand final this year. I want them to show the other teams in the competition that the standard of the A-League is rising, and to compete you can’t simply rely on the same squad as last year, and that quality recruiting is necessary, and attractive football rewarded. For mine, these are the three teams that have raised the technical bar so far, and while some of the teams have managed to keep up (the Jets, thanks to Branko Culina, and maybe Central Coast, but in a more negative style) others have been left behind.
September 9th 2009 @ 10:04am
Millster said | September 9th 2009 @ 10:04am | Report comment
Final thing before I get down to work… ALLEZ LES BLEUS for tonight. Goddamn we need this win away to Serbia or else we are in embarrasingly serious trouble…
September 9th 2009 @ 11:47am
Pippinu said | September 9th 2009 @ 11:47am | Report comment
Millster
tough, tough assignment, and with all the backroom chatter – both the coaching staff and players are going to be feeling the pressure big time.
If they get through it, they would have earned it all right.
September 9th 2009 @ 12:17pm
Art Sapphire said | September 9th 2009 @ 12:17pm | Report comment
Millster – you must have read this yesterday. I even posted it on another thread. Nice to see they are such a harmonious group just before the big game. Good luck, but something tells me you will be finishing 2nd in the group and will have to face another 2nd place team.
Thierry Henry – “I have been in the France team for 12 years and never have I been in this situation. We do not know how to play, where to go, there is no organisation. There is no style, no guidance and no identity.”
September 9th 2009 @ 11:46am
Pippinu said | September 9th 2009 @ 11:46am | Report comment
Good article Tony
I note your penchant for the incongruous in your team of the week, with both Elrich and Kemp filling their respective full back positions!
But when you sit down and think about it, it’s fair enough. Kemp had just about the best game of his career with the Victory, and Elrich helped the jets get back into it in the final quarter (temporal and geographic).
September 9th 2009 @ 12:10pm
onside said | September 9th 2009 @ 12:10pm | Report comment
Plus; I love the doubleheader match fixtures on TV.
September 9th 2009 @ 12:33pm
Wilba said | September 9th 2009 @ 12:33pm | Report comment
Yeah, how was Saturday night: 5-7pm GCU v SFC; 7-9 pm NQF v BR; 9-11pm AUS v S Korea. When the Socceroos were looking a bit lost I flicked over to see the Lions bury the Blues in the last quarter. I even caught the Wobblies downing the Boks. I loved it, my wife not so impressed.
September 9th 2009 @ 12:43pm
Pippinu said | September 9th 2009 @ 12:43pm | Report comment
…when too much football is not nearly enough – I was doing the exact same thing on Sat night – needs plenty of mental toughness and stamina – it’s not easy being an arm chair expert!!
September 9th 2009 @ 1:08pm
DT said | September 9th 2009 @ 1:08pm | Report comment
One reason I’m loving A-League season five:
Season four: Distance to nearest live game = 1334km
Season five: Distance to nearest live game = 13.4km
September 9th 2009 @ 1:24pm
Tony Tannous said | September 9th 2009 @ 1:24pm | Report comment
As mentioned at the bottom of my article, the good folk at Half-Time Heroes, namely editors Eamonn Flanagan and Con Stamocostas, have been putting in the hard-yards to bring football fans the latest editon of HTH, which was relased this morning…it can be found here;
http://issuu.com/nearpost/docs/halftimeheroessept09?viewMode=magazine
For those interesting delving into more of my tactical stuff, it’s on pages 10 and 11…
For those that cant get enough football coverage, dont miss Wayne Snowden’s cartoons – he’s got DJ Simon Hill in his record store, Pim Verbeek up to his usual tricks and Miron Bleiberg in conversation with Jason Culina.
Meanwhile, Con talks to football-nutter Adam Spencer, Mike Salter, the Football Tragic, takes on the men in black, Fiona Crawford reports from the Homeless World Cup and Ben Buckley is in for some banter.
Hope you enjoy.
September 9th 2009 @ 1:33pm
Midfielder said | September 9th 2009 @ 1:33pm | Report comment
Tony
Once agian a brilliant article and what you say s very true… I would add one addational point to your list… My point is the management of the clubs and their coaching staff is getting better each year …
I find that I can watch a non Mariners A-League game now … and not turn it off … a small start but an important one…