Evidence generation next are armed with the tools to play and play out

By Tony Tannous / Expert

It’s the first minute. The Young Socceroos captain Curtis Good takes a quick free kick deep in his own half,  playing it back to his goalkeeper Paul Izzo.

A couple of passes later the ball is back at Good’s feet via Izzo, and he turns and plays a ball into the feet of his holding midfielder, Jackson Irvine.

Immediately Colombia’s Jose Leudo presses Irvine from behind. He can’t turn and face the Colombian goal, so he plays a short square ball out to left back Scott Galloway, close to the sideline.

Galloway, with a Andres Renteria putting pressure on him, can’t go forward, so he turns back and plays it to his skipper.

Good, too, is quickly pressed by John Cordoba. Suddenly it’s three-on-three and the Young Socceroos are being squeezed into their left hand corner.

In the technical-talk game it’s what’s often referred to as being “boxed-in”.

One-on-one, all three Young Socceroos accounted for,  there’s very little space to operate.

Good, on the ball, is under immense pressure from Cordoba, with no obvious or open outlet.

Rather than panic, though, as many Australians teams in the past may have, he takes a touch and shifts the ball past Cordoba, towards Galloway.

In beating his man, he lures the Colombian attacker marking Galloway, Renteria, towards him.

Suddenly there is a small break from the one-v-one situation as Renteria leaves Galloway to try and dispossess Good.

But before he gets to Good, the central defender is able to get to the ball first and find Galloway.

Suddenly, with the two Colombians ahead of the Melbourne Victory left back, there is an opportunity to get the ball out of defence.

When Galloway turns, the Colombian that had been marking Irvine, Leudo, is forced to go across to shut Galloway down.

It leaves Irvine open, and Galloway is able play a square ball to his unmarked holding midfielder, who is now facing the Colombian goal, with no-one in front of him.

While there is pressure from behind from the back-tracking Cordoba and Renteria, Irvine can play an outlet ball out of defence to Danny De Silva, who has peeled away and found space on the left hand side of the halfway line.

While De Silva ultimately has his attempted pass into the feet of Adam Taggart intercepted, it is nonetheless an instructive build-up from Paul Okon’s men.

Coming in the first minute and being this team’s first build-up of the tournament, it showed that this batch of Young Socceroos, true to their manager’s word, was in Turkey to play, and play out.

More importantly, it showed that they had been instilled with the tools to play, and that’s a credit to the FFA technical team led by Han Berger and Alistair Edwards as much as it is to the work of current mentors Okon and Milan Blagojevic.

Ultimately the likes of Connor Chapman, De Silva and Adam Taggart are creatures of Australia’s development system, and, as I wrote on Saturday, it’s nice to see the early fruits of this hard work.

What the Young Socceroos demonstrated over the 90 minutes in Trabzon is that they have a clear understanding of how to play the indoctrinated 4-3-3 system.

With many of these players having lived and breathed he FFA’s guiding template for the past six or so years, their tactical and technical understanding came across in the performance.

Always looking to play out from the back through triangles, such as the one described above, it was very rare to see either of the central defenders hoof it long.

Indeed, if they were pressed and had no options, or couldn’t dribble past their immediate opponent, they would turn back to Izzo.

Only if Izzo was pressed and had no open options would the keeper play long.

Among the many encouraging aspects was that the team invariably looked to play forward angled balls, with the fullbacks, particularly Jason Geria, always presenting.

The fact they were able to get it into the feet of the talented 16 year old playmaker, De Silva, and the two wide men, Connor Pain and Andrew Hoole, so often, was most pleasing, particularly against a quality South American ball-playing opponent.

How often can we claim to have out-possessed and controlled such an opponent for large parts of the game?

Also pleasing was the mentality. Early, as the impressive Colombian left-footed playmaker Juan Quintero ran the show, the Young Socceroos stayed calm and disciplined.

Later, when Colombia equalised, the Young Socceroos might have gone into their shell. But they kept playing, and finished stronger.

While heart-warming, it wasn’t completely flawless, and there remains plenty for Okon and his men to work on in Turkey.

Primarily, I felt that Taggart, as the focal point in attack, was often isolated from his wide men, Pain and Hoole, as well as De Silva.

Often, I felt, the wide players may have tucked in, allowing for more combinations.

Certainly, as they build towards El Salvador on Wednesday morning, Okon and Blagojevic must ensure there is no complacency and they continue to execute.

To that effect, it was encouraging to hear De Silva talk about the importance of the mental preparation ahead of taking on the Central Americans.

What Okon and his boys will want to prove is that the process can produce consistently good performances, which should ultimately lead to results.

It’s the type of football that will also get the world talking and is a significant moment for those of us who have preached patience in the work being undertaken to shift Australia’s football focus from physical to technical.

What it should do is bring the skeptics, and there have been many, along the path.

Ultimately, it’s a performance that should not only be celebrated, but embolden the growing band of believers to strive for further technical progress.

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-25T16:52:47+00:00

Stevo

Guest


Correct!

2013-06-25T15:59:04+00:00

Tim Schuster

Roar Rookie


am looking for somewhere to follow the game can anyone help with a link pls?

2013-06-25T15:42:19+00:00

Dean

Guest


And now Pena.... I'm only getting a nothing commentary, can anyone tell me if we're playing even half decent? Says we're having most of the possession.

2013-06-25T15:23:21+00:00

Dean

Guest


Yeah, but so did Coca. :(

2013-06-25T15:11:36+00:00

dasilva

Guest


GOOOOOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL Brillante strikes

2013-06-25T08:21:01+00:00

Brick Tamlin of the Pants Party

Guest


I hope we've turned the corner too,following the Glory seems eerily similar to this scene from National Lampoons.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAgX6qlJEMc

2013-06-25T04:14:11+00:00

AndyRoo

Roar Guru


I really enjoyed the game against Columbia. Years of traumatic experiences has conditioned me to try and protect myself from getting too excited though. Bracing myself for a frustrating loss tonight.

2013-06-25T03:42:52+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


Smidgen more than a year to the first Aus Cup, woo!

2013-06-25T03:31:30+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


My only Glory away game so far was the last Melbourne Heart v Perth Glory game at AAMI and, well, it was a staggeringly disappointing game but at least in years to come I can say that I was there the day Perth Glory turned the corner ;) Well, I hope we've turned the corner, I'm pretty excited about it either way.

2013-06-25T03:26:57+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


Well that's not really fair on him - he WAS going to be signed by a mid-table Premier League Team in Everton. However, Work Permits got in the way. This is a big part of why we don't have that much in the way of youth in the Premier League, because of the adoption of work permits that specifically mention international experience.

2013-06-25T01:02:10+00:00

NUFCMVFC

Roar Guru


Yeah can understand how he was the type of player opposition fans love to hate etc, but he was a commanding presence at the back and a large reason for all our early trophies It is often the case that people are a bit different as coaches to they were as players,

2013-06-24T23:37:19+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Tony you be interested in this... off topic ...but have a read.. There was a decent turn out last night... quite impressed with Gallop as well as Charlesworth and Turnbul. I might add some very decent questions and ideas from the floor... Tho I would post some of the key things that impressed me.... in no particular order... Australian Cup will start in July 2014. Mariners expect to get the stadium rights to Bluetounge. Centre of Excellence to start building again and take two and a half years to complete. We will appoint coaches from within and believe we have our coaches for the next 10 years. Dutchie along with Arnie will try to set up our coaching academy vis the CC Association in a similar vain to Ajex... with Dutchie to develop a system for the coaching style where each year builds on the one before and to train and manage the coaching. The Mariners and the Central Coast Football school to work very closely together. 99.9 percent chance we have the second spot in the ACL with MV having the half spot. FFA to essentially pay the 2.5 million wages bill of each club and will make a monthly transfer to clubs to pay player wages. FFA looking at ways to reduce the number of FFA sponsors that clubs cannot use similar types like a sponsor having ford. From the floor a suggestion which the entire panel tho was an excellent idea was clubs to hold open days at their stadiums where fans could go round and look for a seat or seats and then go and see if they could get memberships for those seats. Mariners tho they have gone off the boil in the community engagement and will do the following as a minimum- Each player to be allocated a club to look after and included in this will be the player training the junior coaches. 13 clubs this year and 13 clubs next year to have the Mariners go in and do a complete look at training and development of their coaches. All players all coaches will go to these. BTW two more forums to go.

2013-06-24T23:33:52+00:00

mahonjt

Guest


How ben Williams was given a Visa, let along a match is beyond me.

2013-06-24T22:37:24+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Thank you Tony, great article. There were other examples in the first half as well where the Young Socceroos showed that patience, discipline and backing themselves to keep possession under pressure would allow them to find a way out. Doing so from the first moment underlines how fantastic this side can be. Just don't know how I'm going to stay up tonight and work the next day though :-(

2013-06-24T22:35:48+00:00

Franko

Guest


All, I take back everything I have said about Muscat. I took his brutal style as a player to his coaching, maybe this is a bridge too far. Hopefully he is using a 'do as I say, not as I did' mantra. Would hate to every see another Christophe Dugarry incident.

AUTHOR

2013-06-24T22:10:23+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


Another note from the U20s WC; Watched the second half of Spain v Ghana this morning. The referee was Ben Williams. Won't surprise A-League viewers, but looked like he swallowed his whistle. Spain won 1-0. Williams turned down a penalty claim from Ghana in injury time, looked a fair shout for obstruction. Earlier in the second half he didn't blow his whistle when a Spainish attacker appeared to be clipped in the box.

AUTHOR

2013-06-24T22:01:20+00:00

Tony Tannous

Expert


Thanks for the feedback all. Already thinking ahead to El Salvador and a few pointers; Mustn't be complacent, need to ensure that everyone is mentally prepared Okon had a chance to see the Turkey-El Salvador game live as it was at the same stadium, after the Colombia game Watching the highlights I note that Turkey's 3 goals came from rapid transition moments on the right, so targeting El Salvador's left could be an avenue. They appeared to play high, maybe because they were chasing. So there may be some space for Hoole, Taggart and Pain to exploit. Here's Okon's thoughts ahead of the match; "The players had to battle until the last minute (against Colombia) so we expected some tired bodies but we've recovered well," said Qantas Young Socceroos Head Coach Paul Okon.   "Football's all about emotions, it's all about enjoyment and moments like the other night, the result, the performance, you need to sit back and enjoy the moment.   "But we know it's step one in the direction that we want to go, we will face a good opponent in El Salvador and it's important for us to continue to play the way we've been playing since we started the program.   "We need to maintain that and not get anything else in the way of doing what we feel we do well..   "We've looked at a number of DVD's, but I think it was great to actually see them (El Salvador) play live, after our game the other night, against Turkey..   "They're a good team, they're typical street footballers, very good one v. one's, we're aware of that.   "They have one or two key players, but we feel that we have the game to beat them and we just need to continue the things that we're doing, maybe execute them a little bit better.   "If we have the same amount of chances as we did against Colombia - which I feel we will create - we need to maybe be a little bit more clinical."

2013-06-24T16:25:56+00:00

Matthew Skellett

Guest


Yeah I'll be staying up to watch it myself !!!!!!!! :-)

2013-06-24T14:18:50+00:00

Titus

Guest


SBS2....next game is Wednesday 12.45am(Tuesday night)

2013-06-24T13:47:54+00:00

trent

Guest


Muscat was definitley not afraid to challenge for the ball...or man.. or opposing manager!

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar