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Australia's Luke Wilkshire, left, and Australia's Lucas Neill leave the pitch after the World Cup group D soccer match between Germany and Australia at the stadium in Durban, South Africa, Sunday, June 13, 2010. Germany won 4-0. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)
As unedifying as the media war which erupted in the wake of the ‘Disaster in Durban’ is, what it may do is galvanise the Socceroos. Some of the criticism of Pim Verbeek and his players has been savage, but it will all be forgotten if Australia beats Ghana tomorrow.
In the wake of what I called an “unmitigated disaster,” one Roar contributor suggested that I had failed to find a silver lining in the defeat – that people care.
But I would argue that everyone in the football media cares, and that is why we’ve seen such a passionate discourse take place over the past few days, some of which has arguably crossed a few lines.
At the end of the day, it’s not Craig Foster or Mike Cockerill who will make the difference in Rustenburg – it’s the players, and I hope that some of the criticism manages to spur the Socceroos on to the victory required against Ghana.
Durban is done and dusted – perhaps it was the defeat that we had to have to jolt certain players back into some form – and the beauty of tomorrow’s game is that the Socceroos can turn their tournament around within the space of ninety minutes.
The key question is where the goals will come from, and if Pim Verbeek thought his job was tough already, it became a whole lot tougher the second Tim Cahill saw red against Germany.
Many have speculated that Harry Kewell will play a key role against Germany, but whether the 31-year-old is fit enough to make a significant contribution is a question that will only be answered on the day.
Yet, if defeat to a youthful Germany has taught us anything, it’s that squad regeneration is a vital component of international football, and I just wonder whether it’s time for someone like Nikita Rukavytsya to truly make a name for himself.
Granted, Rukavytsya has hardly played for the national team, but if the speedy attacker wants to put himself in the shop window for a new club in Europe, he can hardly do better than by scoring a goal on the biggest stage of all.
That’s if Rukavytsya gets on the pitch, of course, but whomever the embattled Verbeek relies on – be it Kewell, beanpole striker Kennedy or the pacy Rukavytsya – I have the sneaking suspicion that Ghana may just underestimate the Socceroos.
That’s not the line currently coming out of the Ghanaian Football Association, with President Kwasi Nyantakyi warning his players to be wary of a wounded outfit.
“We definitely have no cause to be complacent because Ghana is bent on winning the cup and nothing will stop us from achieving that target,” Nyantakyi told the Ghana News Agency.
Ghanaian-born former NSL player Ransford Banini is another to have lectured the Black Stars on the dangers of discounting Australia, yet the fact that so many have felt compelled to warn the Ghanaian players to remain focused suggests that their minds may already be on Germany.
The role of underdog has always suited the Socceroos, and when nothing less than three points will do, the nation awaits a much improved performance from a national team we all care passionately about.
It’s hardly the media’s job to act as cheerleader, but come the full-time whistle against Ghana, I doubt there’s a single journalist who doesn’t hope to be writing fulsome praise of Verbeek and his team, rather than another scathing analysis.
With backs-to-the-wall and a World Cup lifeline to play for, Australian fans are entitled to expect the most committed performance we’ve seen yet under Verbeek, against a Ghana side who may have already been lulled into a false sense of security by the disaster in Durban.
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June 18th 2010 @ 11:36am
Luke10 said | June 18th 2010 @ 11:36am | Report comment
Nice article Mike, I think it pretty well sums up the current situation. Harry’s attempt to quieten Cockerill and their tit-for-tat circus is a total farce. Ok there is a love hate relationship between Kewell Inc and Cockrill but making that front page news I think is over the line. It is obvious that the media is having a negative effect on our team or from what is visible, effect on Kewell.
Controversy and disaster news sells copies and generates clicks. Hence the tiles used in The Age, Catastrophe’ for dismal France and ‘Harry tried to ban me’. The later article seemed like some smitten ex-lover who was pouring out their pent up emotions after years of neglect, mental and emotional abuse. Joe FC is right 100%, labelling individuals as failures and useless because they have not performed is counter productive. Calling players out, to “actually DO something” as if their international career is on the line is just so immature. This kind of media, out team does not need. I am interested to know, does the FFA have a communications or media policy at all? Does the FFA have media relations staff to manage Socceroos media exposure? It is obvious there is room for improvement with he way team Australia handles the media.
June 18th 2010 @ 2:03pm
Mike Tuckerman said | June 18th 2010 @ 2:03pm | Report comment
I have to say that I can see both sides of the coin here, Luke. Like you, I can’t quite believe that things have degenerated into a personal slanging match.
But as Fisher Price hints below, part of me thinks that Kewell should just ignore media speculation and get on the with the job.
June 18th 2010 @ 11:51am
Fisher Price said | June 18th 2010 @ 11:51am | Report comment
Kewell’s used to being pampered by his manager, the media and the FFA; now he doesn’t like it when someone calls him on the myth that he’s a star – poor dear.
June 18th 2010 @ 12:03pm
Old Yella said | June 18th 2010 @ 12:03pm | Report comment
Two things have to happen for the Socceroos to have any chance of winning against Ghana. Firstly they actually need to be motivated by the loss and fallout from the loss and secondly they need to not assume that Ghana will underestimate them.
June 18th 2010 @ 12:06pm
Mick of Newie said | June 18th 2010 @ 12:06pm | Report comment
The last person who derserves credit from this is Mike Cockerill.
However, the day that Aust invovlement in a major tournament is not diverted by another HK exclusive in the Daily Terror (“I should be dead”) is the day Kewell is entitled to ask for no special media attention from other journo’s.
June 18th 2010 @ 12:10pm
betty b said | June 18th 2010 @ 12:10pm | Report comment
The Aust football media finally get their day in the sun, off the lost pages that few but the dedicated read and onto the back page that every sports lover reads, and boy are they being found out. Know their stuff – no doubt. Sore losers – absolutely. Every sport plays the blame game but none so harshly as this bunch of under nourished and over expectant critics. Craig Foster talks of developing Australia’s football culture, apparently, from what he says, by behaving like a bunch of whingeing pommies.
I’m at the point of not wanting to watch SBS any more, or read any Sydney press, not for the team who I love regardless, but for the prolonged attack they have launched against our team.
I would like to agree with your line that it will spur the team on, but equally, I fear, it will destroy them and, more importantly, their mass of fans who, unlike the dedicated throng, involve themselves in this beautiful game only on big occasions such as this.
June 18th 2010 @ 2:10pm
Mike Tuckerman said | June 18th 2010 @ 2:10pm | Report comment
It has all become a bit of an unseemly mess, hasn’t it betty? Here’s hoping that we can claim the three points off Ghana and see a sense of perspective restored in the process.
June 18th 2010 @ 2:48pm
AGO74 said | June 18th 2010 @ 2:48pm | Report comment
Spot on Mike. It was awful the other day but we also have to remember we we are in the pecking order of things, how far we’ve come and what a result like the other day shows how far we’ve got to go.
THis time last week I was so excited about the World Cup. The loss to Germany was shattering but the fight that has occurred since has really disappointed me.
June 18th 2010 @ 6:11pm
Stephen Smith said | June 18th 2010 @ 6:11pm | Report comment
Betty B – “behaving like a bunch of whingeing pommies”
Ahh, that’s right – if in doubt, blame the English! You’re no better than Foster!
June 19th 2010 @ 2:43pm
betty b said | June 19th 2010 @ 2:43pm | Report comment
Stephen – in no way was I blaming England. I apologise for offending you. My intention was simply to state that our media has gone way overboard with criticism, led by Craig Foster. I used the term well known to many of us to compare his antics, but I certainly didn’t intend any offence (I love the English, they’re in the family), and I certainly don’t lay the blame at anybody other than the Aust media.
June 18th 2010 @ 3:29pm
Phil Hawkins said | June 18th 2010 @ 3:29pm | Report comment
Anyone detect a notable silence from Lucas Neill in all of this? I would have expected more from the captain in this hour of need, particularly since the other figurehead (the coach) is under a somewhat of a cloud. Combined with Neill’s distinct lack of leadership on the pitch against Germany (more interested in blaming officials for the back four’s clumsy attempts at offside), he has been very disappointing.
And although Cockerill has not named them explicitly, I can detect his frustration with Channel 9, whose continual fawning hero-worship of Kewell has been particularly painful.
June 18th 2010 @ 4:12pm
ItsCalledFootball said | June 18th 2010 @ 4:12pm | Report comment
This is not our best team alright and they are not in their career best form either.
I would have been much happier with Ogenovski and Colosimo in defense against the Germans, but then again they played in the A-League didn’t they . . . no chance of being selected.
June 18th 2010 @ 4:46pm
Vinay Verma said | June 18th 2010 @ 4:46pm | Report comment
Mike, Kewell is in a better place than Cockerill and can silence all the innuendo with one telling shot at goal..or two for good measure..I would have thought journalists had a thick skin and would not have to resort to a defence resembling a race relations dispute.
In the end journos have to be above individuals and report the game fairly and objectively. This is not always the case. How often do you hear an obvious bias in commentary of internationals? The answer is very often..it does not matter which sport..there are some independent journalists and these are worth reading and listening to. Maybe the Roar should run a piece on “Your Favourite Journo”
June 19th 2010 @ 5:30pm
Mike Tuckerman said | June 19th 2010 @ 5:30pm | Report comment
A big night indeed for Harry. We’ll finally see how fit he is, and whether he’s still capable of answering his critics.
June 18th 2010 @ 4:49pm
Apelu Tielu said | June 18th 2010 @ 4:49pm | Report comment
I don’t think anyone, in all honesty, would have expected the boys to beat Germany, though I do not think it was a defeat they had to have. I think the best we could have hoped for was a draw. In that sense, I applaud Pim’s gamble.
So I do not know why all the negative comments as if we had any realistic chance of winning. The only sad thing is that Tim Cahill will now not available for our next game. But I’m confident the boys can make the round of 16 if they have a positive attitude going in to their remaining matches; it’s all in the mind; that’s the main difference between winning and losing.
June 18th 2010 @ 5:20pm
sheek said | June 18th 2010 @ 5:20pm | Report comment
I’m fascinated at the way some Aussies, or make that many Aussies, are carrying on.
With all the vitriol being thrown around you would think we’re world cup favourites Spain who have just been spanked by Switzerland. Even so, I haven’t read the Spanish media carrying on like our lot.
Gee, it will be very interesting in the future whenever we’re one of the favourites for the WC & we lose a pool game everyone thought we should win.
It’ll be scorched earth ground zero day!!!
I’ve often wondered what “un-Australian” actually meant. Sadly, the present behaviour of some media & fans would be clearly identified as very un-Australian.
If ever a game has been set up for a squad to give its fans & media the “stick that up your a@&e, you bastards”, then this is most certainly it.
Even more so if Ghana have gone totally loopy, & are treating this game as a given…..