Australia vs France preview: Time to pour some cold water on the Socceroos

By Cameron Handley / Roar Rookie

Following the announcement from Qatari officials regarding the ban on alcohol sales in and around World Cup stadiums, I’m going to have to pour a glass of cold water on Australia’s hopes in this opening game, rather than a cold beer.

Coach Graham Arnold has stuck to his modus operandi, constantly talking of intangibles like culture, togetherness and grit. The mystical Aussie spirit has also been at the forefront of any conversation regarding our hopes in Qatar, and in a knockout tournament, these things can’t be overlooked.

However, they simply can’t overcome some truly worrying statistics for the Socceroos.

Throughout AFC qualifying, Australia played to a worryingly low 0.25 xG per 90 minutes differential, which is extremely poor given that the majority of sides faced ranked between 76 and 130 in the world.

In the two games against Japan, a thorough litmus test for how things compare against elite competition, the Socceroos were thoroughly outplayed, losing both games convincingly whilst losing the expected goals battle 3.98 to 2.1. Worrying signs, indeed.

Arnie is going to have the difficult task of fixing the worst defensive side in the third round of AFC qualifying. Per The Athletic, Australia ranked last in passes per defensive action (12.1), big chances conceded (15), shots conceded (104) and expected goals allowed (11.02).

What this demonstrates is Australia’s lack of ability to keep the opposition from progressing the ball into dangerous areas of the pitch, and a complete lack of being able to defend their own penalty area. To be certain, any defensive output resembling the above will spell disaster against a France team boasting perhaps the best array of offensive weapons at the World Cup.

A defensive bright note for the Socceroos is the form of Mat Ryan, who continues to be a remarkable shot stopper. Throughout qualifying, he was saving at roughly 3.1 goals above expected, and will need that brilliance to keep Australia in matches.

In possession, things don’t get much better. The Socceroos averaged 50 per cent possession through that third round of qualifying, suggesting a crisis of identity. Arnold’s side neither possesses the ball in abundance or sits back and looks to hit on the counter.

Looking over the passing maps for the games against the United Arab Emirates and Peru, there’s an abject lack of connectivity between the front players. Mathew Leckie in the false 9 role against the UAE was uninvolved to the point of being irrelevant, and the duo of Mitch Duke and Ajdin Hrustic were similarly anaemic against Peru, barely registering a touch on the ball.

Ajdin Hrustic (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

So, how does this all pan out against France? Well, the defending champions do have their own problems. Missing N’Golo Kante and Paul Pogba in midfield, French coach Didier Deschamps has already openly stated that his side will look to be defensively sound and conservative in possession.

Whilst the replacement players in midfield, Aurélien Tchouaméni and Eduardo Camavinga, are elite disruptors and screeners, they do lack progressive and creative passing in central areas to drive the attack, and may take a while to unlock Australia’s low block.

Arnie is going to set up with 10, possibly 11 men behind the ball. Fearing the pace of Kylian Mbappe in behind what can only be described as a porous defensive lineup, the only chance the Socceroos have is conservatism plus in a low block.

Sadly, that bodes for quite an uneventful opening match, as France will likely maintain possession in the middle third, shifting side to side and looking to isolate Mbappe one on one. His individual brilliance needs no introduction, and it will take an outlier of a performance from the Aussie backline to keep him off the score sheet.

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The lack of competency for the Australian midfield to progress the ball and involve any attacking players in possession or transition gives little hope to them scoring a goal from open play, with a set-piece the likely avenue to goal.

Harry Souttar, fresh off ACL surgery, did score six headed goals throughout qualifying, but whether Australia can do enough to get up the pitch and generate corners or attacking free-kicks remains to be seen.

Intangibles can go a long way in sport, but papering over some truly alarming underlying statistics is perhaps a step too far. The Socceroos will be stubborn and gritty, and Deschamps’ tactics will keep the final score down, but it’s hard to envision anything other than France winning by 2 or 3 goals to nil.

Luckily, we can enjoy a cold beer to drown our sorrows and not just a glass of water.

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-21T23:20:03+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


hopefully we do not get beaten badly. Go Aussies.

2022-11-21T02:31:11+00:00

Newie

Guest


Looking at that past line-up, apart from Jedinak, I actually like the present one better. I can see Leckie being blown over by an excessively strong gust from the air conditioners near France's box, Goodwin floating the perfect free kick in and Souttar getting a head on it. Goaaaaaaal!

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T11:10:34+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


No Boyle is a huge loss, considering he wasn't bad at defending in wide areas and tracking back. Not sure McGree can do the job anywhere near as well, and Kuol definitely can't. Big loss.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T08:54:24+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


One thing to note about Garangski - 4 goals off 10 shots in the A-liga. That's what we call 'running hot and definitely isn't sustainable. I hope he just looks calm enough on the ball and doesn't look out of place.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T08:51:04+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


Even better, 4-1-4-1, with about 5m between the lines so Greizmann or Mbappe can't pick the ball up between the lines, and have that extra midfielder screen in front of wherever Giroud shows to feet.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T08:07:04+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


here’s hoping John! i will absolutely take a 0-0 draw in this opening game

2022-11-20T07:58:59+00:00

John Newy

Guest


Let’s hope Arnie doesn’t bring him on too late. None of this 15 minutes play. He will breed new life into the team in the second half. Oh and Arnie please remember in the first games goal difference is also important.

2022-11-20T07:53:26+00:00

John Newy

Guest


Mooy is definitely a starter. I would like to see Cam Devlin release the hounds. Irvine and Mabil deserve a start too.

2022-11-20T07:47:23+00:00

John Newy

Guest


Expect the worst, prepare for the best!

2022-11-20T07:45:10+00:00

John Newy

Guest


Thank you for Article. Being an avid Mooy watcher and critic I can tell you he’s up for it. His progress has been sure and steady in Scotland.

2022-11-20T06:25:40+00:00

ockeroo

Roar Rookie


Play eight defenders and suffocate this game stone dead, from start to finish.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T05:37:21+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


Definitely agree that it may take a while for France to break us down. Deschamps wants them to be pragmatic and control games rather than score a flurry of goals, so you couple that with the Aussie low block and it's going to be cagey. I doubt Australia get that high up the pitch at any point, just looking at the pass string maps for our last 8 games, and knowing how great Tchouamene and Camavinga are at covering space and breaking up play. Whoever plays as the Socceroos 9 may feel very lonely.

2022-11-20T05:13:02+00:00

NoMates

Roar Rookie


This is how i see it, Socceroo's will only have 3 shots on goal and 1 on target the whole game, we will lose 3-0 but will put a a bit of a fight in the 1st half defending good but die in the ass cum 2nd half. I also expect France to get a cheap pen in the 2nd half to kill any moment of hope for Australia. Or the Roos could have a blinder and we draw the game.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T02:46:28+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


Arnie is absolutely going to start Bailey Wright at centre half, so it's between Rowles and Souttar for the other spot, with Deng on the outside looking in. I agree with you that Devlin starts alongside Mooy in the double pivot, but if that's the case, it's going to be a defensive effort for 90 minutes. Neither of them is a good enough passer of the ball, at this level, to move us up the pitch. No idea who starts at the 9, as in my opinion, they're all as poor as each other. Duke and Maclaren are non-factors at this level. I'd probably take a shot on Cummings, just to occasionally get the ball in to him to hold up and allow us some respite.

2022-11-20T01:50:14+00:00

Free flowing FC

Roar Rookie


playing around with team formations and seeing how a starting midfield without Mooy against France might look…(also taking into account.. Hrustic and Boyle are under injury clouds). Goodwin–McGree–Mabil. Devlin—Irvine. Mooy off the bench when the game opens up a bit and players begin to tire…hmm, food for thought.

2022-11-20T01:33:56+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


Any combination in the defensive line looks bad. It'll take a second line of defence in midfield to take some of the pressure off them. Hrustic for Rogic should work up front, but Hrustic also has a decent defensive record so I'm thinking more about him forming a line with Goodwin (who can also defend) and Devlin. If Hrustic is used as a wide midfielder then it leaves a place for Irvine. The other options on the right were Boyle/Tilio, Leckie and McGree. But Hrustic has the best defensive record. As for Arzani vs Kuol there's a clear difference in stats. Arzani had just 2 goals and 3 assists from 24 matches at Melbourne City going into the tournament, while Kuol had 4 goals and an assist from 9 matches last season and has 2 goals and 2 assists from 4 matches so far this season.

2022-11-20T01:29:36+00:00

Free flowing FC

Roar Rookie


I’m pretty sure Mooy was Adjudged BOG last WC v France..was a great effort. Let’s see if he can back it up..but this time with a result. I’d be going with a speedy match fit side and given injury, match fitness concerns around Hrustic, Boyle and Souttar I’d probably look at starting with 4-2-3-1 Duke Mabil-Irvine-McGree Devlin-Mooy Behich-Rowles-Deng-Atkinson Ryan Bench. Cummings, Hrustic, Goodwin, Kuol Let’s shake these frogs up boys!

2022-11-20T00:13:03+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


I agree - to come away with a small loss against a team like France is actually a win - as Pim was hoping to do against Germany in 2010. Our efforts in 2018 to lose 2-1 to France (and unluckily) was an amazing result. I’d sign off on that result now! To play well against the best in the world is a great effort. Hopefully, we’ll build up again and challenge the top teams as we did in 2006.

2022-11-20T00:08:19+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Nabbout was very busy defending as Duke will do this time. Hrujstic (if fit) for Rogic is a decent swap and Boyle, Mabil, Leckie, Goodwin - whoever is chosen pair up fine against 2018. Kuol v Arzani as a sub also measures up well or better. You’re right about defence. Milligan and Jedinak were immense and Sainsbury was in very good form. I am hoping Devlin is chosen and he is our new Mile or Vinnie.

AUTHOR

2022-11-20T00:03:02+00:00

Cameron Handley

Roar Rookie


if the numbers suggested there was a clear advantage we had to take it to the french, i’d write all about it. and arnie and the brains trust may have come up with a way to overcome the defensive frailties and trouble in possession, but at the moment it’s pretty grim.

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