The gig is up Bert; now do what we want

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

Wednesday June 27 could be lamented as the day Australian football let another chance slip through its fingers or celebrated as an historic moment for the Socceroos.

If France do indeed put the cleaners through Denmark and open up a crack through which the boys manage to squeeze, ecstasy might not be a strong enough noun.

Conversely, if Peru snuff out our hopes thanks to a nervous and unconvincing performance, the Socceroos will be heartbroken again.

There is of course a third scenario and a Socceroos win would still be a cause for celebration even if the Danes manage a point and wriggle their way through.

However it does play out, the Socceroos have played well thus far and will be pleased with their competitiveness, albeit still frustrated by the lack of goal production in the front third.

Despite hopes for a bold shift in approach that sees the Australian public’s pleas for change pandered to, Bert van Marwijk will most likely lean on his conservative assurances once more.
Right now, the numbers mean everything. One point is enough for Denmark and not enough for the Socceroos.

Three points is plenty for Australia if the French remember how many tourists we send to the Champs-Elysees each year and rack up a few goals against Denmark.

In the end, the mathematics will sort itself out and hopefully the Socceroos will sit on the fortunate side of the ledger yet fans want something more. Van Marwijk needs to come to the party and do a few simple things against Peru; things that should have been done earlier.

Socceroos coach Bert van Marwijk. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

#1 Timmy must play
This is potentially the most significant ‘elephant in the room’ at the World Cup, and there is no point ignoring it. Watching Tim Cahill nervously sniffing, scratching and waiting for the call from the manger has been awkward.

In reality, the selection of Cahill in the squad, off the back of limited football dating way back to his final month or so with Melbourne City, created a rod for the manager’s back.

Throw in the perceived corporate and sentimental expectations around his selection and the manager was placed in something of a conflicted position. Van Marwijk doesn’t promise anything to anyone and has stuck by his selections in the face of that sentimentality.

We saw it clearly when Mile Jedinak didn’t start the final warm up match and his treatment of Cahill reinforces his ability to remove emotion from the equation. In short, he was asked to do a job and is doing it as well as he can; using the best tools available.

However, the Australian public know there is far more to Cahill than meets the eye. The chances of our favourite son taking to the pitch as a thirty-eight year old and greeting one of the many balls that were fired into the box against Denmark were higher than van Marwijk would realise.

While logic may have instructed him to stick with his plans and attempt to capitalise with the injection of Tomi Juric and Jackson Irvine, the Dutchman doesn’t fully understand the Midas touch of Cahill, nor the number of times it has saved the Socceroos’ bacon.

Is Tim Cahill set to play? (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Cahill must play.

#2 Stick with Robbie Kruse
The vitriol in social media around the VfL Bochum man has been disgusting, relentless and unfair. The personal nature of it has been particularly tasteless. In reality, the front three of Andrew Nabbout, Matthew Leckie and Robbie Kruse have played as well as could be expected and true to form.

Nabbout has provided the energy and run up top that van Marwijk was after and without a true nine to bag goals on a regular basis, Leckie and Kruse become important tradesmen. In effect, it is a game of patience; a game in which many Socceroos fans appear to have lost faith; feeling frustrated with Kruse’s performance against Denmark.

Yes, Kruse has only managed five goals for his nation in 66 appearances yet that ratio is reflective of much of his club career and should shock no one.

Kruse tirelessly runs angles in behind; providing service rather than goals, something that not all the keyboard warriors probably understand.

Sure there are clumsy moments where his skill level is tested and exposed yet such is often the case with Australian football on the world stage.

It is unfair to lump the frustrations around execution in the front third on Kruse alone. It is symptomatic of an illness that has plagued our squad for some time now.

It isn’t Robbie Kruse’s role to play the whipping boy.

Mile Jedinak of Australia celebrates scoring his side’s first goal with team mates Andrew Nabbout and Robbie Kruse (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

#3 Give Arzani more time and give Luongo and Maclaren any time at all
I had firmly expected to see Massimo Luongo start against Denmark. Whether Jedinak was rested or a reshuffle occurred in midfield, I felt his freshness could have been valuable. Daniel Arzani received just over 20 minutes when he replaced Kruse.

They both deserved more time.

Much is made of van Marwijk’s conservative approach and it was clearly on display once again.

Arzani looked rushed, brilliantly effective at times, but unable to settle into a rhythm. Given more time to adjust to the contest he would have served the Socceroos better. We have all seen enough of Arzani now to realise he is both old and good enough.

Tomi Juric was once again called to action when Andrew Nabbout left the pitch despite still being hampered by injury.

Surely the manager’s reluctance to play Maclaren doesn’t stem from his initial non-selection? Of course it does. He wasn’t in the original squad, why would he receive game time now?

Both Maclaren and Cahill were better options on the day.

The absence of Luongo has me baffled. Tom Rogic was improved against Denmark and Aaron Mooy has been effective yet Luongo showed the glimpses of class of which he capable in the pre-tournament friendlies.

Mass Luongo (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Van Marwijk appears to have developed a trust and belief in certain players in his short tenure and cashiered others. Trent Sainsbury, Mark Milligan, Matthew Leckie, Jackson Irvine and Andrew Nabbout appear to be favourites.

Tim Cahill, Jamie Maclaren and Massimo Luongo look to be somewhat on the outside.

It would be nice to see something a little more adventurous against Peru. While the manager’s rigid approach has worked to a certain degree, Socceroo fans appear to be craving a little more of our national spirit and sentimentality in selection.

Let’s hope we see it when we take to the pitch on Wednesday.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2018-06-27T12:13:08+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


Nemesis I love you mate but that is a ridiculous summation. Firstly, calling for more game time for the four players doesn't mean ninety minutes. Juric not performing, Maclaren instead. Cahill to have the last 30. Arzani on around the same time and Luongo to have had some time in midfield at the expense of Rogic, Mooy or Jedinak. Don't misrepresent my comments,

2018-06-26T14:24:38+00:00

wazyZ

Guest


Maybe we're not that good? Cahil is there for sponsorship reasons with Caltex.

2018-06-26T13:30:31+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


“Every nation’s fans are so friendly .. albeit I haven’t yet crossed paths with the English“ .... ooo, a racist then

2018-06-26T13:29:42+00:00

Gerry

Roar Rookie


It’s a ridiculous but familiar situation Australia finds itself in. Who is to blame? The football assciation of this country, the coach, the players not performing. You would have to say all of the above. Let’s get things clear as much as we want it Australia will not progress to the next stage. That ship sailed when the coach failed to go all out to win the Denmark game as to who the Australians well and truly had the measure of. I wish the Socceroos well but in reality it will be building towards the next World Cup.

2018-06-26T13:21:09+00:00

Doran Smith

Roar Guru


Arzani is a better option than Kruse in my opinion.

2018-06-26T10:58:55+00:00

Aidan

Guest


Imagine the scenes if Kruse scores tonight....cant wait for the game.

2018-06-26T09:49:15+00:00

AGO74

Guest


@ Phantom that looks like an unruly sokkah riot. Somebody contact channels 7, 9 and 10 now!

2018-06-26T09:43:06+00:00

monday QB

Guest


If this is treated as a Tim Cahill farewell (as you seem to think it should be, Stuart - 'just expressing a view that Cahill should be sent out the right way') the Socceroos are done before a ball is kicked. As suggested in the above comment - a home friendly or 'tribute game' is how you send someone out. Picking the best team to get the job done is how you play a WC game.

2018-06-26T09:22:29+00:00

Fadida

Guest


Is Irvine an attacking right midfielder? If not he shouldn't play there. He's not by the way.

2018-06-26T09:16:56+00:00

Fadida

Guest


I saw Mooy shoot and miss. I'm not sure how that backs up your argument. Jurman "outstanding"? Not so sure Cahill? No one knows. He hasn't played for a year Irvine is a quality player? He's not bad but you need to outline how he's going to fit in.

2018-06-26T08:20:35+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


Win lose or draw our fans are having fun regardless :)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwnCdZjqHOA

2018-06-26T08:18:22+00:00

jbinnie

Guest


Fadida - You may not be aware of the fact but for some years now there has been a coaching "industry" in existence in Holland and one has only to examine the working "backgrounds" of Hiddink, Van Haal, Advocaat, Van Basten, BVM, Blind, and Koeman to realise that a "national team sojourn" seldom lasts more than 2 years. These men have been in the national job ,some of them twice, for the last 18 years. However if one examines each individually we find that in that same 18 year period it emerges that collectively they have filled another 59 management jobs all around the world. If you add "our" experience in this "industry" it will be remembered we have had 4 Dutch coaches influencing our game in the last 18 years,Baan,,Verbeek ,Berger,& Versleijen, and surprise surprise, those four have filled another 35 jobs in football in the same time frame. So you see my friend it would appear that tying a Dutch coach down to a long term contract is a task easier said than done. It would appear there are always greener pastures elsewhere. Cheers jb.

2018-06-26T08:14:06+00:00

punter

Guest


Exactly Griffo, we all just having fun as the countdown continues. I was in Russia for first 2 games & the atmosphere was huge & the Aussies are backing the Socceroos to the tilt. We all have our opinions, but at the same time we all want the boys to do us proud. A 2-1 lost to France & a 1-1 draw with Denmark, 2 months I would have taken that. But alas as football fans we always want more.

2018-06-26T08:05:29+00:00

punter

Guest


I love the pain Arnie has caused other A-League clubs!!!!!

2018-06-26T07:38:18+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


I'm here with the family, but the football is part of "business". A few football friends are also here, but they have different tickets and different plans. To be honest, I enjoy not being part of the Aussie mob at such times. Just have to wear the AUS National Team shirt and everyone recognises "the kangaroo". Every nation's fans are so friendly .. albeit I haven't yet crossed paths with the English. But the local Russians are fantastic. Do not believe any of the nonsense written about Russian football ultras, violence, or bad attitude to foreigners.

2018-06-26T07:24:57+00:00

Onside

Guest


Hi Nemesis, are you with a group or private arrangements (just interested that's all). And seems like no communication issues which is good, unlike us antipodeans with the magic NBN system.

2018-06-26T07:13:01+00:00

jbinnie

Guest


Fadida - Actually Ron Smith is not listed as a former Socceroo coach in Wlkipedia's list of former national coaches. Ron ,who could best be described as a "professional football coach" has been around the national team for what seems forever but the only time he has actually been in charge of the team was for a few months while the head honchos negotiated with Guus Hiddink in 2005. Ron is better known for his work at the old AIS in Canberra where he held the top position for many years and it appears he has always been regarded as someone who could fill an "interim" position, if ,and when required. He has made a name for himself as an analyst and has filled that type of position with some distinction mainly at Liverpool under Houlier... Ron has done some "direct" team coaching ,as you say at Perth Glory for 2 seasons, but mainly at various "lesser" leagues in Asia. Cheers jb.

2018-06-26T07:02:18+00:00

MQ

Guest


Yep, even if we don't get through, I think he has done an extraordinary job.

2018-06-26T07:01:26+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Nemesis, He may be doing 2 out of 3 jobs well but it’s not really working all the same. Results show that. Arzani would be the go for me, then sub Kruse on with fresh legs later. I can appreciate Kruses work rate but you can’t defend your way out of a World Cup group anymore.

2018-06-26T07:00:44+00:00

MQ

Guest


Regardless, here we are, with a 25% chance of progressing, and if we remain tight, we only need to hit the back of the net once, and it doesn't really matter how it gets there: corner, free, pen, deflection, own goal, keeper error, off Leckie's backside, it doesn't matter. If Peru score first, then it's probably all over.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar