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  • Mutch Ado About Three Points In Ballarat


    mack

    A "Western Derby" saw the Western Sydney Wanderers travel to Ballarat in Victoria to take on Western United on Sunday afternoon, with Jordon Mutch taking advantage of a terrible defensive error to slot home the only goal of the match.

    The major pre-game drama involved the Wanderers coach Carl Robinson, who took ill on the morning of the game and remained in Melbourne while his team travelled down the freeway to Victoria's south-west Assistant Kenny Miller took Robinson's place in the technical area. Keanu Baccus was dropped to the bench after his horror show in the last game, Jordon Mutch made his first start for the Wanderers and James Troisi took up the attacking midfield role.

    An early chance fell to Bernie Ibini in the 10th minute, he nodded down a wide free kick testing the Western United keeper but not beating him. The home side had their own try not long after, with a fast break that ended with Connor Pain firing a shot in from a very narrow angle. Alessandro Diamanti attempted an audacious volley from well outside the penalty area but it flashed miles over the bar.

    Besart Berisha fashioned a goalscoring chance despite being outnumbered 2 to 5, receieving the ball he turned on his defender and shot low and hard. Daniel Margush was well positioned and collected it easily. Graham Dorrans fired back from 25 yards, causing a deflection that momentarily worried the keeper. Diamanti tried another long range effort and replicated his earlier finish, well over the bar.

    On the half-hour Dorrans was very unlucky not to open the scoring, Ibini and Duke managed to knock the ball down into the path of Dorrans and his shot took a deflection that almost beat Kurto. After it was cleared a scramble saw Bernie Ibini try to turn the ball home at the near post, he missed but Aaron Calver hit Kurto in the head with a stray knee as he dived in for a block. Kurto remained on the turf to take a concussion test from the club physio. He failed the test and was replaced by Ryan Scott who made his second A-League appearance, with his first coming in identical circumstances against Adelaide United in March 2020. The delayed blunted a measure of momentum for the Wanderers and let Western United regroup. Steven Lustica the former Wanderer was booked for a clear drag-back on Ibini. Ibini then found space outside the penalty area but his shot rose off the boot and kept rising until it reached the construction zone behind the goal.

    Jordan Mutch nearly pulled a scorpion kick goal out of the locker just before half-time, a cross in was behind the midfielder and Mutch stuck out the leg and turned it toward goal but not accurately enough to trouble the scorers. As the 5 minutes of stoppage time were indicated by the fourth official, Dylan Pieras sucked Mark Natta into a poor challenge and the Wanderers central defender was given a yellow card for it.

    Diamanti delivered a corner to the back post and found Tomoki Imai, although he was falling backward he generated enough power to really trouble Margush and forced the keeper into a diving scrambling stop that rolled over the byline.

    Controversy reigned in the final seconds of the half. Bernie Ibini took the ball inside the penalty area, Aaron Calver did a blatant shirt pull while Andrew Durante also knocked him from behind. It clearly impacted on Ibini's shot but the referee gave nothing, while VAR cleared the foul in the 15 seconds between the foul and half-time being blown. It was a clear and obvious error on just the shirt pull alone, with two further fouls committed as Ibini was going to shoot. Unlike VAR calls that go against WSW, the ref didn't stop the game, didn't walk over to spend 5 minutes reviewing slow motion replays from bad Fox Sports camera angles while the VAR Bunker tells him to change his mind.

    Scott made his first action of the game in the second half, Ibini held up the ball to play Troisi and his lofted short range cross was met with a volley from fullback Daniel Wilmering. It was fast but straight at the keeper down low. The Wanderers first change of the game was forced through injury, Mark Natta who was already on a yellow card suffered a quad strain. With no recognised central defender on the bench Keanu Baccus was bought on and the Wanderers moved to a more regulation four at the back formation. 

    Jordan Mutch opened the scoring in the 56th minute after Jerry Skotatis made a horrific error trying to play the ball back to the keeper. He made a complete hash of the pass-back, it dribbled a meter or so and Mutch was reward for his closing down with a saloon passage into the penalty area, his side foot placed shot beat the sub keeper to make it 1-0 to the visitors. The Wanderers did a double change after the goal, bringing on Kwame Yeboah and Bruce Kamau in place of Ibini and Troisi.

    In the 65th minute Pieras sent the home supporters into raptures with a ghost goal. His curling strike beat Margush and looked to have nestled into the bottom corner but instead it hit the goal stanchion and rolled onto the rear side of the netting. Mitch Duke pulled up sore with an apparent leg injury and he left the field for Simon Cox, with goal scorer Mutch replaced by Nicolai Muller.

    Western United built back into the game after the subs broke the speed of the play, Berisha had a chance for a very short range header and looped it over the crossbar. Margush was called into action again 10 minutes from full time. When the rest of the defence failed to stop a long throw being flicked on at the near post, Margush was strong with his hands to keep the ball out. Simon Cox almost doubled for the Wanderers, he got onto the end of a long bomb cross from Yeboah, it would have beat the keeper but a late intervention from the defence stopped it from finding the net or flashing across goal for a Muller tap-in. Muller had his own opportunity when he smashed a short-range volley over the bar.

    The fourth official somehow found a 6 minute long stoppage time and United should have equalised with a point blank header only for the United attacker to find Margush from a few meters out. The Wanderers should have then buried the game as they broke fast up the other end, Yeboah and Kamau combined and Yeboah practically shot the cover off the ball only to rattle the woodwork. If he'd found Kamau in the middle he might have had a tap-in to seal it.

    The late pressure from United was met with a stoic, uncompromising defence with the Wanderers throwing themselves at the ball and when required, through the opposition players. The clearly excessive 7 minutes of stoppage passed with waves of United attack but they couldn't breach the Red & Black wall and having taken all three points, the Wanderers benefiting from other results to fly up the A-League table to take 3rd place on 16 points, 5 from the Mariners in first and ahead of Adelaide United on goal difference. It may not have been the prettiest game for the visitors but they held fast, worked for each other and had enough chances to say they deserved the close win. It is the first win for the Wanderers outside New South Wales in 436 days and a welcome relief after the poor form of last month.

    The Wanderers next match is against Wellington Phoenix at Parramatta on Monday March the 15th. 


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    1 hour ago, wendybr said:

    "Bolding up his fatness"?

    More like "bolding up his fartness"  surely?   :D

    Och! Ye'r ony blowin' in they wind lassie.

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    14 minutes ago, Edinburgh said:

    Och! Ye'r ony blowin' in they wind lassie.

    Aye, mebe so, but I'm  rrete, am aye nart?

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    7 hours ago, StringerBellend said:

    DG is on his way out, Carlo made his mind up. To be fair to DG I like that he came on pitch at the end and supported the team must be hard for a pro like him to be on the outer.

    That said other than the cameo at MacArthur he’s been dreadful when he has played. 
     

    He doesn’t mark his man tight enough, and going forward on the left he cuts inside all the time, willmerring gives us more width 

    As for the 4, personally I think we look far better and it suits the players we have. If we are 3 at the back then teams exploit the space in behind (see Nabout tearing us a new one the other week) we become 5 at the back and have no width.

    wing back role in that formation is a huge ask for a couple of kids to play. 4 keeps it simpler and allows us to play an actual winger  

    A successful back 3 is something that can only be played by the most elite of teams. With all respect to our great league, the players here aren’t capable enough. You basically need 3 defenders who have the best of a centre half rolled into the best of a fullback, all with premium pace. Then you need a wingbacks who have an engine on them to run all day plus 6’s that can motor from box to box. There’s too much going on.

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    Great to see Kamau and Muller absolutely giving it to Yeboah at full time. The dude is a momentum black hole. And for us being a team so reliant on a counter attack, we're better off playing with 10 men. 

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    Yeboah would be competing for a contract. Considering we have:

    • Cox
    • Ibini
    • Duke
    • Yeboah
    • Kamau
    • Muller
    • Troisi

    Along with Yeboah it would be clear we would not be keeping all of them. Yeboah does need to improve with that chance he absolutely needs to bury it if he isn't squaring it to Muller or Kamau

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    On 08/03/2021 at 10:50 PM, hughsey said:

    A successful back 3 is something that can only be played by the most elite of teams. With all respect to our great league, the players here aren’t capable enough. You basically need 3 defenders who have the best of a centre half rolled into the best of a fullback, all with premium pace. Then you need a wingbacks who have an engine on them to run all day plus 6’s that can motor from box to box. There’s too much going on.

    Yeah there is a reason that the 3-5-2 is not a popular option these days. If you think about the best team to use it, they had bloody Cafu and Roberto Carlos getting up and down the sideline. Freaks.

    Hiddink used it with the Socceroos, but that was more damage control against great teams and he always said that we'd play one more central defender than the opposition had strikers. And he had some absolute workhorses in Emmerton and Chipperfield getting up and down. He also routinely changed formations and the opposition had few games of ours to scout and so didn't always take advantage where they could. You get the feeling that the opposing coaches are coming ready for Robo and he needs to adapt a bit.

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    11 hours ago, btron3000 said:

    Yeah there is a reason that the 3-5-2 is not a popular option these days. If you think about the best team to use it, they had bloody Cafu and Roberto Carlos getting up and down the sideline. Freaks.

    Hiddink used it with the Socceroos, but that was more damage control against great teams and he always said that we'd play one more central defender than the opposition had strikers. And he had some absolute workhorses in Emmerton and Chipperfield getting up and down. He also routinely changed formations and the opposition had few games of ours to scout and so didn't always take advantage where they could. You get the feeling that the opposing coaches are coming ready for Robo and he needs to adapt a bit.

    That seems to be a common Socceroos tactic. Hiddink set us up in a formation that effectively left us a man down in certain areas of the field, but then made sure we were the fittest team there so we compensated for it. In the last World Cup where we played really well against the eventual winners I remember watching a video of the French squad's debrief meeting. Deschamps was blowing up at them as he was going through the stats because we had collectively run over 10% more than them, which he likened to playing against an extra man.

    3-5-2 allows you to overload certain parts of the field but at the expense of requiring some players to do the work of two people at times. That's why Georgievski appears to be falling out of favour. The only position Robbo can really play him is wingback but he doesn't have the motor to do it for 90mins. When he came off the bench in that role he looked great because he knew he didn't have to pace himself and could go flat out. The problem is when he's only a bench player why wouldn't you give that role to one of the kids? Even then I agree that there are too many specialist roles in the formation that require people to be complete outliers in terms of fitness. Also when it requires two defensively minded midfielders and no wingers it means that Cox, Duke, Muller, Troisi, Ibini, Yeboah and Kamau are all competing for three starting positions, which seems like a waste of cap space and visa players.

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    Natta and Tass have both played a little as defensive midfielders in their formative years. It would be good if we could quickly switch from 3-5-2 to 4-2-3-1 when needed by pushing Mutch forward and having Tass or Natta play next to Dorrans. Probably too much of a step up for our young defenders though I guess.

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