Ange: Socceroos will handle hype

By Steve Larkin / Wire

From hopeless to hyped, Ange Postecoglou isn’t fussed what you think.

“I handle everyone writing us off okay. I think I’ll handle all the hype,” Postecoglou said.

Postecoglou’s Socceroos, morphing from a one-man band into a ensemble of sweet scorers, are now coping with bounding Asian Cup expectations.

Australia clobbered a hapless Oman in Sydney on Tuesday night, winning 4-1 to advance to the quarter-finals.

They’ve banked eight goals, all by different scorers, in two cup games. A week ago, it was who else but Tim Cahill can score. Now, it’s who can’t.

The drubbing of Oman followed a 4-1 blitz of Kuwait, sprouting prospects of Australia claiming its first meaningful soccer silverware.

And Postecoglou is ready for such hype.

“I have got a real belief in this group of players and the way we’re going about things. And it has never been an issue for me what the external view is of us,” he said.

“I still think people underestimate us, which is great. But from my perspective, nothing changes.

“It’s not just about the Asia Cup. We’re going into a four-year World Cup cycle.

“We started 14 months ago … it’s about building a new team, changing the way we play and that is what we’re doing.

“A lot of the guys out there are in their early 20s or mid 20s and have got a good four years in them and we have got to make sure we keep improving.

“And whatever comes our way along the way, we will just take.

“But whether people think we’re favourites now or they still think we’re ranked 300 in the world – it doesn’t make any difference to me.”

The Socceroos travelled to Brisbane on Wednesday to prepare for Saturday night’s showdown with South Korea – the winner tops their group.

Given their positive goal difference – six – over the Koreans, a draw would be enough for the Socceroos, who expect captain Mile Jedinak to return from an ankle injury.

For most, the Socceroos’ improvement appears sudden – Postecoglou entered the cup with two wins from a dozen games as Australia’s world ranking slipped below 100 for the first time.

But for the coach, it was all about time.

“People forget I virtually had two, three games in charge and we were thrown into a World Cup,” he said.

“There’s no way I was going to radically change everything we were doing, it just wouldn’t have been fair.

“But since the World Cup, every camp we have had, we have progressed.

“We have become more proactive. We have adjusted the roles of the players.”

Australia remain ranked 100, a slot which bemused Postecoglou who said the Asian Cup showings belie the lowly status.

“I’m sure there’s some bloke at FIFA right now who does the rankings who has got a headache trying to work out how a team ranked as low as we are can play that kind of football,” he said.

“But that is life.”

The Crowd Says:

2015-01-14T22:44:38+00:00

The Bear

Guest


Absolutely. I mused about this yesterday on the Roar. Bring on Burns up front, he may unearth an option that could prove more useful than others. Keeping him on the bench could let a good thing go stale. I think AP is the kind of guy that never wants to lose but he knows the bigger picture too.

2015-01-14T21:46:17+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Bto said: "....a lower possibility of meeting Japan in 1/4 final." The Socceroos cannot meet japan in the quarter final. There is a strong likelihood that they will not meet until the actual final (going on results so far and current form).

2015-01-14T21:39:33+00:00

BtoThePower3

Guest


Socceroos have to be on the top of Group A to have a lower possibility of meeting Japan in 1/4 final. Again, socceroos have the luxury of resting a couple of key players like what happened in the 2011 Asian Cup. On that occasion, Osciek decided to keep the momentum. So, what is the philosophy of this better coach, Ange? If this socceroos team is "Brisbane Roar plus aerial attack", then one or two key players, like Luongo and Cahill, may be rested to give some new players to practice. This is based on the fact that Ange would rest Broich after 70 minutes sometimes while Murvey make Broich to play every minute in the season. Both Ange and Murvey were successful. So, that comes down to something more than just one single determining factor. Full trust is on Ange. However, still, it is interesting to see the level of subtlety to be seen. Some coaches like momentum, but the disadvantages are higher predictability from the opposing side, lower energy conservation for possible 6 matches, higher possibilities to injuries on major players, and lesser play time for new players.

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