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  • Wanderers Fade Away Against Jets


    mack

    The Western Sydney Wanderers produced a typical Western Sydney Wanderers display tonight against the Newcastle Jets, a good first half hour including a Mitch Duke penalty was followed by a dire remainder of the game that let the Jets pickup a point when Matt Millar equalised in the 75th minute.

    The match was delayed when a gigantic rain & thunder storm flew over Sydney prior to kick-off, and once the lightning cleared away the match began under heavy rain. Jean-Paul de Marigny took charge of his first home game as Wanderers interim manager, 5 minutes in and his side had the lead. Bobby Burns was beaten all ends up by Bruce Kamau, the right wing-back blazing into the penalty area and being cut down from behind to give Mitch Duke a chance from the penalty spot.

    The Wanderers captain made no mistake, blasting his penalty straight down the middle as the Newcastle keeper dived away from the ball. Burns was lucky to avoid getting sent off shortly after, as the referee inexplicably decided to not show him a first yellow card after the penalty, and he was beaten again by Kamau shortly after to pick up what should have been his 2nd yellow card. Instead he remained on the pitch to help the Jets get back into the game.

    The Wanderers wasted a score of chances following the goal, Simon Cox should have been able to round the keeper following a defensive mistake from the Jets, but his touch was exceptionally heavy and gave Lewis Italiano just enough time to rescue the situation. Cox also made a poor decision with his run as Daniel Georgievski fired a ball across the face of goal. When a far post run would have given him a tap-in from a few yards out, he ran near post and let the defender get involved to shut down the attack. It was the last major chance for the Wanderers in the game.

    Newcastle built into the game before half-time, finding a number of open spaces on the flanks, the front line attack being unlucky that several crosses were hit coming back towards half-way and left the strikers having to leap backwards, generating no power on their headers.

    The 2nd half was abysmal for the Wanderers. Lopar saved a fierce strike from Dimi Petratos that went straight at him, Steven Ugarkovic followed up a minute later with a long range looping volley that Lopar turned onto the bar and out for a corner. 15 minutes before full-time the Jets got their reward. After mucking about with the ball in the back line, Patrick Ziegler passed it straight to a Jets player and they attacked, Matt Millar worked a 1-2 and he found a shooting opportunity. Lopar was wrong-footed as if he expected a cutback along the 6 yard box, but instead Millar shot at the near post and took advantage of the keeper being out of position.

    Newcastle pressed forward to find a late winner, while the Wanderers fell further back to defend and were lucky to get away with the 1-1 full time scoreline. It was yet another poor result, a failure of intensity and application, one that should never have occurred for a side coming off a 2 week break due to the postponement of the Sydney Derby, against the team in second last place.

    The Wanderers face Adelaide United at Parramatta on Friday February 21st, kick-off at 7:30PM. The Sydney Derby has been rescheduled for Friday February 28th.

    Edited by mack


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    WanderingToqui

    Posted

    Did anyone watch Yokohama wipe the floor with Shitney fc?

    4-0 ... could've been 7.

    Yokohama were pressuring so high up the field for the ENTIRE 90 mins. Never gave Sydney any time or space. 

    They made the ball do all the work. Short, fast and precise passes making the opposition chase and get frustrated. A very Latin way of playing. Fitness was awesome. Crazy thing is, J League hasn't even started and the A League is halfway through.

    I wish we had someone with the same philosophy as Postecoglou, Bielsa, or Sampaoli coaching us.

    These coaches teach and nurture and instill self belief. No divas just every single player from the superstar to the reserves treated the same.

    Yet here we are ... Mediocre City ... and we're all paying for this sorry show. 

    :crap:

     

    BoyFromTheWest

    Posted

    The excuses of SFC were they hadn't played for 3 weeks, were a bit rusty; allowed soft goals; the first goal was lucky and on and on.  They were so outclassed it was a brilliant football lesson and justification of Ange over Oz football.  Probably the final 'up yours' to show our precious football community where we sit in terms of world football and that they made a huge mistake in terms of Ange.  Good on him.  HIs team were a pleasure to watch.

    billybob

    Posted

    Not sure they made a mistake with Ange. I think it is more that he now has players that can play the style and tempo that he wants to. Previously, he has to use Australians. 

    StringerBellend

    Posted

    3 hours ago, BoyFromTheWest said:

    The excuses of SFC were they hadn't played for 3 weeks, were a bit rusty; allowed soft goals; the first goal was lucky and on and on.  They were so outclassed it was a brilliant football lesson and justification of Ange over Oz football.  Probably the final 'up yours' to show our precious football community where we sit in terms of world football and that they made a huge mistake in terms of Ange.  Good on him.  HIs team were a pleasure to watch.

    They really are the Kopites of the A League

    sonar

    Posted

    6 minutes ago, billybob said:

    Not sure they made a mistake with Ange. I think it is more that he now has players that can play the style and tempo that he wants to. Previously, he has to use Australians. 

    That's the bottom line isn't it.High quality players on the pitch.

    WanderingToqui

    Posted

    Haven't we forgotten what Postecoglou did with Brisbane Roar? 

    I'm absolutely certain he or someone with a similar football philosophy could once again replicate Ange's Roar days in Oz again, yes even at the Wanderers.

    He would be most welcome at Wanderers to overhaul and instill his philosophy from the youth teams to first team.

     

    WanderingToqui

    Posted

    Gombau and Postecoglou are like chalk and cheese.

    I still thought Gombau unconvincing when he won it with Adelaide.

    Postecoglou is different.

    Took Yokohama to Champions in his second season and got them playing his philosophy. Foreign culture, language and all.

    Took the Roar and revamped their playing style whilst they won the league.

    Took the National team and made them Champions of Asia.

    Gombau ... slid on the grass in his suit when he was happy.

    Can't compare.

    Wobblies

    Posted

    Let's get Valverde then...C'mon Lederer you have the money, be brave. Ya can't take it with you.

    mack

    Posted

    2 hours ago, WanderingToqui said:

    Gombau and Postecoglou are like chalk and cheese.

    I still thought Gombau unconvincing when he won it with Adelaide.

    Postecoglou is different.

    Took Yokohama to Champions in his second season and got them playing his philosophy. Foreign culture, language and all.

    Took the Roar and revamped their playing style whilst they won the league.

    Took the National team and made them Champions of Asia.

    Gombau ... slid on the grass in his suit when he was happy.

    Can't compare.

    I was on my phone so I couldn't post a lot there but obviously there are levels between them in terms of what they've done.

    The main comparison is they had a philosophy of how they want their team to play that was pretty similar. Especially if you compare it to the last 2 seasons where we have anti-philosophy.

    wendybr

    Posted

    6 hours ago, WanderingToqui said:

    Gombau ... slid on the grass in his suit when he was happy.

    That was a damned good A League moment, though! :xnod:

    Prydzopolis

    Posted

    Oh Mack, putting Gombau & Ange on the same level :lol:

    StringerBellend

    Posted

    On 20/02/2020 at 4:30 PM, mack said:

    I was on my phone so I couldn't post a lot there but obviously there are levels between them in terms of what they've done.

    The main comparison is they had a philosophy of how they want their team to play that was pretty similar. Especially if you compare it to the last 2 seasons where we have anti-philosophy.

    His philosophy seemed to be to get centre backs to aimlessly pass the ball amongst themselves before getting Vedran to hoof it to no one.

    or his alternative one was Vedran to roll the ball out to a marked Hammil to then lose it

    a “strategy” isn’t useful if you have no idea how to implement it 




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