Wanderers ready for Al-Hilal's off-pitch intimidation

By Ben Horne / Roar Guru

Western Sydney goalkeeper Ante Covic has declared the Wanderers won’t be intimidated, even if Al-Hilal fans resort to dirty tricks on and off the field when the team arrives in Riyadh for the second leg of their Asian Champions League decider.

The Wanderers were subjected to disruptive and potentially dangerous behaviour in Guangzhou, China for their ACL quarter-final, when locals deliberately caused car crashes with the team bus and shined laser pointers into players’ faces during training and the match.

Covic had a laser shined directly at him when saving a penalty early in the tie-clinching match against Guangzhou Evergrande, and said he and the Wanderers are expecting similar shenanigans from the passionate Saudi Arabian supporters.

Laser pointers were first used at Saudi venues back in 2006, and King Fahd Stadium with its capacity of 65,000, is known for being a gauntlet for opposition supporters.

The veteran shot-stopper said if Al-Hilal try to disrupt the Wanderers, they will live to regret it.

“We’re not going to be intimidated,” said Covic.

“We’re not going to care what they’re going to throw at us.

“We were in China with 50,000-odd people throwing bottles and yelling at us. We couldn’t even walk off the field without security coming to get us, so that’s not going to faze us.

“They can do what they want.

“We’re going there with the mindset that something probably will happen.

“(But) if they’re thinking of throwing any tricks, they’re going to be doing it to the wrong team.”

In Guangzhou, the Wanderers say they were spurred on by the outrageous tactics of the locals.

From dogs being set loose during training sessions to intruders door-knocking and prank-calling the team hotel at 2am the morning of the match, the Wanderers thought they’d seen it all.

That was until the trip to the ground, where the team bus was hit from the front and rammed from the back, forcing the players to change vehicles.

Then within minutes, two cars suspiciously crashed into each other directly in front of the new bus, attempting to delay the Wanderers’ journey to the ground.

Western Sydney lost 2-1, but the away goal was enough to guarantee their path to the semi-finals.

“It was a very, very suss bus crash. The boys were looking at each other going, `alright, this is what you’ve got for us.’

“It really fired us up more than anything.

“That’s the nature of our team.

“Throw anything at us and we’ll come back at you twice as hard.”

Covic said one thing the players weren’t going to worry about was the officiating.

“That’s out of our hands,” he said.

“The only thing we can be worried about is what we can control.

“If they want to try little things like (50-50 calls going to Al-Hilal), that’s something we have to deal with in a professional manner.

“We’re going to be disciplined on the field and do everything we can do to win the game.”

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-28T12:46:05+00:00

Leonardo

Roar Guru


Wanderers have started it by taking a woman to the game. :) Saudi Pro League games are usually Men Only. Wow. But AFC have forced them to allow women in for the final. Saudi women are banned from voting in state or national elections, going to a pool or gymnasium, driving a car and cannot get a passport. They can't open a bank account, leave home, marry or enter higher education without permission from a male parent or guardian. Two different Pro League teams were investigated for alleged sexual harassment and assault, but charges were withdrawn without going to court. A teenager girl originally claimed that she had been gang-raped, but because she left home without a male relative to accompany her, she was punished by the court instead and persuaded to drop the charges.

2014-10-28T04:15:09+00:00

Josh

Guest


Of course just getting this far is a wonderful feeling but I think we have earned the right to finish this one off with a win. If nothing more than to silence the 'choker' crowd.

2014-10-28T03:48:59+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


It'll be wonderful regardless of result. Parramatta won't be sleeping Saturday night.

2014-10-28T03:41:49+00:00

Josh

Guest


Wonderful or horrible, it could easily go either way.

2014-10-28T03:20:38+00:00

Arnold Krewanty

Guest


Saudi Arabia is one of the strongest police states in the world & they take looking after foreigners very seriously so their population isn't tainted. barring jet lag, there won't be any worries for the players at their hotel/compound or getting to the game.

2014-10-28T00:21:19+00:00

Chris

Guest


The Wanderers have a massive opportunity to take the biggest football prize in Asia and the players well being is crucial. The experience they had in China will give them that edge as it will be something they learned to overcome. The Saudis want to win this as this is their life . The whole Australia backs the Wanderers it will be a wonderful night next Saturday .

2014-10-27T23:43:29+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Wonder if the team will be taking a bit of their own security? Not that I expect anything to happen but to ensure they remain in control of every situation, it might be helpful. I think the team leaves later tonight.

2014-10-27T22:31:59+00:00

rmc

Guest


Haha I sat watching the guanzhou team bus broken down in from of their hotel, Novotel parramatta, right before the game. The mechanics couldn't "make it" due to traffic so they 'sadly' had to walk a km or so to the game. The wallabies know how to get to homebush... via police cavalcade

2014-10-27T22:10:03+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


There's no place more intimidating in world football than running the gauntlet that is Parramatta Road.

2014-10-27T21:54:44+00:00

ciudadmarron

Guest


Nice one!

2014-10-27T21:12:42+00:00

Franko

Guest


"Then within minutes, two cars suspiciously crashed into each other directly in front of the new bus, attempting to delay the Wanderers’ journey to the ground." This is a trick borrowed from the Westies themselves. How many times have away teams going to Parra had to drive along the M4...?

Read more at The Roar