Juric can be Socceroos’ striker for years to come

By Domenic Trimboli / Expert

There are certainly question marks and more than a few ‘what-ifs’, but there’s every chance Tomi Juric could lead the Socceroos’ frontline for the next decade.

It’s been a scrapbook month for the 23-year-old. A well-taken goal against the champions of Italy was followed by two (sorry Golec) decisive goals to give his team an unlikely passage into the Asian Champions League semis.

Sandwiched in between was the most coveted jewel of them all – a call-up to the Socceroos squad for upcoming friendlies against Belgium and Saudi Arabia.

As the blueprints of generation-next continue to be drawn up, Juric finds himself in a fantastic position to stake a real and legitimate claim to the apex of Postecoglou’s 4-2-3-1.

With the sad but inevitable departures of Tim Cahill and Josh Kennedy not too far around the corner, the Socceroos are looking precariously wafer-thin in the striking stocks.

Assuming Tim Cahill and Josh Kennedy do indeed call it a day post-Asian Cup, Ange will be looking for a new leading man to spearhead the regime of tomorrow.

And despite still being relatively raw and unproven, you get the feeling that it could well be Juric.

There are those who have heralded Juric as Mark Viduka-reborn. But it’s completely unfair, unwise and unproductive to christen any new prospect as the next so-and-so; a cursed procession of supposed ‘Harry Kewells’ will be quick to tell you that.

Juric is not Viduka, nor will he ever be, though he has the sort of rare panache the Socceroos’ frontline has craved since the V-Bomber’s exit.

He fuses physicality with deftness; just as comfortable being the target-man as he is rolling defenders and running the lines. For a bulking presence, he’s light of foot and not short on speed, with a pestering work-rate that keeps opposition honest.

And the boy sure can finish.

Juric also has this understated ability to manipulate defenders into misjudgment; he’ll show enough of the ball to entice a challenge, before using his frame and change of pace to gain the crucial half-yard advantage.

It’s subtle and all-action all at once, and encapsulates the type of game Juric likes to play – in your face, on your heels and off your shoulder at any given time.

This well-roundedness, this spectrum of styles, is what ultimately sets Juric apart from his contemporaries.

The man who wore the number nine shirt in Brazil, Adam Taggart, exists more as a pure finisher, a specialist, a poacher; one who, although blessed with speed and directness, almost solely relies on the service of others.

Matthew Leckie has shown promise when playing up-front, but in this current Socceroos set-up, his talents are best used out wide rather than as the focal point.

Eli Babalj is perhaps a prime candidate for consideration. The 22-year-old has endured an unfortunate run with injuries since moving abroad, but is beginning to show the sort of form that warrants close attention.

Australia is lucky in the sense that we have a vast network of young striking talent scattered across academies and reserve teams in Europe and beyond. Of course, these players will need to convert their potential into something more tangible if they ever want to be touted for selection.

But for now, Juric is firmly towards the top-end of the line of potential suitors. And there are few barriers standing in his way.

So far, consistency has been his sorest area. And it’s something we’ve seen in the past week. A forceful first-leg performance against Guangzhou contrasted an indifferent second-leg showing – yet he showed he’s no shrinking violet with a super, super penalty.

Even in what was largely his breakthrough season last year, Juric managed only scored eight goals in 20 games for the Wanderers, with 10 of those appearances coming off the bench. A modest return, but hardly befitting of an on-song international striker.

It must be said that a few niggling injuries and his coach’s constant tinkering somewhat limited what he could have achieved; he averaged only 53 minutes per game. Still, Popovic should be applauded for his management of Juric throughout the season.

There were times when Juric’s focus could have been spoiled by whispers of foreign interest and increasing fan expectation, but Tony Popovic did well to keep the young striker grounded, holding him back at the right times and giving him the confidence to explode when the right opportunities presented themselves.

It’s tough work being a striker in the A-League and Juric is now well aware of the pitfalls of the position. Fail to hit the ground running at the start of the year, and you run the risk a risk of becoming a stutterer, finding form in only brief infrequent pockets and never really establishing the rhythm and feel needed. And that’s as true for a career as it as for a season.

Though in the year ahead, Juric will be the undisputed driving force of the Wanderers attack. Without the familiar support of Ono and Hersi, he’ll need to shoulder much of the impetus going forward. It’s a responsibility you imagine he’ll thrive on.

We know that Ange sees club form as a major pre-requisite for national team inclusion. Should Juric have a stellar year for the Wanderers, there’s no reason why he can’t cement the green and gold nine as his own; for now, and for years to come.

The Crowd Says:

2014-08-30T08:46:57+00:00

Cameron

Roar Guru


You SHOULDN'T just be handing out caps though. Diminishes the Socceroos jersey. Selections need to be particular.

2014-08-30T03:21:21+00:00

Davo

Guest


Considering how good the Newcastle Jets youth system is, I am surprised there are no players from that squad.

2014-08-29T00:31:25+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Big fan of Brillante - he just keeps stepping up when given the chance. De Niese is an incredible story - personal tragedy, living in a foreign country at 13, not many other South American nationals stay long at River Plate but this Aussie did, told to keep working hard until he turned 18 to get his passport because he is backed by the academy, they still rate him, he can play anywhere it seems except goalkeeper and striker. Not to just go off a YouTube clip but watch No. 8:

2014-08-29T00:19:47+00:00

Ben of Phnom Penh

Roar Guru


This is an ASEAN tournament. Clubs are not obliged to release their players.

2014-08-28T22:30:26+00:00

Aljay

Guest


Personally I think Gligor will surprise people by where he ends up in a few years time. Very composed for a 19 yo. and is learning how to do the simple things well against men. Dare I compare him to Brillante? Also, I know next to nothing about Gavin De Griese, but I'm hoping that an Aussie playing for River Plate will be looked at.

2014-08-28T11:41:41+00:00

Barca4life

Guest


I rate him highly than Taggart and even Babalj put this way. We haven't had a CF like him since Viduka not saying he is like him but his game is a similar ilk to Viduka. Can hold the ball, can link play and can score goals. Whilst Taggart is a good finisher, and Babalj has a similar game to Juric but isn't a good finisher unlike Juric.

2014-08-28T11:08:03+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


We need options so if Juric can put in a full season or two of performance then all strength for us; similar with Babalj who if he keeps going is likely to get the nod from Van Basten. All about taking your chances when they come. Still we might be shuffling attacking midfielders forward in lieu of out-and-out strikers - we have or are going to have quiet a few (wanted to say 'glut') of these types coming through if we are lucky in the next few years. Leckie and potentially Halloran seem suited out wide with pace but with potentially the likes of Awer Mabil come through (and any of De Silva, Amini, Ikonomidis and so on...), these guys may move centrally if Juric, Babalj, Taggart et al don't fire consistently at national level and bring others into play.

2014-08-28T11:00:49+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Agree with Aljay but also this is a prep tournament to look at other players as well. U19 AFC team announcement will really show where the Young 'roos and Okon are at. Expecting Mabil, De Silva, Gligor to be in but there will be more overseas call ups as well. That team should not be one to mess with. New Zealand U20 WC is one we should not miss out on.

2014-08-28T10:55:09+00:00

SVB

Guest


Actually, it's more like an U/6 soccer game or a bunch of kids playing in the school yard with no sense of positioning or tactical nous. Does it kind of remind you of anything?

2014-08-28T10:44:26+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Is that basically every Stoke City game? Centre back throws a ball/chip into the box and everyone jumps for it.

2014-08-28T10:38:43+00:00

SVB

Guest


If I want mediocrity I'll throw a chip on the ground a watch a bunch of seagulls fighting over it.

2014-08-28T10:23:40+00:00

Aljay

Guest


I think it's the right choice to let Ikonomidis fight for his squad place at Lazio. Leaving for 2-3 weeks this early in the season could set him back 12 months.

2014-08-28T09:24:50+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


@Terry I don't think NRL, AFL & SuperRugby is a decent standard. So what? Should fans of those competitions stop watching? You might think the Costa Rican Primera División is not a decent standard? So what? If we only cared about watching the highest standard, general sports fans should only watch the Olympics & football fans should only watch the QFs of the Uefa Champions League.

2014-08-28T08:57:13+00:00

Domitian

Guest


At this stage he has a lethal shot and hunger to score and can hold the ball up. At times though, his hunger for goal causes him to ignore his team mates and I think he would do well to think about his game a bit more. A good striker does more than just score goals.

2014-08-28T08:33:20+00:00

Terry

Guest


I don't dislike the a league fuss- I just don't acknowledge it as a decent standard. svb it is not trolling to point out mediocre players merely telling the truth. If you wish to delude yourselves that the a league is decent football then that's up to you but people who submit articles of that nature can't be surprised if other real football fans who acknowledge quality choose to add comments denouncing such misinformation. If the socceroos are to rely on this 'player' for the next ten years then they will remain the least supported of all this country's national sporting teams.

2014-08-28T07:19:33+00:00

Brian Orange

Roar Guru


No James Demetriou or Chris Ikonomidis again. Have they done something to upset Paul Okon or Ange Postecoglou?

2014-08-28T07:10:32+00:00

SVB

Guest


Just report the troll. He is an AFL fan boy who keeps copying and pasting the same thing.

2014-08-28T06:56:41+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


@Terry We get it - you don't like A-league & you think it's crap. You cut & paste the same "A-League is mediocre" comment in every post, every day. I reckon it's tedious & quite childish.

2014-08-28T06:44:36+00:00

Ben of Phnom Penh

Roar Guru


De Silva feeding these two could be good to watch. A couple of decent keepers there also.

2014-08-28T06:39:35+00:00

Greg

Guest


And what exactly does that have to do with Tomi Juric?

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