A-League minnows make big start to the season

By Emma Kemp / Roar Guru

Central Coast have declared themselves the little engine that could, as the A-League’s top title contenders failed to get their motors running in the opening round.

Neither defending champions Melbourne Victory nor perennial threats Sydney FC managed to stamp early authority on the competition.

The Sky Blues had the better of the 1-1 draw at home against a depleted Melbourne City but will need some more time for their new players to gel.

Victory’s big guns Fahid Ben Khalfallah and Besart Berisha lacked their usual firepower in a goalless draw away to Adelaide, who were without Socceroos Tarek Elrich and Eugene Galekovic in Jordan.

And for all the talk of Spanish infusion, the flavour offered by the Reds was decidedly dull.

Signs that the frenzied Josep Gombau era has dissipated surfaced in his successor Guillermo Amor’s first match at the helm.

The Barcelona legend was quiet on the sidelines as a lethargic United failed to capitalise against 10 men after Leigh Broxham was handed a second yellow card for a soft foul on midfielder Isaias.

Amid all the focus of big-money signings, it was the less financially sturdy sides that produced the most pluck.

Wooden spoon favourites Central Coast stormed to a 3-2 home win over Perth via two Diego Ferreira penalties that added to Irish striker Roy O’Donovan’s opener on debut.

It vindicated new coach Tony Walmsley’s refusal to resort to defensive football against teams with more resources at their disposal.

“When you’re operating at the floor of the salary cap against teams that are spending more money on players with vastly more experience, it’s fair to assume that at times we’re going to be challenged by that,” Walmsley said.

“But that’s the bit we relish, and it won’t stop us home and away trying to play in that way.

“We can’t kid ourselves that we’re home and hosed and here we go.

“What we will have done though is given ourselves the great belief we can approach the A-League with that proactive style and be successful with it.

“Going away to Brisbane and Melbourne City in the next two weeks is a whole new challenge and we’ll be relishing that trip to Suncorp next week.”

Another coach humming with confidence against the odds is John Aloisi, whose unfancied Brisbane are top of the ladder after thrashing an error-ridden Western Sydney Wanderers 3-1 in the season-opener at Pirtek Stadium.

The pressure was on Aloisi for his first A-League match in charge since Melbourne Heart sacked him a season and a half ago, but even without Socceroo Matt McKay his squad emphatically put their torrid off-season behind them.

Last season’s wooden-spooners Newcastle also joined the party with a gritty 2-1 win away against Wellington for new Jets coach Scott Miller.

David Carney headed in the first and provided the perfect through ball for Milos Trifunovic’s winner, as the Jets hung on despite being reduced to 10 men for the closing 10 minutes.

The Crowd Says:

2015-10-12T01:34:10+00:00

josh

Guest


When 2500 people turn up to a midweek ACL match Lionheart they're minnows.

2015-10-12T01:23:12+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


fair enough, though I'm not sure the odds referred to in the article are the same one offered by the bookies, or the global enterprises as they are these days.

2015-10-12T01:16:00+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


and it's even stranger that you would headline Central Coast as 'A League Minnows' given that they are twice premiers and twice runners-up, and they won the grand final in 2013 and have also been grand-finalists on three other occasions. I mean, if you count success on trophies won, that puts them in the top three most successful clubs, above the 'perennial threats' Sydney. They're not minnows at all.

2015-10-12T01:14:21+00:00

cm

Guest


I get the sentiment Lionheart, and tend to agree, don't worry, but let's take a look at what those words actually mean. Against the odds - well, sportsbet were offering 2.20 on WSW on 3.20 on the Roar. So... it was against the odds. And unfancied - well, a lot of pundits (mistakenly) didn't "fancy" the Roar's chances. So... yes. They were unfancied. Now the bookies might have been wrong (actually, bookies are never wrong, as their prices are set by the money being wagered and not by the actual chances... but I digress) and the pundits might have been wrong but that doesn't mean that the words used here are incorrect.

2015-10-12T00:51:57+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


It's strange that you would describe Roar's win as 'against the odds' and Brisbane as 'unfancied'. You have obviously fallen for the rather strange forecast made by some, that Brisbane Roar's off field ownership issues would impact on field performance. Even a quick look, like say, at the Roar roster, would tell you that will not be the case. As Jade North said, 'we all had the chance to leave, but only one player did'. And he was going to leave anyway.

2015-10-11T22:16:25+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Its great to have the football back ...

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