All class: AEK dish up a performance to remember
By Tony Tannous, 26 Jul 2010 Tony Tannous is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- A-League, AEK Athens, Alex Brosque, football, Hirofumi Moriyasu, Mark Bridge, Sydney FC, Sydney Festival of Football, Vitezslav Lavicka
One of the refreshing aspects of what has been an excellent A-League pre-season so far has been the opportunity for Australian football followers to see some quality players dish up some high intensity football.
Whilst ridiculous prices, a long time bugbear of mine, and fairly poor promotion have resulted in fewer fans than expected at a couple of the events, what has been refreshing so far has been the serious nature of the contests.
Teams like Everton, Boca Juniors, AEK Athens, Rangers and Blackburn have come here with full squads and an attitude to work.
These are s no Mickey-mouse end of the season tours. In the main, they have been very serious preparations for the upcoming season, with emerging players likes Seamus Coleman, Magaye Gueye, Victor Anichebe and Marcelo Canete impressing not only their own technical staff, but the Australian football public.
For the A-League clubs involved, they’ve had valuable hit-outs. While both Sydney FC and Brisbane Roar were unlucky not to get a draw against Everton, and the Wellington Phoenix knocked off Boca, the two Melbourne sides didn’t fair so well.
In a feisty game against the Victory, Boca dominated, while the Heart were also second best against Everton. But neither side were embarrassed.
Yesterday, at the SFS, we witnessed the best performance yet from a visiting side. This was a super effort from Greece’s third club, AEK Athens, which left a disappointing host in Sydney FC flattered by the closeness of the scoreline.
It might have finished 5-3, but in truth the Greeks were at least a three or four goal better side.
Controlling the midfield through the experience of Pantelis Kafes and the energy of his youthful sidekick Savvas Gentzoglou, a future Hellas international if ever there was one, Sydney couldn’t get a touch until the final 10 minutes, by which time the damage was done.
Playing in a flat line as part of Sydney’s 4-4-2, central midfield duo Terry McFlynn and Sydney’s new signing Hirofumi Moriyasu were powerless to stop the onslaught, especially with the creative types, Nikos Liberopoulos and Ignacio Scocco, dropping back to crowd out the midfield.
This is a very well drilled 4-2-3-1, managed by the excellent Serbian Dusan Bajevic, a former AEK player now in his third stint at the club.
What was so impressive about the performance was its intensity and how sharp they looked in tight areas. Clearly a couple of early warm-up games in Europe have helped.
Club legend Liberopoulos is back after a couple of seasons in the Bundesliga and it’s as if he never left. You only had to see the amount of number 33 AEK shirts around the SFS to know how revered he is by the fans.
While he and Kafes set the tone by getting on the ball with their astute touch and poise, they had able support from central defenders Daniel Majstorivic and Kostas Manolas, who suffocated Alex Brosque and Mark Bridge.
Brosque may have bagged a brace, mainly due to the generosity of Kafes and Ioannis Arampatzis, but I don’t recall him being this anonymous since Vitezslav Lavicka arrived just over 12 months ago.
While many of the experienced AEK players stood up, equally impressive were the younger brigade.
During the week I heard from a long time The Round Ball Analyst reader ‘Sir Alex’, now based in Athens. He suggested I keep an eye out on Argentine playmaker Scocco. It was astute judgement as ever.
Whether out on the right, or left, or through the middle, Scocco was a mixture of pace and skill, jinking and twisting the Sydney defence one way, then the other. Some player.
Sir Alex was also high in opinion of Scocco’s compatriot, Ismael Blanco, AEK’s main goal getter, and his mobility and technique was another feature here.
There is something about these Argentine diminutive types in the front third. As if there weren’t enough in South Africa a few weeks ago, they’re all over the place.
A week or so ago we saw Marcelo Canete of Boca turn on a virtuoso display against the Melbourne Victory at Docklands, toying with the likes of Grant Brebner, Rody Vargas and Adrian Leijer. Reports suggest he was equally impressive against the ‘Nix.
Graham Arnold, at the Central Coast Mariners, certainly looks to have brought in one of his own in Patricio Perez. If the playmaker is anywhere near the level of Scocco or Canete, he will be the player to watch this upcoming season.
It wasn’t all Argentinean though yesterday, with two Brazilians, in Leonardo and Eder, also catching the eye. There was even a young Aussie, in Nathan Burns, making a cameo.
In years to come, as the likes of Gentzoglou, Manolas, Scocco, Leonardo and Eder make their mark across Europe, many downunder will remember the afternoon they first laid eyes on them.
What a privilege it was.
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- Explore:
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July 26th 2010 @ 1:35pm
OneJayBee said | July 26th 2010 @ 1:35pm | Report comment
I saw the Everton game and agree totally with Tony – Sydney were competitive back & middle, a bit behind at the ‘sharp end’ – mind you they seemed to get a valid penalty appeal ignored….
People shouldn’t forget Sydney aren’t full strength at present either and are trialling a few people like that young tall striker who scored yesterday. But yes, ALeague clubs get one ‘marquee’ player if they are lucky, the Euro clubs (especially the bigger ones) have them on their bench!!
Looking forward to seeing the weds games in the flesh to get another look at how things are shaping up. Hope the crowd picks up big time, it needs to be an annual event…
July 26th 2010 @ 5:00pm
Tony Tannous said | July 26th 2010 @ 5:00pm | Report comment
On the subject of the crowd at yesterday’s double-header, which a few here have braced, at first I thought the price of $29 for the cheapest seats was a pretty decent one.
But then I checked to see what the cheapest child tickets were, and they are the same $29 Category 4 tickets.
What’s worse, there is no Cat 4 family ticket.
The cheapest family tix are the Cat 3 ones at $120.
July 27th 2010 @ 12:27am
Midfielder said | July 27th 2010 @ 12:27am | Report comment
Vinay
Australia has a long way to go in Football terms… there are many challengers …. there are many problems…
But if we could encapsulate it into one theme it would be quality…
On the plus side …we have heaps of players… Australia’s best sporting brand in the Socceroos… a small but growing media …. and slowly a better understanding of football by the non hard core rusted on… and I think a greater acceptance by the hard core rusted on to the WC bandwagoners…
On the negative side … we have soooooooooo few quality coaches at park level … until we are free to air this will never improve … an example I coached a cricket team U 15 & 16 two two grand final wins and undefeated in the second year by simply listening to Richie say where to ball and how to hold your bat…
Our structure is still all over the shop… in RL, RU & AFL they have a district side who have reps who go and play for the local side… in football we have park sides with rep teams … then we have two different levels of state teams of which many played in the NSL… then the A-League where aside from the Mariners the teams have not been able to connect to the various associations…
Carrying nine national teams is great but it cost heaps and we have over 200 players overseas… HHHHHMmmmmm … Very small budget our TV deal is one tenth of the current AFL deal….
Having said all that we are developing a following for the A-League and have had a youth league running for two years now and there are heaps of young players in the A-League squads this year… U 13 internationals to keep our best young players and individual coaching at top level for our best 60 young players aged 6 yo 16… meaning that quality thing is being addressed at least at the top level.. I do worry about the late developer if they will ever be picked up ….
Looking forward if we can make it to the next media deal Football will be much stronger….
Until then on existing budgets and players I think we punch a little above our weight and that is a good Aussie thing…