Socceroos vs Germany: As it happened analysis

By Tony Tannous / Expert

Australia’s Socceroos World Cup players, Tim Cahill, Lucas Neill and Harry Kewell pose for team photo in Melbourne, Australia, Wednesday, May 19, 2010. AP Photo/Andrew Brownbill.

It’s been four long years since the Socceroos were bundled out of the World Cup in Germany in controversial circumstances, and at 4.30am EST Monday morning, Pim Verbeek’s men get their chance to get back on the big stage and have another crack.

In many ways, the Socceroos have done remarkably well to consolidate on their nation-inspiring qualification for Germany by making it to South Africa.

It was a long and logistical assignment through Asia, but Pim’s accumulators dotted their “i’s” and crossed their “t’s”. Even if it wasn’t always a job beautifully done, it was a job done.

Remember those barren and pain-filled 32 years between 1974 and 2006? In that respect, it’s just wonderful to be a part of this latest extravaganza.

How depressing would it be if the Roos weren’t a part of this? Just ask the Croatians, Turkish, Romanians, Irish, Czechs and Russians, or the Iranians or Saudis.

For that reason, we should be happy to be around. Backing-up is part of our ongoing development as a serious football nation. Look at the USA as an example.

But there’s little doubt the successful campaign four years ago raised the bar, in a big way. Australia now expects. Even to take it to a three-time world champion like Germany.

Monday morning we get a chance to measure how far we’ve come.

Verbeek has been able to get results in Asia, and in friendlies throughout Europe and against European opponents, but the Socceroos must now prove they can do it when and where it counts.

The level of organisation and functionality required in a World Cup is at a very high level, and the Roos must demonstrate, against the Germans, that they are organised defensively, that they remain composed, whether behind or in front, and that they offer some flow.

Moreover, Australia, as a developing football nation, must continue to paint a positive impression. More USA, Mexcio, South Africa and South Korea, rather than Greece, if you get my drift.

Against such a quality opponent, it won’t be easy.

What Australia might lack in comparison to the Germans from a technical perspective, they hope to make up for through tactical and mental discipline.

To that end, the tactics won’t be any surprise. The Germans will act, while the Socceroos react.

Under Verbeek we won’t offer anything like the control that Guus Hiddink brought to the team in Germany. That is for another day, maybe another generation.

As I noted in my technical dissection of Germany’s most recent friendly, Joachim Loew’s men will get on the front foot with a pro-active 4-4-1-1, where Mesut Ozil will play just off the central striker, expected to be experienced Miroslav Klose.

Ozil is the key, drifting right or into midfield, mixing subtlety with pace. Verbeek must have a plan to surround him and make his life difficult, but there are threats everywhere you look.

Their two central midfielders, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Sami Khedira don’t sit square, in a straight line, like our two holding midfielders. They play scattered, with Khedira slightly advanced of Schweinsteiger, always looking to press high.

On the left, Lucas Podolski “hugs the chalk”, offering width and pace, while Pitor Trochowski, on the other side, prefers to duck infield and link.

Threats are also posed from the fullbacks, especially Philipp Lahm, while Per Mertesacker is a monster at set pieces. And they pack a threat from the bench, with Cacau, Marko Marin, Mario Gomez, Thomas Muller and Toni Kroos all great options.

The Socceroos must to stay compact, disrupt, survive and apply a sucker punch.

Verbeek may spring a surprise by playing Jason Culina out on the left, with Carl Valeri slotting alongside Vince Grella, meaning Mark Bresciano starts from bench.

That would be as much about halting the threat of Lahm as it would be recognition that the Roos have looked far better with Valeri and Grella in midfield, and Culina higher up the pitch.

A Roos great, Brett Emerton, looks likely to resume his partnership with Luke Wilkshire down the right. As well as dealing with Podolski, they must try to take it to Holger Badstuber, if the youngster lines up at left back.

Harry Kewell might be thrust off the bench late if we are level or a goal behind.

Opportunities will be few, but when they do present, be that on the counter, or at a set piece, the Roos must pounce. If they are to get anything, it’s likely to be a classic smash and grab.

Right now, given where we are in the football world, that would do.

As Lucas Neill pointed out in the pre-match press conference, the Germans have earnt the right, we’re still trying to earn it.

A positive performance, even if not quite a positive result, would be a step in the right direction.

Join me here at 4.15am EST for a running analysis of the game in the comments section below and be sure to share your thoughts before, during and after the game.

The Crowd Says:

2010-06-14T04:07:31+00:00

James

Guest


Thanks for the reference Tony, another sterling job. In a nation full of 'know it all' pundits, your work stands a class above. The writing has been on the wall, or on the Roar, and it's all been written by you. Notice Cockerill is "now" saying PV should have rejuvenated the side. It doesn't go unnoticed to those in the know.

2010-06-13T22:14:05+00:00

Zippy

Guest


Get a spoon of cement and a glass of water, and harden up. Your team is hopeless. Go Deustchland

2010-06-13T21:47:16+00:00

The Bear

Guest


thanks for the blog and comments. everyone ; )

2010-06-13T21:03:52+00:00

Matthew Maguire

Roar Pro


why the high defensive line? it was the exact antithesis of what was needed and more to the point, polar opposite to every bloody match under Pim for 2 years now. got stretched wide through the middle and gave Ger acres of space behind the line to run at Schwarzer (and thank christ we had him - thought he butchered the Klose header but also saved it from being 7-0). just strange of a manager to be so insistent, to the point of being stubborn, about his formations and defensive play, to then, on the bloody day of the world cup (!), start experimenting. crazy. with all that said, 1-0 or 4-0, the Ger game was always going to be a loss so the equation remains the same - win two remaining games to progress or beat Ghana and draw with Serbia and hope Ger win against both. not all lost but Pim will need to get his head right and more to the point, rescue Aus confidence after such a hiding. (cheers for the updates TT)

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:39:19+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


FULL-TIME SUMMARY continued; Thanks for joining us on this running analysis of the Roos opening game at the 2010 World Cup. Unfortunately it wasn't the result or performance we were hoping four (edit: "four" was on my mind), on the end of hiding from the dynamic Germans. Be sure to stay with The Roar throughout the rest of the tournament. We'll bring you all the wash up from game one and the build up to the Ghana game, as well as live analysis of all the Roos and All Whites games, as well as key finals. Join me again tomorrow night for the live analysis of the NZ vs Slovakia game, and again on Wednesday afternoon for a live Socceroos and World Cup Q & A.

2010-06-13T20:33:38+00:00

SideShowBob

Roar Rookie


And not just beat Ghana, but knock a few in as well which with Cahill out is going to be a very tall order.

2010-06-13T20:31:51+00:00

jupiter53

Guest


The Germans look the best team so far in the World Cup by quite a distance. 2 wins needed was always likely. Can we do it? Rationally I doubt it - central defence slow, Schwarzer late for Klose's header, poor midfield performance defensively and where are our goals coming from? However neither Serbia or Ghana is in Germany's class and surely we can't be that poor again....here's hoping!

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:30:41+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


FULL-TIME SUMMARY; The hope, going into this clash against the three time world champions, was that the Roos would compete and even grab something, but all this match served to underline was the huge golf in class between us and the world’s best. We still have a long way to go. While we're all bitterly disappointed and about to unleash (to borrow the Socceroos marketing slogan for this campaign) on the Roos and Pim Verbeek, spare a thought for the quality of Germany, everything we should aspire to be. Not only mentally tough, but technically proficient and perfectly prepared. Movement, class and compsure!!!! There was some hope across the nation ahead of this match, but to my mind it was largely misguided, especially after witnessing the Germans last warm up and comparing it to the disjointed Roos preparation. We might be able to compete on the world stage, but not yet with the likes of a German team that is on the rise. Maybe with a team at the peak of its powers, but not a team on the slide, to borrow the description used by Roar reader James in a recent piece on this forum. Verbeek must shoulder the blame for not rejuvenating the side. Germany on the other hand are clearly a team on the rise, with some gifted youngsters in Ozil, Mueller and Kedira mixing it up with experienced players in Klose, Lahm, Schweinsteiger. Simply magnificent to watch, a template to work from. How the Roos respond will be the key. They must beat Ghana. That was always the key game. Nothing short of three points will be enough after coping four goals here.

2010-06-13T20:13:17+00:00

SideShowBob

Roar Rookie


Thank the maker for the final whistle. It was getting beyond embarrassing. I'd say 2 wins in the final 2 games was still possible but for Cahill missing the next game.

2010-06-13T20:13:14+00:00

Matt

Guest


Tactically all over the place. If you are gonna play a high line (with dinosaur centre halves) yuo have to close down the ball. They had way too much time to pick their runners from deep (Ozil, Muller Khedeira) and we got cut to shreds because of it. Would be some hope if Cahill not sent off (two-game ban minimum). Add to that yellows for Neill and Moore.

2010-06-13T20:10:45+00:00

SideShowBob

Roar Rookie


Delete. Gateway error. Double post.

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:10:41+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


The goals from Podolski, Klose, Mueller and Cacau. Full time summary to follow

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:08:53+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


94'; FULL-TIME, 4-0 Germany. Outclassed

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:06:33+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


90'; Germany look happy with their four, and sitting back a bit now, happy to let Roos have it

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T20:02:36+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


85'; A little bit of late possession for the Roos wth Chipperfield getting down the flank for one cross to Rukavytsya and Holman

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T19:57:00+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


81'; The quick and tricky Marko Marin on for the outstanding Podolski

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T19:56:17+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


79'; A good build up from the Roos results in a Culina cross to the back post, but do you want a measure of the quality and discipline of the Germans? Who was the man busting a gut to get back, at 4-0 up, to make a defensive header? Yes, Thomas Mueller.

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T19:52:48+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


75'; Jedinak on for Emerton, damage limitation. Truth is, damage has been done. Let's hope it stays at four.

AUTHOR

2010-06-13T19:49:28+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


74'; Some respite? Ozil replaced by Mario Gomez. Great performance, shame I didn't make him captain in my fantasy team.

2010-06-13T19:48:49+00:00

mds1970

Roar Guru


Socceroos being shite - maybe I could believe that. But the bullshit call of the red card proves beyond all doubt that this match was fixed. I won't be watching any more of this World Cup. I want to watch fair sport, not something that's been scripted by dodgy underworld bookmakers.

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