Socceroos face tough test to maintain perfect record

By Janek Speight / Expert

Australia’s 100 per cent record in World Cup qualifying so far has been expected, but nevertheless impressive. Next month, however, a trip to Jordan poses as a potential dampener in the quest for a fourth consecutive appearance on the world stage.

Although FIFA’s world ranking are an absolute farce – Romania inexplicably lie in seventh – Australia must ensure a near perfect record if they are to finish in the top two Asian-ranked countries.

Because while FIFA ranking are most of the time worthless – the amount of consternation surrounding Australia’s drop to 94th was ridiculous – unfortunately they do play a role in determining seeding.

The Socceroos must rank in the top two to assure them Pot 1 status for the third round of World Cup qualifying, therefore likely avoiding Japan, who are starting to regain form. Iran are currently 40th, followed by South Korea and Japan in 57th, 58th, with Australia lying just short in 61st (the UAE are next in 70th).

A defeat of Jordan would be a huge boost in other regards, however, and probably even more crucial.

If Australia win this match they will go into a meeting with Kyrgyzstan in Canberra on November 12 with a chance of securing top spot in Group B. With two games to remaining, against Taijikistan and Bangladesh, it would give Ange Postecoglou room to experiment with new combinations.

The squad for the Socceroos’ clash with Jordan on October is yet another strong one, strengthened by the return of previously injured or uncontracted stars Trent Sainsbury, Tomi Juric and James Troisi.

All three played vital roles in the Asian Cup victory, and Postecoglou’s suggestion that Australia’s depth continues to grow is spot on. It’s a promising era for the Socceroos.

Sainsbury’s inclusion is the most exciting; his partnership with Matthew Spiranovic has been one of the highlights during Postecoglou’s reign, though injury has always robbed the Socceroos boss of partnering them together for long stretches.

This is the central pairing that should realistically be first choice for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, and getting them together regularly over the next three years is essential. The way they complimented each other in the majority of the Asian Cup was promising.

Captain Mile Jedinak and first-choice keeper Mat Ryan are still missing, as is second choice keeper Mitch Langerak. Yet Mark Milligan’s solid performances recently make Jedinak’s omission unconcerning, while Alex Cisak, Eugene Galekovic and Adam Federici are more than capable between the posts. The latter’s penalty heroics for Bournemouth in the League Cup could see him secure a starting place.

Unfortunately, the other name on the Socceroos injury list is concerning, with Robbie Kruse breaking down again. The forward had used the last international window to secure a move to VfB Stuttgart, yet a hamstring problem will see him out for four weeks.

It is a sign of Australia’s current depth that when Kruse returns he will find it tough to break into the starting line-up. He has always been an automatic starter for the Socceroos, and likely will be again when he has proven his fitness, but who does he replace?

James Meredith is the latest new name added to Postecoglou’s growing list of debutants, though the 27-year-old Bradford City left-back will unlikely start against Jordan. Introducing him to the set-up to give Jason Davidson competition is the right move, however, with Aziz Behich so far failing to put pressure on Australia’s first choice.

Jackson Irvine and Chris Ikonomidis have dropped down to the Olyroos for friendlies with South Korea, a sign that Australia is taking all levels more seriously than they perhaps have in the past. These two matches are the last for the Under-23s before they face vital qualifiers for the Rio Olympics.

While Irvine and Ikonomidis more than proved themselves at full international level against Tajikistan, giving them increased game time is more beneficial than sitting them on the bench, or giving them a small cameo.

Aaron Mooy, Milligan and Massimo Luongo will hopefully start against Jordan, with Tommy Rogic used as an impact player. We know what Rogic can do, especially against tiring defences, and the aforementioned trio has gelled well.

Up front, it would be great to see Tommy Oar start alongside Tim Cahill and Mathew Leckie. The winger made his long-awaited return to professional football with Ipswich Town in a 3-0 loss to Manchester United, and we saw his understanding with Cahill against Bangladesh as well as Kyrgyzstan. Oar’s ability to whip in accurate through balls and crosses could prove vital against Jordan.

Australia are in for a hostile reception, and a one-goal win would be a huge result. Jordan are a difficult opponent and the wild predictions of 10-0 victories from the Socceroos’ last three games will be absent.

Three points in Ammam and then Kyrgyzstan in Canberra – where 12,000 tickets have already been sold – awaits for a chance to wrap up the group.

The Crowd Says:

2015-09-26T10:51:29+00:00

Jack

Guest


Morally excited about this match although it may be hard to stay up for. My two thoughts.... 1. We need a friendly on our bye date of 13 October 2. mustafa amini should be in out side and imagine a side with him luongo and rogic all on the park at the same time? Talk abou creative over load

2015-09-25T07:44:14+00:00

fadida

Guest


Better than the Valeri, Jedinak, Holman Axis of Evil? :)

2015-09-25T06:28:27+00:00

SM

Guest


You do realise the Wales are currently topping their Euro 2016 qualifying group, while the Dutch are about to fail to qualify for the 24 team tournament, right? Wales have been steadily improving for years, and since FIFA rankings are taken across a four period, which coincides with this improvement, it's no surprise they've shot up the rankings.

AUTHOR

2015-09-25T05:58:41+00:00

Janek Speight

Expert


Oversight indeed, cheers Torchbearer

2015-09-25T05:31:22+00:00

marcel

Guest


And 9 players from the two Blacktowns and Wanderers.....good to see the Western Suburbs still doing its job for the national teams.

2015-09-25T04:22:31+00:00

Brian

Guest


Didn't Uruguay win there 5-0. A good solid win shouldn't be asking too much

2015-09-25T04:00:40+00:00

Aljay

Guest


I would expect the Championship pays at least three times as much.

2015-09-25T03:55:41+00:00

Franko

Guest


Errr, he played against Man Utd a couple of days ago. I'm not saying an away to Wellington is not some sort of career high point, but I think he's playing on greener grass.

2015-09-25T03:45:21+00:00

Bondy

Guest


I dont understand why Oar doesn't come back to the A League if he stared here he'd almost be given an automatic position in the national team .

2015-09-25T02:59:00+00:00

Franko

Guest


What a spread of clubs these guys play for: Seiritsu Gakuen Tokyo, Japan Manly United FC (NSW) Tottenham Hotspur, England Emerging Jets Squad etc etc etc

2015-09-25T02:29:35+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


Paul Okon has named his squad for the u19 AFC Championship Qualifiers in Laos. AUS plays Philippines (next Friday), then Laos (Sunday) and Japan (Tuesday, 6 October). Full squad: http://youngsocceroos.footballaustralia.com.au/article/young-socceroos-squad-named-for-afc-u-19-championship-qualifiers/cez2kb6svouf1cs0mzzc04jkd

2015-09-25T01:08:55+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


Hey fuss, send me that spreadsheet you're working on please. For research purposes.

2015-09-25T01:05:52+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


Just like the ATP has a formula for ranking tennis players, Fifa has a formula for ranking Football Nations. The Australian Business Review has a formula for ranking Australia's richest people. Heck, "lads' mags" have a formula for ranking swimsuit models. You may not agree with the Ranking Formula, but it's the formula Fifa has adopted. Read the formula, create a spreadsheet & plug in the data inputs. You will no longer be confused about Fifa rankings. PS: I'm busy working on creating the spreadsheet to understand the Swimsuit Models ranking ... still researching the inputs. ;-)

2015-09-25T00:50:46+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


It does seem weird, however Wales have had a very good run of results as of late - mainly in Euro qualifiers - while teams like Netherlands and Spain have not. FIFA base their rankings on results. Qualifers gain you more points than friendlies. Tournaments gain you more points than qualifiers (I believe this is still the case, last i checked was 2 years ago). Therefore winning a lot of games in qualifiers pushes you up the rankings.

2015-09-25T00:16:37+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


"Aaron Mooy, Milligan and Massimo Luongo will hopefully start against Jordan, with Tommy Rogic used as a impact player." How good does that midfield sound? Most technically gifted and creative Socceroo midfield I've seen for a long time.

2015-09-25T00:07:44+00:00

Torchbearer

Guest


I don't know if it was an oversight, but Iran are Asia's Number 1 team at 40. The FIFA rankings have Wales at Number 9 in the world, ahead of England, Spain, NED....that seems weird?

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