Tom Rogic must turn up against Thailand

By Evan Morgan Grahame / Expert

The Socceroos trudged off the pitch in Saitama last Thursday, crestfallen and soundly beaten, having offered up a performance against the Japanese that barely flickered.

Of course, the 2-0 defeat exposed a handful of tangible issues that, in the depressing aftermath, throbbed luminously, demanding to be addressed: Brad Smith’s damaging inclusion, Robbie Kruse’s impotence as a central striker, and Mat Ryan’s highly questionable short passing are just a few.

But perhaps most concerning was the manner in which Tom Rogic waned, a semi-transparent version of himself, a wispy echo of our most talented attacker, shimmering only briefly into relevance before fading away completely.

Rogic was substituted 70 minutes into the Japan defeat, and departed the field having had 41 touches – a total that would end up being fewer than that of all of his starting XI colleagues, fewer even than James Troisi, who had been substituted ten minutes before Rogic.

Rogic also attempted the fewest passes of the Australian starting XI, and at the second-worst rate of accuracy. According to the FFA match stats, he made no successful dribbles, and had just two shots, only one of which was on target.

Clearly – and keeping in mind the high-scoring brief the Roos have set themselves for the Thailand game – this sort of ineffectual turn cannot be repeated. Attacking coherence will be the most important factor; the Thais are already out of qualifying contention, and it would not surprise anyone to see them set up specifically to avoid an embarrassing blowout defeat.

Thai pride, the only thing left for them to play for, will be protected by a packed defence, and if Rogic, the Australian player most able to ignite a fine attacking performance, wallows in irrelevance again, a gruelling third-placed playoff beckons ominously.

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Obviously, Tom Rogic is at his best with the ball at his feet. Unlike, say, Matt Leckie – whose pace makes him a dangerous off-the-ball threat at all times – Rogic is not as effective away from the action. His pace is average, he has no leap to speak of, and he isn’t the most laterally agile.

What he does have, crucially and delightfully, is an ability to dribble – honed on the now nationally under-funded futsal court – under extreme pressure, a foot skill that pairs beautifully with his penchant for suddenly shooting with devastating power and accuracy.

We saw a glimpse of how elegantly he can negotiate tight spaces with the ball at his feet at the beginning of the Japan game, switching the ball from one foot to the other, feinting, hooking the ball with the instep, having drawn three opponents, Rogic nearly releases a teammate, only for the pass to be picked off.

This moment, of course, came during the frenetic early phase, before Japan receded back into the stolid defensive formation they took up for the bulk of the contest. Space was a little more available then, and as the match wore on, it became clear that the Japanese weren’t just going to allow Rogic to flourish unmolested in dangerous central areas.

More than half of Rogic’s successful passes in that game were hit from his inside-right position out to Leckie on the wing. Japan were actively forcing Australia out to the wings, confident as they were in Maya Yoshida and Hiroki Sakai’s ability to out-muscle and out-jump the out-of-position Kruse in the air.

The two Australian wing-backs’ crossing was consistently poor in any case, so for Rogic to spend so much of his time on the ball enabling a strategy that the opponents were largely untroubled by – not to mention were actively encouraging Australia to continue – is tantamount to spending at least good hour engaging in inconsequential thumb-twiddling. A waste, suffice it to say, of Rogic’s arsenal of skills.

It seems Rogic has trouble imposing his will on a game when the going gets tough. In Scotland, playing for a juggernaut club that tends to keep an iron vice-grip on the domestic competitions, he tends to thrive when fit, enjoying the increased space and time that comes when you’re part of a team other clubs fear and respect.

It’s almost as if he’s softened because of this, or at least has become too accustomed to the good life. He can saunter up and strike a howitzer from the edge of the box when teams give him the space – like they did here playing for Celtic.

But if he’s marked tight, bullied, and denied the freedom to work in, then he tends to flake away.

Ange Postecoglou’s team went into halftime a goal down to Japan, and really the Roos manager should have made changes then, designed specifically to revive Rogic’s dwindling involvement.

Perhaps removing Jackson Irvine, and dropping Rogic back into midfield in search of time and space? Perhaps removing Kruse and sending on Tomi Juric or Tim Cahill earlier, so that Rogic might have had more time to play off a natural, anchored central striker? Perhaps bringing on a centre back and moving Mark Milligan up into midfield, whose passing might have aided in bringing Rogic back into the fold?

Obviously the passing of Aaron Mooy was sorely missed, and would surely have linked Rogic more closely to the build-up play. But once Mooy’s condition was confirmed to be too poor to be involved, then the reverberations that rippled out from his absence should have been mitigated for. Irvine’s distribution is, based on the evidence against Japan, not an adequate replacement for Mooy; Irvine’s role in the second Japanese goal, losing possession, adds further testament to this.

Rogic is a special talent, but he’s a player qho relies so much on his teammates – and, to perhaps an equal extent, the opposition – creating a favourable footballing environment for him.

He is a bespoke part, a delicate, high-spec component that cannot just be thrown into any old machine and expected to function properly.

It’s Postecoglou who is most responsible for creating these conducive conditions, certainly from a systemic perspective, but some responsibility must also be laid on Rogic himself.

His country needs him desperately tonight against Thailand, and he has to answer the call.

The Crowd Says:

2017-09-05T09:36:35+00:00

Zaccaa

Guest


MANCHESTER CITY WILL WIN THE EPL!!!!!

2017-09-05T08:18:11+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Actually, I have to say I kinda miss it. The drama was fantastic.

2017-09-05T08:14:52+00:00

shirtpants

Roar Guru


It's not all doomed if we don't, but I for one love the atmosphere surrounding the world cup. it makes it that much more exciting when we participate in the finals. It's definitely a buzz, gets the media talking it up and kids get excited. We don't need it per sei, but it's definitely a big plus.

2017-09-05T07:41:22+00:00

Caltex TEN & SBS support Australian Football

Guest


The Melb Storm filled the AAMI ground to capacity with their last game of the premiership season and now tonight football, will fill the ground to capacity. It's about time the Vic government enlarged the ground to a proper 60k rectangle football stadium. The football landscape in Melbourne is changing.

2017-09-05T07:35:22+00:00

Sydneysider

Guest


"Twelve years after John Aloisi's penalty broke the 32-year qualifying hoodoo, why does Australian football remain so heavily dependent on World Cup qualification? So much so that many fear the sky will fall in on the game if the Socceroos don't progress." Gee, I have to ask this, is Richard Hinds a Melbournian?? Because that quote from above is not accurate. If the Socceroos don't qualify for Russia 2018, the domestic game will continue, the A-League will continue and more kids will continue to play the game. I expect us to qualify but it's definitely not dire consequences for the game in Australia. If you want dire consequences, then take a look at rugby in WA.

2017-09-05T07:26:00+00:00

Caltex TEN & SBS support Australian Football

Guest


There was no chance of us playing our football on that Thai home ground surface. Yes it was 2-2 playing away on a wet soaked cow paddock ankle deep in sticky mud and the Thais needed to win to keep up with the leaders and so they had an incentive to get a result. This time the Thais have nothing to play for and we are at home all to play for on a near perfect fast surface, which is going to suit our high pressing, pressured football game. And at the end of the day, we need to chase those goals to get that goal average up.

2017-09-05T07:24:37+00:00

Sydneysider

Guest


"lack of flexibility." This is the clincher and what has been killing us in this second round qualifying campaign. His lack of flexibility during a game is so annoying. Even managers like Conte, Guardiola, Ancelotti who are all a class above Ange, have changed tactics mid game. Ange doesn't. His ego won't allow him to.

2017-09-05T06:15:48+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


+1

2017-09-05T06:10:47+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


Kiwis draw 2-2 with Solomon Islands. Means aggregate 8-2 I think, so NZ playoff with 5th place South America team. So pleased we don't do that anymore.

2017-09-05T06:07:11+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Yes, that's the lament of every football fan on the planet. I'm sure the Argentinian fans would love Leo Messi & Sergio Aguero turning up every time they play for the national team. I'm sure the Portuguese would love CR7 turning up every time he plays for the national team. There is no footballer on the planet who turns up every big match. They're human. Not robots.

2017-09-05T05:50:43+00:00

Stevo

Roar Rookie


Would have loved him turning up to the Japan game where we needed him far more than the confed cup games.

2017-09-05T05:47:29+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Hinds is well of the mark on a number of points. He's a bit of lightweight when it comes to football. It's not his sport, and it shows.

2017-09-05T05:43:13+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


He seems to be off his meds again.

2017-09-05T05:42:05+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


But the style is rubbish, Mid. Since the Asian Cup the Roos have been awful to watch. One scuffed shot on target against Japan.

2017-09-05T05:41:12+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Yeah, I know... I surprised myself there, Caltex. Could certainly be a case of be careful what you wish for if it happened.

2017-09-05T05:31:55+00:00

chris

Guest


I agree. That line of thought of 'roos not making the WC bringing the demise of football in this country gets trotted out time and time again. Game tonight is a sell-out btw.

2017-09-05T05:22:25+00:00

Fadida

Guest


I disagree Caltex, and so will Ange. Throwing caution to the wind will as likely end up costing us a goal in transition and upset the team balance. Playing without a player in a defensive capacity on the left will be suicide. How did the rankings affect the last result between the 2 sides? It was 2-2 I recall

2017-09-05T05:19:53+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Yes, very interesting article. I think Hinds is way off the mark if he thinks the National Team is still the engine driving Football in Australia. It certainly isn't the financial driver; nor is it the driver for hearts & minds that are playing the game. Our National Football Teams are now in their rightful place - the cherries at the top of the cakes. The National Teams can unite all football fans in Australia - whether you're new football, old soccer, a bitter, a plastic, an active fan, a prawn sandwich fan, ALeague club owner, NPL club, grassroots club, no club but just play with mates on weekends, futsal, beach soccer, PFA member, Sunday hack, ref, administrator, etc. etc. Tonight all of us - everyone who loves the Game - tonight, we all truly are Football. But, tomorrow, we go back to being at each other's throats with our club allegiances. So, the National Teams are no longer the foundation upon which Football stands in Australia.

2017-09-05T04:27:50+00:00

chris

Guest


Nem not sure if you read this chicken little article by Richard Hinds. http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-04/richard-hinds-world-cup-wobbles-leave-socceroos-in-a-tight-spot/8868130

2017-09-05T04:21:42+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Real Don't disagree but can't see the change happening .... FFA have to many things on their desk to allocate management time to a new coach.... Like Venger and Pep ... AP values style over substance ... Pep without Messy and in a competition were a number of teams have equal playing strength is not the same as in Spain & Germany when his teams had by far the best players... Sometimes and IMO WCQ is one where results do matter ... not saying we want a Pim either ... but its a great debating point...

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