A-League 2012/13 preview: Pressure Crooker at Sydney FC

By Tony Tannous / Expert

The biggest question heading into Sydney FC’s 2012/2013 season is whether new manager Ian Crook can shake them out of their pragmatic and reactive recent state, and instil a style of play that will have the punters coming back for more.

Recapping 2011/12, the Sky Blues finished fifth after winning ten games, drawing eight and losing nine. They made the finals, but crashed out after a 3-2 loss to the Wellington Phoenix in week one.

This season, the prized capture of Italian great Alessandro Del Piero should attract plenty of immediate interest, as we’ve already seen.

But the key to keeping those that have recently had their interest aroused coming back consistently will undoubtedly be the level of Del Piero’s play and that of his teammates.

In that sense, there’s already much pressure on Crook to get things right and ensure that Del Piero is integrated into his system as soon as possible, and that it flows seamlessly.

While any new manager deserves time to get things ticking, the expectation has been ramped up by the extra attention brought by Del Piero’s signing.

As has always been his way, Crook has adopted a relaxed approach to his work, with humour at the core, and that appears to have fostered a culture  of closeness.

Even Del Piero, it seems, was in a pretty relaxed mood at Tuesday’s launch of the A-League at Parramatta Stadium.

But behind Crook’s veneer of good humour lurks a shrewd football brain, one well versed in the modern technical trends thanks in part to his work at the NSW Institute of Sport.

At the heart of his modus operandi is a proactive style based on trying to get control through pressing high and dictating terms through possession and quick circulation of bodies and ball.

With his fullbacks, Fabio on the left and Brett Emerton on the right, getting forward regularly, you can expect to see much movement in the front third.

Crook’s team looks to be one set-up to transition the ball quickly into the final third, with the pace of the likes of Kruno Lovrek, Joel Chianese, Mitch Mallia, Ali Abbas, Yairo Yau, Dimi Petratos and Blake Powell bound to spring Sydney forward quickly.

But with Del Piero and youngster Terry Antonis comfortable at getting on the ball around the opposition box, and Lovrek also said to be a creative presence, compared at one point to Kresimir Marusic, there should be a bit of subtlety on the ball when Sydney are controlling games.

This dynamic and creative approach is likely to be a far cry from the often turgid style under Vitezslav Lavicka, and if there’s one thing Crook should focus on, it’s ensuring his team doesn’t wait for the opponent before he starts playing.

Being proactive is something rarely seen at Allianz in recent times, but an aggressive intent will help keep the punters happy.

While Crook appears to have front third options, to my mind there remains a few things that need to click behind them for Sydney to succeed.

What’s most important for the Sydney XI is what happens in the number six role, at the base of Crook’s midfield three.

After struggling in the first half of last season, McFlynn bounced back with some more polished late performances, and it’s this form he’ll need to bring from the start, enabling the front third to flourish though accurate distribution.

While Crook has obviously entrusted McFlynn with the captain’s armband, he has also shown pragmatism through the late signing of an experienced and hard-working midfielder like Paul Reid, ensuring he has options.

Central midfield remains one of a couple of areas Sydney look a little light in.

Of course, Crook will look to bring Antonis further on, but another midfielder I’ve been impressed by whenever I’ve seen him is Hagi Gligor. Gligor is a diminutive and mobile midfielder buzzer and is very neat on the ball.

Another area that Crook has been working hard on is the integration of his back four into the system.

Last season, only Melbourne Victory and Adelaide United conceded more goals, so it’s perhaps no great surprise to find three fresh back-four faces.

While an injured Emerton struggled higher up the pitch last season, he should be re-invigorated by a return to right back, from where he can roam forward.

But he and Fabio will need to be wary not to expose the central defence. This is particularly the case for Fabio, who was caught out a few times at Melbourne Victory.

While Adam Griffiths is expected to add strength alongside Pascal Bosschaart, they and Ivan Necevski will also be relied upon to play out from the back.

How well they manage this will have a big say on how far Sydney go.

There’s no doubt there’s a great deal of pressure on Crook to get things right, and the sooner he has Del Piero integrated and flowing, the smoother Sydney’s season is likely to be.

Prediction: Fourth to seventh.

Player movement
In: Alessandro del Piero (Juventus, Serie A), Kruno Lovrek (Qingdao Jonoon, China), Yairo Yau (Sporting San Miguelito, Panama), Adam Griffiths (Hangzhou, China), Ali Abbas (Newcastle Jets), Fabio (Melbourne Victory), Trent McClenahan (Central Coast Mariners), Vedran Janjetović (Sydney United 58, NSW PL), Blake Powell (Sutherland Sharks, NSW PL).

Out: Nicky Carle (Bani Yas, UAE), Mark Bridge, Michael Beauchamp, Shannon Cole (Western Sydney Wanderers), Karol Kisel (Slavia Prague, Czech Republic), Scott Jamieson (Perth Glory), Liam Reddy (Esteghlal, Iran), Bruno Cazarine (free agent).

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2012-10-05T05:40:06+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


Brilliant

2012-10-05T01:42:44+00:00

TC

Guest


I saw a good interview with Crook on Fox yesterday. He was impressive. He made the point that the recruitment of Del Piero is not about the short term, but about building a team for the long term. TC

2012-10-05T01:29:28+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


Great advertisement ... Ale Del Piero refuses to talk to FoxSports ;-) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HNsXYTSA10

2012-10-04T06:48:00+00:00

Titus

Guest


Playing a 4-3-3 I would suspect the midfield would be McFlynn, Antonis, Del Piero/Lovrek, with Del Piero and Lovrek doing quite a bit of interchange as the #9 and #10..

Speed - down the flanks. Make it happen Crooky! That is all. Thank you.

2012-10-04T05:11:55+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


haha was tongue in cheek comment but, yes the Dwight year was memorable but the standard wasnt that great. It was memorable because it was the first time. Its not surprising the HAL cherry was picked by all night and his chums, but was it good football they played? Good compared to now? I remember Dwight playing on a different wavelength and a lot of graft in the games. Although Corica was a good player to watch. In any event the first season was quickly Butchered before the club Czeched itself. .. as an aside do you think a season 1 team would fare well in the latest HAL environment. Fitness, technique, tactics, expectations, imports all seem to have gone up a notch. Wld SFC season 1 even bother a top 6 HAL team now?

2012-10-04T04:35:15+00:00

apaway

Roar Guru


Whiskeymac I'd contend that SFC achieved both those things in Season 1...

AUTHOR

2012-10-04T02:31:45+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


Agree whisky, think Crook deserves time, but there will also be some internal pressure to produce. I think a few of the great and undervalued things that Lavicka brought to Sydney were professionalism, stability and culture, and it would be a shame if any of these were lost

2012-10-04T02:16:46+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


Am mostly interested in seeing how the youngsters perform - Antonis, Chianese etc - so i hope they get game time. I also hope SFC give Crook the time he needs - more than ADP that club needs stability. I wld like them to finish in the top 4 AND play good football, which will be a first for the club i think =) .

2012-10-04T01:10:15+00:00

apaway

Roar Guru


There looks to be a lot more pace to SFC this season. Last season, they looked slow, with no-one capable of putting pressure on a high back four and as a result Sydney got swamped in the middle of the park and had to continually drop deeper. I'm eager to see Joel Chianese build on his impressive late season form, and there's a certain ADP who miht be able to control the middle of the park and play in his wide men a lot more effectively than happened last season.

2012-10-04T00:57:16+00:00

Newcastle Michael

Guest


What did he tell you? (I'm coaching 12 year olds next season!)

2012-10-04T00:49:17+00:00

Newcastle Michael

Guest


Sydney are going to be interesting to watch this season. Will they play a more adventurous style or will they continue as they were with a superstar up front? I can't help thinking that the hard graft of McFlynn just doesn't suit the style Sydney need, to attract and keep fans.

2012-10-04T00:14:11+00:00

striker

Guest


Del piero and Terry Mcflynn together what a mismatch Mcflynn is useless my 5 year son would play better than him.

2012-10-04T00:13:51+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


I have a lot of time for Crook and remember at the Northern Spirit .... IMO SFC have got a brilliant coach .... I had a brief chat with him yonks ago when at North Sydney Oval we were standing in the old spirit point stand when it was coming down cats and dogs and a number of folk were waiting for it to stop and also watching the light show in the sky... I asked him for some advice about shape and training with an U 12 team I had.... he spoke to me for maybe ten minutes before the storm cleared ..... when he stopped behind us had gathered a heap of folk all soaking up this football brain and the way he spoke and explained things was WOW TBH .... I learned more in that 10 or so minutes than I had in my football life before ... and he explained at my level...

2012-10-03T23:43:03+00:00

Cappuccino

Roar Guru


Antonis is going to struggle to get a place in the starting line up as long as Del Piero and McFlynn are available. Unless Crook decides to drop Terry (which is unlikely considering he's the skipper) both of Antonis' best positions- in the hole behind the strikers or in the deep-lying, Pirlo style position- are going to be taken. It's a shame, because Antonis is a better player than McFlynn (and if he isn't now, he'll certainly become a better player as his career progresses).

2012-10-03T22:11:50+00:00

cruyff turn

Guest


A good read, Tony. I'll be most interested to see what Crook does with Antonis this season. The boy has all the makings of being a future Socceroo, but I'm still none the wiser what his best position is - maybe he's a victim of his own versatility! Should Crook play him further up the field, or as a link between defence and midfield, in a Pirlo-type role? I get the feeling it will be the latter, but is this the place that best serves his talent?

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