Five stories of the 2015 Asian Cup so far

By Mitch Sabine / Roar Rookie

Every nation has now played at least one match at the 2015 instalment of the Asian Cup.

Australia silenced some doubters by slotting eight goals past some albeit rickety defence. The Socceroos have already secured a place in the quarter-final stage.

So while the Australian public may be concerned with green and gold only, there is actually 15 other teams with finals aspirations – not that you would know it with the one-sided media coverage.

So what are the biggest stories to come so far?

1. Massimo Luongo
Seriously, how good can this kid be?

One goal and two assists from two games may not scream superstar, but make no mistake, this guy can play.

Ange Postecoglou’s faith in the 21-year-old by including him in the starting line up may have raised a few eyebrows, but the cries of discontent were quickly softened after Australia’s opening two matches.

Luongo had a hand in just about every attacking move in which Australia has looked dangerous, and while Oman and Kuwait may provide the same danger as a malfunctioning cap gun, it’s still a good sign for the Swindon Town product.

He’s best with the ball at his feet and taking on defenders and is an accurate passer, the ideal number 10 for a modern game which revolves so much around players with those attributes.

Mentally, he still needs some shine, and his nerves were evident in the first 15 minutes of the Kuwait game before settling into it.

With Luongo, Robbie Kruse, Matthew Leckie, Tommy Oar and Tomi Juric, Australia now has the talent in the final third to trouble defences for the next decade.

2. Crowd numbers
In short, the crowds at the Asian Cup have been pathetic.

Not that you can blame the Australian public, who are delirious with sporting fatigue after the Indian Test series and are now amidst a hectic schedule including Big Bash every night, the summer of tennis, the upcoming One Day International cricket series and the upcoming cricket World Cup.

Last December, the organising committee’s CEO Mark Falvo was adamant fans would get behind the event.

Well, you wouldn’t be able to tell so far, with an average attendance of 16,870 being heavily inflated by last night’s bumper 50,276 crowd at ANZ Stadium to watch Australia’s 4-0 thrashing of Oman.

You could have been forgiven for thinking the crowd at ANZ for last Saturday’s North Korea versus Uzbekistan game was one of a Canterbury Bulldogs versus North Queensland Cowboys rugby league match, so dismal was the 12,078 crowd that petered into the 82,000 capacity stadium.

Likewise, you might have thought the 6840 in attendance at Suncorp Stadium Monday night were there for a Reds trial game, not a major football tournament.

But again, it’s not the public’s fault the committee’s marketing strategy has been so poor – you’d hardly even know the Cup was on, unless you’re a football fanatic.

The advertising for BBL04 has been clever and continuous, likewise for the ICC World Cup and while those two events may have more financial backing than the Asian Cup, it’s no excuse for the lacklustre promotion of an event on home soil which Australia has a good chance of winning.

3. Cross with the Socceroos
They may have put eight goals away so far, but at times Australia is still stuck in the Pim Verbeek and Holger Osieck era with the amount of nothing crosses fired into the box.

It’s hard to blame them when you have one of the best aerial threats of all-time in Tim Cahill bobbing up around the six yard box, but the best sides know when to whip one in and when to cut it back.

Australia has looked their most dangerous when they play directly in the final third, as do most sides, or when breaking at pace down the wings and firing in well-aimed crosses with defenders scrambling.

But all too often when play breaks down on the wing in the final third, the ball has been passed back to Australia’s fullbacks who fire in nothing crosses from 30 yards out with defenders mauling Cahill.

It is hard to argue though, when the Socceroos’ best goal so far came from Matthew Leckie’s superb outside of the foot cross, albeit a low, hard, curling one which was absolutely class.

4. Is 16 too many?
I’m all for an equal competition which gives the opportunity for lesser quality sides like Uzbekistan, Palestine, Bahrain and Qatar to compete in major tournaments. Lord knows, Qatar is going to need it to escape major embarrassment at the farcical 2022 World Cup.

But from a spectator’s point of view, wouldn’t the Asian Cup be better suited to say, a 12-team tournament in the fashion of the CONCACAF Gold Cup?

The tournament would work in the same fashion, 12 teams divided into three groups, with the top two teams from each group automatically progressing into the knockout stages.

The third placed teams from each group are then ranked on tournament points, with the top two advancing as well.

For example, in the 2013 Gold Cup, in Group A Panama and Mexico finished first and second, with Martinique third. In Group B, Honduras finished first with Trinidad and Tobago second and El Salvador third.

In Group C, United States finished first with Costa Rica second and Cuba third.

This meant Panama, Mexico, Honduras, Trinidad and Tobago, United States and Costa Rica all automatically advanced the quarter-finals.

Of the third placed teams, El Salvador finished with four points while Cuba and Martinique both finished with three each, but Cuba had a better goal difference meaning El Salvador and Cuba advanced to the quarter-final stage.

The average crowd attendance for the group stage at the 2011 Asian Cup was 5036, and while Australia is on track to top that number by at least 10,000, it is clear the fans want higher quality games.

5. Canberra hates football, and football hates Canberra
With the highest quality match to be played at Canberra Stadium (South Korea versus Oman) drawing only a crowd of 12,552, organisers must be wondering why they even bothered.

You can hardly blame the locals though, with the slate of games in their city offering all the appeal of regurgitated vomit.

South Korea versus Oman, South Korea versus Kuwait, China versus North Korea, UAE versus Qatar, UAE versus Bahrain, Iraq versus Palestine.

Yawn. When are the Brumbies and Raiders back again?

The Crowd Says:

2015-01-26T13:15:57+00:00

max perram

Guest


Just an update, it appears we will go past 650,000 even with 60,000 missing out on the Au v UAE match being played in Newcastle. This guy jumped the gun simply because he wanted to write something negative. How noticeble it is that his limp argument has led to him refraining from further comment. What a coward!

2015-01-22T15:54:34+00:00

NUFCMVFC

Guest


Oh wow this article is an interesting find Looks like you wrote it far far too soon

2015-01-19T01:23:47+00:00

max perram

Guest


18.457 for this one. What,s that noise? oops Mitch has just collapsed. Let,s see how many League AND Union games get that this season!

2015-01-18T10:21:23+00:00

britesparke

Roar Rookie


Where is Mitch? Miiiittttcccchhhhh! Canberra has an excellent crowd for the China vs KDPR game and it is a dead rubber! Still awaiting the official figure but have been hearing that it is close to capacity! 20K for two non-Australian combatants is exceptional!

2015-01-18T02:10:34+00:00

max perram

Guest


It seems Mitch has collapsed under the weight of evidence against his biased article. I posed 3 simple questions and he has gone into hiding. As i searched for this web page the headline about attendances to smash the 500,000 mark popped up. I guess he,s absorbing a meal of weighty truth.

2015-01-16T20:36:32+00:00

Spud

Guest


Yes. I got to no. 2 and went straight to the comments to watch the backlash! 23,000 at suncorp for Japan v Iraq.

2015-01-16T07:05:56+00:00

Anthony Portero

Guest


Canberra crowds crap? I'll have you know that our stadium can only hold 25,000 people. 12,000 is superb for two teams that don't have much support here if any at all. We got a solid 8,000 in the pouring rain which was what Brisbane got in a stadium with a capacity of 52,000 in good weather.

2015-01-16T06:44:52+00:00

max perram

Guest


Take out the Kangeroos from league and you have no teams, One mercilous flogging after another. What would the average crowd be in England without the English. A double header for a semi final to avoid embarrasment? You can fool some of the people some of the time.........

2015-01-16T04:37:16+00:00

max perram

Guest


Mitch-Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiitch where are you?

2015-01-16T04:03:46+00:00

max perram

Guest


At least not as bad as League and Union!

2015-01-16T04:01:44+00:00

max perram

Guest


It has probably got something to do with the NRL They have lied about crowds for years. I also could quote many games of figures reduced at football on NRL grounds and conversly inflated at NRL games. The real NRL average is probably around 13000. Even their commentators can,t find the spectators. I guess they are in the carpark! The figure given for the Japan game at Hunter was a farce.

2015-01-16T01:16:19+00:00

Brad

Guest


There have been way too many rubbish teams so far in this tournament for it to have been anything more than a chore. Looking forward to the group stages being over.

2015-01-16T01:04:03+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


You say there were "6840 in attendance at Suncorp Stadium Monday night". I go to most Roar home games at Suncorp and know what a 17,000 crowd looks like (being about average crowd this season). No way, absolutely no way, is that 6840 figure correct. At least 17,000 - but more like 20,000. Also heard Fox commentators question official attendance figures at Sydney the other day. Not sure who's doing the counting, but they can't count.

2015-01-15T23:56:42+00:00

max perram

Guest


I am aware it is Rabbitohs i cut it short just for this article,

2015-01-15T23:52:39+00:00

max perram

Guest


I note that the auther of the above yawns when he mentions the Brumbies and Raiders and no wonder! I will pose some questions to you Mitch and i would like a reply please. If France played Scotland on a rain affected Tuesday in Doha what do you think the crowd would be for a Rugby Union game? If the Kangeroos played Samoa on a rain affected Wednesday in Tokyo what do you think the crowd would be for a Rugby League game. Just one more while you are thinking- what do you think the average crowd will be for the cricket World Cup? As cricket is our national sport then it would be reasonable to expect 35000 on average to put it above the AFL based on your assumptions. I look forward to seeing a crowd figure for something like Zimbawe v Ireland. Perhaps now you will get the point. Please reply to my questions with no comments only your crowd estimations. I look forward to these with great interest!

2015-01-15T22:16:51+00:00

albatross

Roar Pro


"Rabbitohs"

2015-01-15T22:05:19+00:00

Dinko

Guest


With defence to Canberra, I travelled down from Sydney to watch South Korea vs Oman and the weather was attrocious. It had rained in Canberra the Thursday and Friday before the game and on the game day, 2 hours before kick off there was a heavy down pour which made me even doubt the game would go on. This rain lessened but continued the whole game so 12, 552 for a game in the rain between 2 counteis with no large diaspora in Australia I think is a great result.

2015-01-15T13:45:20+00:00

max perram

Guest


The comment about 15000 at world cup semi for league referred to the game in Oz.

2015-01-15T13:26:27+00:00

max perram

Guest


Compared to the rugby league,s farcical world cup made up of countries that don,t exist in their world, full of third rate NRL players i would say the attendances are very good. And that was played in a country with 3 times our population. You have chosen to include the smaller numbers yet fail to mention that a number of these were rain affected and are played midweek. The average is higher than the NRL average and had 10% of the publicity. The last league world cup saw just 15000 watch the kangeroos play a sem final. While league is a small sport not even in the top 20 in the world it is dwarfed by the Socceroos attendances and they are ranked 100, in the world. Melbourne Victory currently average 30% more people in attendance than the Rabbits! As i type the Iranians have just had 23000 at their game. It is worth noting that the Socceroos are our best attended national team.Only a handfull of the other games have had under 10000 how many did you think would attend? Look at cricket the grounds are empty and in Sydney the crowds were poor against India. Your comments are simple bias

2015-01-15T10:36:17+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Like I mentioned above part of the reason those events had high averages was due to their use of double headers throughout the tournament as well as having multiple host nations in some cases. This will go down one of the most well rounded tournaments imo. How pathetic is this crowd in Homebush :P

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