Has Verbeek got it right for Indonesia?
By Ben Somerford, 18 Feb 2010 Ben Somerford is a Roar Expert
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- A-League, AFC Asian Cup, football, Pim Verbeek, Socceroos
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Socceroo's coach Pim Verbeek chats with Harry Kewell during a training session at ANZ Stadium, Sydney, Thursday, June 19, 2008. The Socceroo's take on China in a World Cup qualifying match this Sunday, June 22. AAP Image/Dean Lewins
Australian boss Pim Verbeek yesterday named his squad for the ‘must-not-lose’ AFC Asian Cup qualifier against Indonesia in Brisbane on March 3, with the 25-man squad consisting of 21 local-based players along with four from abroad. So has he got it right?
The Socceroos’ qualification for next year’s Asian Cup in Qatar hinges on a result against Indonesia in a fortnight’s time. A loss could see us embarrasingly miss the continental tournament.
Make no mistake, that would be a huge blow for the status of football in Australia.
But, of course, our populous northern neighbours Indonesia are hardly world-beaters, with a current FIFA ranking of 136.
Nevertheless, a Socceroos team made up entirely of A-League players had their problems with the Indonesians just over a year ago when they could only manage a 0-0 draw in Jakarta.
With that in mind, and considering so much is at stake, along with the fact this is actually an official FIFA international date, Verbeek must’ve been tempted to call on his European stars.
But considering the time constraints of the FIFA window it was not ideal, with those players likely to arrive less than 48 hours before the game.
And a distraction like this could potentially jeopardise the first-team places at club level for some of our Socceroos, which wouldn’t be ideal going into the World Cup, with ‘game-time’ the key thing heading towards June.
Indeed, on that note, Verbeek’s squad selection is the right decision.
The four foreign-based players he’s called upon, Joshua Kennedy, Mark Milligan, Jade North and Luke Wilkshire, could all play important roles on March 3, while there’s enough strength in the rest of the squad to get the job done.
Verbeek isn’t normally the type to take a gamble, but the point is the squad he’s picked really should get the job done on home turf against a team ranked 136 in the world, especially considering they don’t even actually have to win the game.
A draw will be enough (that’s not to say that I think that they should play for a draw).
But the problems of the ‘A-League-Roos’ in the past has been their inability to retain possession and their lack of potency in attack, highlighted by a return of no goals against Indonesia and Kuwait in our first two Asian Cup matches in 2009.
In Verbeek’s latest squad he appears to have tried to address those issues, with the increasingly-impressive Wilkshire likely to control the midfield alongside seasoned Socceroo Jason Culina.
Wilkshire was the outstanding performer in an A-League dominated Australia side in Kuwait earlier this year, when the sides drew 2-2. Linking him up with Culina, who missed the Kuwait game, is a solid base.
And Verbeek has also opted to deploy his favourite attacking weapon in Asia – Japan-based bigman Kennedy.
Kennedy’s selection is slightly curious considering the J.League season kicks off the following weekend, with the big striker’s side Nagoya Grampus travelling to Gamba Osaka for a March 6 match, but he won’t need to adjust much to the relative time-zones and he is perfect for Australia’s circumstances.
I admit I don’t know much about Indonesia’s centre-halves, but I dare say, Kennedy will cause them problems. He has, after all, against some of Asia’s best despite being a fairly predictable route to goal.
On the topic of forwards, Daniel McBreen’s selection has been greeted with plenty of skepticism, but it seems Verbeek is looking for back-up to Kennedy should anything unforeseen happen to the man known as ‘Jesus’.
McBreen could easily play a similar role with Verbeek saying yesterday, “the strikers I have can do a job”. It seems Verbeek has his heart set on the familiar target-man tactic.
Down the other end, Verbeek may have been tempted to call up reliable goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer to reinforce and organise the defence, but you wouldn’t expect him to be kept terribly busy against Indonesia and Eugene Galekovic is more than capable in his absence.
Verbeek also hinted at his preferred defensive duo when quizzed about Wellington pair Jon McKain and Andrew Durante yesterday.
He responded: “Playing well together for their club can be an advantage but Simon (Colosimo) did well the whole season and Jade North can play there.”
North, who has been frozen out of action at club and international level in the last six months, gets a reprieve ahead of Urawa new boy Matt Spiranovic, while the likes of John Aloisi, Sasa Ognenovski, Joel Griffiths, Eddy Bosnar and Adrian Leijer can kiss their World Cup hopes goodbye.
Perth Glory’s Chris Coyne is another curious absentee although Verbeek commented: “I know Coyney has done everything to be part of the World Cup, so far that hasn’t happened. But there’s a few months to go. At this moment these are players are doing better than Coyney. There are no guarantees in football.”
Indeed, Verbeek and his latest Socceroos squad shouldn’t forget that final comment, because there will be no guarantees on March 3 when the Indonesians try to salvage something from a poor qualification campaign in Brisbane.
Sure, you fancy the Socceroos should get the job done, but whichever team Verbeek has picked, the job still needs to be done. Indonesia on March 3 must now be the focus.
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February 18th 2010 @ 11:45am
Benny said | February 18th 2010 @ 11:45am | Report comment
I will never get the love affair with Kantarovski – lazy around the field, poor passer and loves a badly timed ugly challenge for a card
Oar and Leckie look promising but
great to see Musialik back in the fold too – best passer in the a-league and a great man marker (gave a clinic against hernandez on the weekend)
February 18th 2010 @ 12:11pm
cruyff turn said | February 18th 2010 @ 12:11pm | Report comment
Benny,
I agree with your point about Musialik. He offers a good link between defence and the midfield. He should be there with Culina and Matt Thompson. Would also love to see Oar and Leckie in the front third, with Oar supplying crosses for Kennedy, and Leckie running at the Indonesian defence.
Is it just me, or is this squad top-heavy with centre-backs? Milligan and Colosimo should get the nod here. In an ideal world, I’d like Wilkshire to play in midfield, but for this match I’d have him at RB, because who else do we have? Cole? North?
Come on Australia! Let’s get the job done, and qualify for the Asian Cup.
February 18th 2010 @ 12:30pm
Joe FC said | February 18th 2010 @ 12:30pm | Report comment
It certainly is a banana skin game. We should qualify but the nervous tension is building.
February 18th 2010 @ 12:33pm
Punter said | February 18th 2010 @ 12:33pm | Report comment
What about Joel Porter? Very good player in Div 1 last year & has helped Smeltz alot this year.
February 18th 2010 @ 1:20pm
GibbonsMcGibbons said | February 18th 2010 @ 1:20pm | Report comment
This is a pointless arguement, but I don’t think there’s anything wrong with the squad, it’s the fact that the squad selected is not complient to play the 4-2-3-1 formation. For that formation to work, you need either a creative, Riquelme-esque player or a goal-scoring, Cahill-esque player in the middle of the 3 behind the striker. This squad lacks either.
I think a front 2 of either Leckie and Kennedy, or Broqsue and Kennedy would be a dangerous proposition of old-fshioned height and speed and given the squad selected, be the best attacking option. Culina and Wilkshire get through enough work as a central midfield pair to accomodate this.
Again, I recognise this is a pointless arguement given the only thing more certain in life than death and taxes is Pim sticking with 4-3-2-1.
February 18th 2010 @ 1:40pm
clayton said | February 18th 2010 @ 1:40pm | Report comment
yup – if someone disagrees with you, they must not have watched the game. cos everyone who watches a game agrees about everything they see. obviously.
jedinak and wilkshire had a great start – but did they play as well in the second half? I didn`t think so. You might disagree. Which is fine.
sterjovski is another who has come back to oz after a decent, long career in europe. given the experience that guys like sterjovski and moore have in europe, it isn`t fair to use them to bag the a-league. I don`t think that Sterjovski would have played any better whether he was playing in Switzerland or Perth. Is Moore a better player now because he is over in Greece now?
I`d hate for us to miss out on the Asian Cup – if we are there we have a decent shout of winning the thing. Also should get some good games against the regional heavyweights. Gonna be a nailbiter I guess.
February 18th 2010 @ 1:56pm
Eamonn Flanagan said | February 18th 2010 @ 1:56pm | Report comment
Great to see the pressure on the local boys…again. This is how Aussie football will continue to improve. The local boys playing another meaningful international.
Takes time but in 5 years or so we have to produce a team of locals capable of competing with the best in Asia….Japan had a team of locals for many years bar two players….Australia needs to get there and fast.
Still stunned at the team he picked in Canberra less than 12 months ago against Kuwait. Has a national team ever changed so much so quickly Mackay, Simon, Nicholls, Mullen, Pondeljak all started and played that night….and we locals played good money but we won’t go there.
Methinks Pim didn’t pick that team…..he couldn’t have and then make so many changes could he???
February 18th 2010 @ 2:09pm
markwakefield said | February 18th 2010 @ 2:09pm | Report comment
do us all a favour and don’t write anymore articles… theyre devoid of insight and juvenile in the extreme…
February 18th 2010 @ 3:44pm
cruyff turn said | February 18th 2010 @ 3:44pm | Report comment
Then enlighten us with your football wisdom, Mark!
February 18th 2010 @ 7:40pm
dannyshepherd said | February 18th 2010 @ 7:40pm | Report comment
you’re on my radar scruffy…
February 18th 2010 @ 2:17pm
Griffo said | February 18th 2010 @ 2:17pm | Report comment
We are under pressure to qualify for the first time in a while, so all the old nerves are coming back – waiting for the mistakes at the back, can’t score, reading all over the “expecting to win against ‘inferior’ opposition so we already have the game in the bag” mentality.
We have to win first…and previous A-League teams didn’t inspire the next generation of kids with confidence.
I am actually glad to see Durante there: good defensive player, likes to pass it out to build attack. Pim should like that. He also likes playing club-combos, but that hasn’t worked so well for him thus far.
But I expect Colosimo and North to play. North has experience under Pim, so he might be given some active World Cup match preparation by starting, or at least coming on if the game is safe. Colosimo is in form, could be good SA2010 defensive cover and so keep Durante warming the bench. Pity.
Just hope Kennedy doesn’t suffer some form of head injury during training leading up to the match. Don’t want to shake the froth out of my glass that much at my local before kick-off.
February 18th 2010 @ 2:20pm
markwakefield said | February 18th 2010 @ 2:20pm | Report comment
colosimo was embarrassing in kuwait and north is just embarrassing in general…
February 19th 2010 @ 6:45am
markwakefield said | February 19th 2010 @ 6:45am | Report comment
“However, Melbourne would only have to wait 16 minutes to take the lead when a typically direct ball from Muscat had Simon Colosimo and Stephan Keller at sixes and sevens, allowing Mrdja to nip behind them and lash home a left-foot strike on the edge of the area that had Clint Bolton grasping at thin air”…
smh
February 18th 2010 @ 2:39pm
pimbo said | February 18th 2010 @ 2:39pm | Report comment
More new faces. Unknown A-League players and debutants.
The team doesn’t get together till next week and then only a few days to train together and get to know each other.
Sounds like the Kuwait game in Canberra all over again.
Hope the boys can pull it off or there’s more bad PR and bad mouthing from Pim for the A-League and its players.
Maybe the Socceroos should train with a German second division team.
February 18th 2010 @ 2:55pm
Griffo said | February 18th 2010 @ 2:55pm | Report comment
Yes, I’ll brace myself this time for player in shirt number 150.
February 18th 2010 @ 8:52pm
Australian Football said | February 18th 2010 @ 8:52pm | Report comment
Pimbo,
any chance of giving the Sydney lads a rest for this one against Indonesia, cos we have Melb Vic in the return leg on Sunday week for the second final in Sydney? And what of your assistant Arnie going to CCM any comment you would like to make on that score?
~~~~~~
AF
February 18th 2010 @ 3:16pm
keeper11 said | February 18th 2010 @ 3:16pm | Report comment
Could be a high scoring draw…
australias inexperienced A leaguers have all the pressure:
MUST win ..AND last chance to impress pimm….mmm
Indo are very average lowly ranked team but with nothing to lose or prove…..
February 18th 2010 @ 3:22pm
Dogz R Barkn said | February 18th 2010 @ 3:22pm | Report comment
A few points:
1. The two DMs will probably be Culina and Wilkshire – and that’s about a strong a pairing as we currently have. Also, Josh up front, recalling that he’s about our only recognised striker at NT level at the moment. On the other hand, bringing in Spike and North probably adds very little to the predominantly A-League squad, unfortunately.
2. It’s a great test for these blokes, it’s double or nothing, that should focus their attentions a bit, and they aren’t just playing for the Asian Cup – they’re playing for all future A-League representation in the NT – plenty at stake.
3. But – it’s the middle of the finals campaign – one imagines that the 5 SFC players might be a touch distracted – not sure – it’s really unchartered waters.