Asian Cup Post-Mortem
Marc Fox picks the bones out of Australia's quarter-final exit
from an Asian Cup debut blighted by over-ambition and arrogance.
For an exiled Englishman, the goings-on of the past couple of
months have followed a painfully familiar recipe.
Step one: take a sprinkling of the highest earners from the Premiership
off the back of another marathon season.
Step two: lavish with unadulterated praise.
Step three: prepare poorly.
Step four: bake in 30-degree heat until (well and truly) cooked.
The result: quarter-final elimination on spot-kicks. Sound familiar?
That the vogue in Australian football circles is to decry the
incumbent English coaching style only adds salt to the wounds.
The contributing factors to the Socceroos' early elimination are
so numerous perhaps coach Graham Arnold will be a relieved man when
the ruling body finally replaces him with a high-profile foreigner.
That might be as quickly as this month with all media speculation
pointing towards Dick
Advocaat, the former Holland and South Korea manager, taking
charge at the end of his domestic contract in Russia.
"We have learned a lot in the last couple of weeks, Asia
is very difficult," Arnold predictably surmised after the shootout
defeat to Japan over the weekend. "The expectations I put on
the team were semi-finals minimum and so obviously it's below expectations."
However, as Arnold knows only too well, the results - including
a 3-1 loss to Iraq during the group stage - were just one piece
of the pie.
The finger has been pointed variously from the dearth of seriously
competitive warm-up games to player ill-discipline, fitness and
sheer willingness to graft in testing climatic conditions.
But put simply the expectations placed on last year's World Cup
revelations - as is often the case in England - were simply blown
to astronomical proportions.
Almost from the outset, for some it wasn't even going to be enough
just to win the Asian Cup outright at their first attempt.
As Soccerphile discussed two months ago, Socceroos defender Lucas Neill made a rod for his own back when he boasted Australia
would canter through the tournament with an unblemished record.
"I really think we've got a squad that can handle the conditions,
enough of us have played on the biggest stage now that we won't
be intimidated by the teams we're going to play against and I really
see the standard we're expecting to set taking us all the way to
the end," Neill told reporters in May despite revealing his
utter lack of knowledge about the Asian scene.
Other players joined the bandwagon too, chiming in with comments
about how nothing will have been gained from last year's World Cup
experience if they don't go onto be crowned kings of Asia.
It is Neill, though, who has been bought crashing back down to
earth with the loudest bump 12 months after remarkably being linked
with a switch to Barcelona.
The West Ham defender was part of the back four humiliated in
the opening group games, was at fault for Iraq's third and then
was sent off for back-chatting the referee.
After being all but named and shamed by Arnold for his attitude,
Neill only earned a reprieve to play the Japanese through Luke Wilkshire's
suspension but then went onto ruin his comeback by missing a penalty
in the shootout.
To focus solely on one player, though, is unjust. From Mark Schwarzer
in goal to Mark Viduka in attack, the Australians were technically
outsmarted by every one of their opponents.
That includes Thailand who fell victim to three well-executed
counter punches after dominating large swathes of the game before
eventually succumbing 4-0.
The technical flaws in Australia's play run deep - a notion supported
by the failures of the under-17s and under-20s in reaching their
respective World Cups last year - and cannot be improved overnight.
But what's surprised most onlookers down under is the vast gulf
between the national team's ability to retain possession for long
periods and their opponents, particularly, as troublesome hacks
have been quick to highlight, given the sky-high pay cheques banked
every week by the European-based players.
At least Arnold didn't pander to the likes of Neill and Harry
Kewell, and may have even come out of the whole muddle with some
brownie points for blooding a number of A-League players like Sydney
FC pair Mark Milligan and David Carney.
If only because of scheduling alone, Arnold's successor will invariably
need to rely on Milligan, Carney and others from the local scene
for the 2010 World Cup qualifying campaign starting next year.
Maybe that will also help realign expectation levels with regard
to Australia's participation in South
Africa - and that, after this sorry mess, must surely be a good
thing.
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