Did Sydney FC just scare the heck out of Perth Glory?

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

As tense, dramatic and thrilling as Friday night was, Sunday night’s A-League semi-final between the Sky Blues and Victory proved to be anti-climactic.

Sydney FC hammered the visitors 6-1; a rarity in matches played between these two great clubs.

It will go down in history as the ‘Mother’s Day Massacre’; a term coined at some stage during the second half, as the Sky Blues put their foot to the floor and dished out a humiliating punishment on Kevin Muscat’s team.

It was partly disappointing; knowing we were denied another epic ‘Big Blue’ and the match become more of a dust-up than a stoush.

Yet the sheer lop-sided nature of the scoreboard created a level of drama that Melbourne Victory and Sydney FC usually manage to construct on the pitch with closely fought contests.

In stark contrast to Friday’s opening semi-final, one side ran riot and the winner appeared clear within the first 45 minutes.

Can Kevin Muscat’s men take on Sydney? (AAP Image/Darren Pateman)

The same could not be said of the Perth Glory versus Adelaide United epic.

Marco Kurz could not have hoped for a more fitting performance from the Reds in his final match as manager. Despite chasing the game from start to finish, Adelaide showed a resolute desire that eventually saw them do the unthinkable.

A Perth Glory side with a comfortable 2-0 lead? At home? With the quality they possess and against a team that has struggled to find the net consistently enough this season?

Cognisant of such realities, it appeared likely that Diego Castro’s second goal in the 74th minute would be enough to send the home side through to an historic A-League grand final.

Yet Adelaide had a dream and it was lived out through Baba Diawara and Ryan Kitto’s late strikes in normal time and Michael Marrone’s extra-time equaliser.

The absurd penalty shootout that followed will go down in the annals of the game. But for Joel Chianese’s poised strike that ended the drama, it could still be going. Such was the nervousness evident in the kicks taken and the superb goal keeping of Liam Reddy and Paul Izzo.

For Tony Popovic’s Premier’s Plate winners, it was the scare of all scares and the manager appeared to be praying intently during the final moments of the shootout.

However, as finger-nail close as Adelaide brought the Glory to elimination, was the scare actually less than the utter fear they should feel after watching a rampant Sydney FC destroy the Victory?

There was something ridiculously efficient about the men in sky blue on Sunday night. After a few dishevelled weeks where players had been rested and Asian Champions League commitments proved their usual challenge, Steve Corica finally sent out his complete and healthy ‘A’ squad and the result speaks for itself.

There was an eerie feeling that Corica had been holding something back. As unflappable as the 46 year-old can be, he seemed hyped and on edge during the pre-game; eyes darting and lips moving more quickly than usual.

Did he know or expect his charges to put half a dozen past the Victory? I doubt it. Although perhaps something was brewing, considering it would only be the seventh occasion this season where he was able to send Siem de Jong, Alex Brosque, Milos Ninkovic and Adam le Fondre onto the pitch in the starting eleven at the same time.

The last time the quartet began a match together was in Round 12. Since, injuries and illness have forced Corica to use a variety of other attacking options.

On Sunday night the four were sublime and complimentary to one another. Ninkovic occupied his pocket on the left, de Jong drifted between the lines and Brosque’s intense pressure and frantic speed up top added something that Corica needs to defeat Perth Glory.

Sydney FC’s Alex Brosque. (AAP Image/David Moir)

Le Fondre has been the mainstay throughout the season, hardly missing a minute and as part of the foursome, looked potentially even more dangerous than he has at any time during his debut A-League season.

As solid as Tony Popovic’s defence has been, Sydney FC look to be heading west with a sharpened tool and a willingness to use it.

Is Popovic scared? No way, nothing scares the iceman. Is he concerned? You bet. Dino Djulbic, Matthew Spiranovic and Shane Lowry will have their hands full.

Sydney will hope to occupy much of Ivan Franjic and Jason Davidson’s time in the defensive end; forcing them to aid the back three for long periods and blunting their attacking potential.

The week will slowly build to a fitting climax on Sunday. Sydney appear to have the momentum yet Perth have the plate and were the most consistent team all season.

Despite that consistency, Sydney’s performance against the Victory will definitely have caught their eye.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2019-05-21T11:34:10+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


In response to my own article........yes they did!

2019-05-14T15:12:07+00:00

Richard

Guest


Glory won 3-1 in Perth. Tore them apart. Watch for the same this Sunday.

2019-05-14T11:44:29+00:00

Jordan Klingsporn

Roar Guru


About 45k have been sold already.

2019-05-14T09:50:06+00:00

Haydos

Guest


Is it only me that feels like the view of the pitch will be just fine at Optus? You feel right on top of it still at the top tier, almost MCG style. Tickets are in high demand according to Optus Stadium/ticketmaster. Potential to break the A-league finals attendance record of 55,436 at Etihad.

2019-05-14T07:31:03+00:00

The Ball Bobbled

Roar Rookie


Sydney have learnt from their ACL experience. Just copy the Asian clubs style and run hard and FAST at the opposition and pinch the ball from the typically slow to react A league hackers. Popovic better prepare his players for the onrushing Sydney F C defenders who will surround the ball carriers and leave them wondering what happened

2019-05-14T02:42:58+00:00

Robi

Guest


The home ground advantage that Perth has enjoyed will be lost at Optus Stadium. For fans the viewing experience is lost due to the distance between the the actual playing ground and the stands. I was at Perth Oval last Friday, the atmosphere on a neutral perspective was out of this world, when that wining penalty finally went in lol the stadium shook. Sydney to win the big one this Sunday as they clearly outclassed their opponents on the weekend, while Perth barely knocked over a Adelaide team that had a 4 day turn around. Watch out for Da Silva in the final

2019-05-14T00:25:47+00:00

pete4

Guest


Don't underestimate a raucous home crowd could be the 12th man in the Grand final

2019-05-14T00:01:34+00:00

Buddy

Roar Rookie


I thought Adelaide did enough scaring on Friday night. Let’s face it, they dragged themselves back into the game in normal and then extra time and had first dibs in penalties. They were ahead when Castro missed and they had three attempts at sudden death but fluffed their lines badly. Had one of those gone in, the pressure on the hosts would have been enormous. Perth got their wake up call and another endorsement for those that believe the week off is not advantageous. They should be perfectly wound up now and ready, even if it is at Optus.

2019-05-13T23:58:19+00:00

Harry Selassie

Roar Rookie


Cheers, new member from the USA who is able to watch A League matches on ESPN+ streams and I’ve enjoyed both the league matches and these finals in particular. Because of the time difference I usually watch an archived replay but I was up early on Friday and watched the last 20 minutes of regulation, the extra time and the penalty kick shootout between Perth and Adelaide United. What a thriller! Incredible work by both goalies Liam Reddy and Paul Izzo. What confidence by Reddy in taking, and converting, his penalty. Rizzo, however, was the reason Adelaide United were playing that match as a few of his saves prevented Melbourne City from winning in the previous round. In the other match Sydney FC’s early goal changed the match. As Mike Tyson famously said, “Everybody has a plan until you get punched in the face.” That is what happened with the Victory. Everything they planned went out the window once they gave up that early goal. Then Alex Brosque’s wonderful volley followed quickly by the own goal ended whatever chances they may have had. I remember reading about the teenage Alex Brosque being Australia’s rising star. Seems like yesterday. Man, I am getting old! I heard that Sydney won both matches this season against Perth. I recall the essentially meaningless one a month or so ago in Sydney but how did they matchup in the prior league match in Perth? Can that give us some clues on how this Grand Final might play out?

2019-05-13T23:51:34+00:00

Jordan Klingsporn

Roar Guru


I'll tell you what, they've scared the heck out of me.

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