Bert's buying time to figure out his Socceroos strike force

By David Schout / Expert

Bert van Marwijk displayed a typically forthright Dutch approach at this morning’s 32-man Socceroos World Cup squad announcement.

As journalists shot questions at the Socceroos boss, he was frank and assured. Failing to understand a question in his second language, he let a reporter know his confusion. When a journalist presented something rhetorical, he shrugged and didn’t add to it.

Not rude, just direct. Like Pim Verbeek and Guus Hiddink before him, it seems you know where you stand with the Socceroos’ new Dutch boss.

It’s a bluntness that seems to be well received on Australian shores. A cut through the media spin, if you will.

One aspect of questioning he was far from direct on, however, was the strikers he plans to take to Russia in just 38 days. Unlike the early years of this century when striking options were plentiful, van Marwijk knows there is a distinct lack of players who can hold the line against world-class opposition.

So unsure is van Marwijk on who he will take as attacking options, he picked an unprecedented nine attacking options in his extended squad. This contrasts heavily with just four picked in Verbeek’s extended squad of 31 in 2010, and five from Ange Postecoglou in 2014.

The nine are Tomi Juric, Matthew Leckie, Tim Cahill, Daniel Arzani, Jamie Maclaren, Andrew Nabbout, Dimi Petratos, Nikita Rukavytsya and Apostolos Giannou.

He has said he will only take ‘two or three’ in the final 23-man squad.

The squad of 32 announced this morning will be cut down to 26 early next week, and several of these casualties will be striking options.

So why has he picked so many in this position?

Well, to buy time – a precious commodity for the Dutch boss.

From now until next week, there are very few opportunities for players in the squad to prove their worth. Most have finished their respective seasons, and there are no training sessions scheduled.

The extra week gives him time to consult further with his assistants and scouts on who to select.

It seems there is likely just two nailed-on guarantees (of the nine) to make the final squad, and that is Tomi Juric and Matthew Leckie, who are also likely to start for the Socceroos against France on June 16.

All the others will be nervously biting their nails this week (some more than others), although Tim Cahill may have breathed a sigh of relief this morning as van Marwijk hinted at his importance to the side.

“He’s a special case. He’s special in everything,” the coach said of the 38-year-old.

“He’s a player who can make a difference… also a player who won’t be nervous playing in front of 80,000 people.”

Since returning to Millwall on January 29, Cahill has played just 63 minutes of football in ten appearances off the bench. His double for the Socceroos against Syria in October was the only time he has scored (in all forms of football) in the last 12 months.

Van Marwijk said goals were naturally influential, but far from the only aspect he would look at.

“It’s important players score goals, especially strikers, but I also know players who don’t score goals for a few months.

“I will nominate a striker who I think makes the team better even if he doesn’t score goals at that moment.”

Another player fans were eager to hear about was Melbourne City young gun Daniel Arzani.

The Socceroos coach’s thoughts were both diplomatic and teasing.

“He’s a player who can make a difference, and I like players who can make a difference,” he said.

“Maybe a World Cup is too early for him but… I won’t hesitate to nominate him.

“I’m happy he’s in the squad now.”

He said he hadn’t considered Arzani’s eligibility to play for both Iran and Australia, and whether he had thought of capping him in the pre-World Cup friendlies as a future investment.

Pressed further on attacking options, van Marwijk was quick to point out the different calibre of strikers in the squad. That is, the larger frontmen of Juric and Giannou, versus the pace of players like Leckie and Nikita Rukavytsya.

“Both strikers sometimes you need,” he said, maintaining a diplomatic tone.

“I like playing with fast players, especially offensively. But it has to fit.”

The World Cup dream of these players rest in the Dutchman’s hands, and all they can do is wait.

The remaining 26-man squad selected early next week will travel to Antalya, Turkey, for a 20-day training camp beginning next Saturday. The final 23 will be selected on Thursday June 3.

David Schout is a Melbourne-based freelance journalist who has written and reported for the likes of the Guardian, the ICC, Sportsbet, and AFL Media. You can follow him on Twitter at @david_schout.

The Crowd Says:

2018-05-09T01:38:00+00:00

Kris

Guest


Also realistically the management team might have only seen them play twice each. So 2 games isn't much but might double the knowledge on someone like McLaren.

2018-05-08T01:41:03+00:00

lunchboxexpert

Guest


At this world cup I'm expecting two floggings and one close loss for Australia. While these results are reasonable given where Australia is at, I agree that it may not reflect well on Marwijk (even though it most definitely shouldn't) with many people. The $2m for the loss of reputation, should Australia finish as expected. I'm trying hard to be positive for Australia in this world cup, really hard. Defensively Australia is reasonable and the defense should hold up against Peru and at a stretch Denmark. But I just don't see how they can put it together offensively to make any sort of impact. Sure they are likely to create a few opportunities around goal but these will all go begging for lack of the finish or the polish of a player like a younger Tim Cahill in the Australian Team.

2018-05-08T01:01:02+00:00

Ben of Phnom Penh

Roar Guru


Indeed, they may not have a lot of time to change the coach's mind however they have plenty of time to get injured; hence the extended squad.

2018-05-08T00:40:19+00:00

Kris

Guest


"From now until next week, there are very few opportunities for players in the squad to prove their worth. Most have finished their respective seasons, and there are no training sessions scheduled." Juric has 2 games in Switzerland McLaren has 2 games in Scotland Nabbout is in-season in Japan Leckie has 1 game in Germany Rukavytsya has 1 game in Israel AEK Larnaca FC has 2 games in Cyprus Millwall, Petratos and Arzani are the only two who are finished.

2018-05-08T00:32:42+00:00

Kris

Guest


Good article in the press today about him as a young lad saying he told all his friends and family that he would be going to Russia. Quotes about him understanding he isn't there yet. It gives the impression that he has accepted the invite.

2018-05-08T00:27:25+00:00

Kris

Guest


He isn't being paid $2m to win. He is being paid $2m in compensation for having his reputation damaged impacting his future employment.

2018-05-08T00:25:49+00:00

Kris

Guest


Because the job is to win, not entertain neutrals?

2018-05-08T00:19:36+00:00

Kris

Guest


For all that the 4th goalie will only be in the squad for 10 days or so.

2018-05-07T22:44:18+00:00

lunchboxexpert

Guest


I think you'r being too hard with your marking. I'd be giving Marwijk a B+ if he manages to keep France to two goals in a 2-Nil loss for Australia and then manages a draw against either Denmark or Peru. He gets a B if France routs Australia but then gets a draw against against either Peru or Denmark. I would suggest he bloods the young players but being realistic again, the way things are going in Australia and the way Football is rising in Asia, Australia won't be at the next world cup in 2022 (unless they prematurely expand the numbers in the competition). So blooding the young players in preparation for the next world cup might be a bit of waste of time, maybe? Haven't really worked out how to assign marks (and even if its worth assigning any marks at all) for this aspect of Marwijks campaign.

2018-05-07T21:48:50+00:00

Grobbelaar

Roar Guru


Actually, I'd put it on par with the 2014 squad.

2018-05-07T14:50:14+00:00

Redondo

Guest


Don't make eye contact

2018-05-07T14:43:44+00:00

Josh

Guest


Are you ok?

2018-05-07T14:30:46+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


No, no, your comment was excellent, best post of the morning.

2018-05-07T14:29:45+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Thank you. That was a great comment about Yokohama Ange too.

2018-05-07T14:28:53+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Great comment. Wonder what Yokohama Ange is up to?

2018-05-07T14:10:31+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Worst Footballroos squad ever. Goes to show if we are relying on a 39 year old to score all our goals. Will be embarassing. Luckily Aussie Bert can pick up his $2M pay check for a few weeks work and go back to Holland for a nice holiday afterwards.

2018-05-07T11:24:57+00:00

MarkfromCroydon

Roar Pro


A good article. I agree with your assessment as to why he's named so many attackers. I was thinking the same thing when I saw the squad.

2018-05-07T10:09:57+00:00

Grobbelaar

Roar Guru


Speaking of young players, it's Norman Whiteside's birthday today, the youngest player to ever appear in a WC.

2018-05-07T10:02:08+00:00

Grobbelaar

Roar Guru


Listening to David Davutovich today on SEN, learned that Karacic has never set foot in Australia. It probably means that he has received a very good football education in his short 21 year life (in fact, Lambertus intimated as much in his presser today).

2018-05-07T09:55:13+00:00

Grobbelaar

Roar Guru


I agree that to finish 3rd in that group would constitute an A (maybe a B+). We should temper expectations. When two of your players are playing with Millwall, that's a sure sign that our team is well, well short of quality.

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