Can Graham Arnold take advantage of Australia’s most talented squad in over a decade?

By Christian Montegan / Roar Pro

During the dreaded penalty shootout against Peru to qualify for the World Cup, the Socceroos were only a couple of missed penalties away from Graham Arnold facing the sack and forcing Football Australia into moving in a new direction.

Instead, they prevailed to qualify for Qatar after an underwhelming qualifying campaign in Asia after finishing third in their respective group.

Scrutiny and anger from supporters directed at Arnold was arguably justifiable given the lack of identity on the pitch and conservative tactics used which resulted in negative results and performances.

That was forgotten once the 59-year-old helped guide the Aussies to their fifth consecutive World Cup appearance. Credit was owed to him for his brave and bold decisions as well as the FA who stuck by Arnold after the capitulation that unraveled in losses to Japan and Saudi Arabia.

After a qualifying campaign filled with more lows than highs, many were just grateful and excited at the prospect of enjoying another World Cup with their country participating after experiencing the most arduous route due to the pandemic and playing 16 out of 20 matches away from home.

Upon arrival in Qatar, no one seriously gave Australia much of a chance to achieve anything significant in a group containing Denmark, Tunisia, and reigning world champions France. Arnold, however, was the leading catalyst in galvanising his players and setting the necessary foundations for a solid defence and incredible work ethic to make up for the lack of talent they possessed.

(Photo by Youssef Loulidi/Fantasista/Getty Images,)

Two World Cups victories in the same tournament, never done before in Australia’s history. Two clean sheets, more than their total of just one in six World Cups combined. A knockout stage appearance equaling their best result in 2006. Those same Arnold doubters were quickly warming up to him and joining in on riding the wave of emotion captured by the rest of the country. 


From a scenario of performing with no expectation to all of a sudden having those expectations rise, Arnie will be under just as much pressure, if not more, to get his team to produce at the expected standard in which Australians now know the squad is capable of.

Friday night presented fans at CommBank Stadium in Sydney a chance to welcome home the Socceroos in their first game back from the World Cup with a 3-1 win over Ecuador in a friendly.

Despite Arnold signing on until after the 2026 World Cup, there’s still a changing of the guard in terms of the youthful ability coming through the system. It could be argued that this current generation is the most talented since the 2006-2010 period of the golden generation.

Everyone is fully aware of Garang Kuol’s exciting potential by now. The 18-year-old Hearts loanee managed to get his name on the scoresheet on Friday for his first international goal, providing a glimpse of his bright future ahead. Nestory Irankunda has emphatically lit up the A-League and has deservedly cemented himself as a candidate in the Socceroos camp, notching up four goals and two assists for Adelaide United in mostly cameo roles.

Add Mohamed Toure, Jordan Bos, Noah Botić, Joe Gauci, and Alessandro Circati to name a few, along with experienced figures such as Harry Souttar and Jackson Irvine, and Australian football seems to have finally woken up.

This new discovery of talent now begs the question whether Arnold is the right man equipped to lead this new generation into the next phase of development.

It sounds harsh to be critical of the manager after exceeding expectations in Qatar, but different teams match different coaching personalities.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

Similar comparisons can be drawn with Italian tactician Claudio Ranieri and his tenure at Leicester City. During the 2015-16 season, he was blessed with the right ingredients at the right moment to steer the club to one of the most remarkable achievements in sporting history by winning the Premier League title.

That side didn’t contain many standout names, but it was their work ethic and togetherness that helped them overachieve. The season after, Ranieri was sacked after all of that good work due to poor results, and the same could spell true in Arnold’s case for Australia.

For Arnold, experience has always triumphed over youth because it’s more reliable and he is more confident that the job can be done, especially defensively. We saw this at the World Cup where Craig Goodwin, Mat Leckie, and even Martin Boyle before getting injured were all preferred over Awer Mabil due to their ability to track back as one example.

(Photo by Shaun Botterill – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

Now, the challenge is to slowly incorporate up-and-coming youth products and get them to play an attractive and attacking style of football that suits the needs of players such as Kuol and Irankunda.



Is Arnold the man to lead the revolution?



Supporters of the former Central Coast and Sydney FC coach will point to the win over 
Argentina at the most recent Olympics where Arnold was at the helm of the Olyroos, being up close and personal with many U23 players, understanding their potential and room for improvement.

You could also make a case for his tactics to actually suit this new-look squad of fast pace and dynamism, focusing on the same solid defensive structure to build towards a counter-attacking style with the technical quality in the final third.

Nonetheless, it’s important to stress that since the Peru match, Arnold has done an impeccable job and deserves all the praise and plaudits. If there’s one thing you can’t criticise about him, it’s the undeniable passion and enthusiasm he demonstrates for his country and that evidently translates to the players.

No one is calling for his head at this current moment as that would be premature.

In saying that, just be cautious and wary of the next chapter of the Socceroos. Just because Arnold delivered success in one tournament, doesn’t mean he is necessarily the right man to lead a different generation.

Time will ultimately tell.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-26T22:07:18+00:00

Redondo

Roar Rookie


Craig Goodwin, Matt Leckie, and Martin Boyle are preferred are preferred over Awer Mabil because they are better. Mabil scores the odd screamer but otherwise there's too many poor touches and poor passes.

2023-03-26T06:34:29+00:00

Ftbl7

Roar Rookie


I wouldn’t consider this to be one of our most talented squads I think Arnold has done an amazing job with a relatively weak squad. I thought WC qualifying went well until the last few key games where the wheels fell off. I think McLaren isn’t effective in our style against stronger opposition. Duke has been much better. Young players like Kuol are exciting prospects but have a long way to go before being good enough to replace Leckie, Boyle and Goodwin so we should temper pushing expectations of these guys too fast as was done with Arzani.

AUTHOR

2023-03-26T00:50:23+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


I didn’t agree with the WC selection in particular with Degenek and Karacic. I think a player like Alessandro Circati playing for Parma in Serie B under the experience of Gianluigi Buffon should be Arnold’s next move

2023-03-26T00:31:51+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Sainsbury gone, Taggart not at the World Cup, no Rogic - he seems to be making them. While Ryan hasn’t been perfect and he has sat on benches, I don’t know that anyone is better and I include Langerak in that group. What other tough decisions do you think he should make?

AUTHOR

2023-03-25T23:37:55+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


The only thing I’ll add is that Arnold needs to stop selecting his favourites and make some tough decisions. He clearly stated before the WC that no player is guaranteed selection and they need to be playing regularly at club level. That rule never seems to apply for players like Mat Ryan. Other than that, Arnold has done extremely well to create a great club-like environment and really get his players on the same page. It’s evident on the pitch that they all wear their hearts on their sleeve for the manager

AUTHOR

2023-03-25T23:33:40+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


I agree with some of the players you mentioned that aren’t up to scratch for international football, especially Taggart who was given an incredible amount of opportunities and produced zero. Jamie MacLaren deserves more chances in my opinion. If we’re arguing how good the quality is in the A-League, then surely McLaren’s goals speak for itself as he’s on the verge of winning 4 consecutive golden boots. His stats under Arnold since qualifying: 5 starts - 278 minutes - 6 goals 9 subs - 215 minutes - 1 goal A lot of short substitute cameos there. I believe if he’s given more consistency then he can be major threat for the attack. Mabil definitely got caught up in making the wrong decision. It’s difficult being in his position though because La Liga obviously appeals to the eye and maybe was too confident in his playing minutes, but Sparta Prague is the right move for his development for now

2023-03-25T22:18:16+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


I think Arnold is improving. The most important thing is to abandon McLaren and Taggart. Players who do not have a single effective quality at international level yet mysteriously are left unmarked to tap in goals in the A-league. The players he used in qualifying was a group of shockers, Taggart,Maclaren, Karacic, Stensness, Mooy straight from a year in Chinese lockdown. Mabil was played by Arnie ahead of Goodwin when he was playing in Europe, then Mabil made a foolish decision he went to Spain and players are reluctant to go to SPain because of the tax these days, and he went to a first division club. Logic tells you if your dissastisfied with the game time in Denmark dont go to top division SPain, now as a loan player your last priority. CLubs want to sell their own players first, and he went to a top team in the league where they have massive squads, go to a middle or lower club where they are short of players. Lets not get caught up with Ange he took Taggart to a world cup, where he was outperformed in pressing by Cahill and Bresciano. The one player that could suit Ange style Brosque was ignored by him. What about Goodwin also ignored by Ange.

2023-03-25T20:50:00+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


I’ve read the comments of others, with more football knowledge than me, that Arnold is a great club coach, but not an international one. I feel like he has now turned our national team into a club team. They seem to have a great camaraderie and are really going in the one direction with confidence. FA needs to get this team together as much as possible so this spirit can continue to grow. I don’t think Arnold is reluctant to play anyone, they just have to be good enough to earn their spot and Kuol, Irankunda, Robertson, Bos, etc are showing they are. Having beaten Peru (I know Micko!), Tunisia, Denmark and Ecuador recently they are showing that as a team they are good enough to beat anybody. That roller coaster ride we have talked about with The Socceroos is on the way up - let’s enjoy the ride for a while.

Read more at The Roar