Tag: Australian coach

  • World Cup hero gone, two shock returns and six rookies as Popovic names Socceroos squad

    World Cup hero gone, two shock returns and six rookies as Popovic names Socceroos squad

    Socceroos coach Tony Popovic has made 10 changes to his squad for two must win World Cup qualifiers this month against Indonesia and China, headlined by the omission of veteran striker Mitch Duke.

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    The extended 26-player squad features six uncapped players in Scotland based midfielder Nectarios Triantis, Melbourne Victory midfielder Ryan Teague, Melbourne City defender Kai Trewin, Middlesbrough goalkeeper Thomas Glover, fellow shot stopper Paul Izzo and Sydney FC defender Alex Grant. It’s the first time Triantis, Teague, Grant and Trewin have earned a senior national team call-up.

    Popovic has also turned to two players, Jason Davidson and Fran Karacic, who haven’t been a part of the Socceroos’ set-up for some time. Davidson, a 33-year-old left back who plays for Panserraikos F.C in the Greek Super League, hasn’t featured for Australia since a friendly against Jordan in 2022. Before that, the 2015 Asian Cup winner’s last appearance was in a World Cup qualifier against Bangladesh in November that year. Karacic’s last involvement for the Socceroos was during the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. The right back, who now calls NK Lokomotiva in Croatia home, was part of the squad for all four games and featured in the group stage win against Tunisia and the 2-1 defeat to Argentina in the Round of 16.

    A raft of injuries to first choice players made picking this squad a tricky task. Goalkeeper Joe Gauci (hip), defenders Hayden Matthews (ankle), Harry Souttar (achilles), and Jordy Bos (hamstring) are all missing while Riley McGree (knock) continues to struggle with his fitness at Middlesbrough. Alessandro Circati is also a long-term absentee as the 21-year-old Parama defender continues to recover from an anterior cruciate ligament tear. The only two bits of good news from the frequent medical reports came in the form of striker Kusini Yengi returning to action for Portsmouth in the Championship three weeks ago after the 26-year-old hurt his knee in the Socceroos last match against Bahrain in late November while giant defender Cameron Burgess has seemingly shrugged off a calf complaint suffered in Ipswich Town’s fifth round FA Cup defeat to Nottingham Forest on March 4.

    Mitchell Duke celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the Qatar 2022 World Cup match between Tunisia and Australia.Source: AFP

    The rest of the squad is a mix of potential, young stars ready for their chance and one veteran who probably thought his time had passed.

    Melbourne Victory’s Daniel Arzani gets another chance to impress after Popovic blasted the talented winger during an interview with reporters in January. The coach said Arzani “wasn’t good enough” when he came into camp in October last year and that his “level was really poor in training.” Arzani, once dubbed “the next big thing” in Australian football, missed selection for the November window and has been left in no doubt as to what Popovic wants to see from him. Marco Tilio’s impressive comeback for Melbourne City from a two-and-a-half-month stint on the sidelines with a hamstring injury has also caught Popovic’s eye. Those two will be fighting to fill the inverted winger role with Ajdin Hrustic not selected. Hrustic has played just 16-minutes for Italian second division side US Salernitana in 2025.

    Triantis made himself almost impossible to ignore after a stunning run of form for Hibernian in the Scottish Premier League where he has featured as a ball-winning midfielder. Melbourne Victory’s Ryan Teague adds depth to the fight for that deeper lying role in the centre of the park. Speculation had recently linked him to the Chinese national team if his exploits had seen him overlooked for Australia again.

    Triantis and Teague were picked over Max Balard and Patrick Yazbek. Balard has been a regular starter for NAC Breda in the Dutch top flight and was called into the Socceroos squad for the November window, but didn’t get on the field.

    Defender Alex Grant gets his reward for a solid run of games with Sydney FC since signing a short-term deal with the Sky Blues in February. Grant is hugely experienced and has an Asian Champions League final appearance and a Korean Cup winners medal on his resume from his time with Pohang Steelers. At 6 foot 3 inches, the 31-year-old goes some way to filling the giant voids left by the injured Souttar and Matthews.

    “It was a whirlwind start to the beginning of my tenure with the national team, and since November we’ve had the chance to review and assess all facets of our program ahead of these Qualifiers,” Popovic said.

    “We understand the importance of these upcoming games and are excited by the opportunity to further cement our position in the group’s automatic qualifying positions.”

    Australian coach Tony Popovic.Source: News Corp Australia

    The biggest surprise is Duke missing selection. The striker has been a regular in green and gold since late 2019, but despite a huge work rate without the ball, hasn’t found the back of the net with the type of regularity the Socceroos have needed to smooth their path at or on the road to, major tournaments. Duke has found the back of the net just four times in 24-games at international level since the start of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. The 34-year-old has also played 45-minutes for J-League side Machida Zelvia this season. Goals will now need to come from the boots of Yengi, Adam Taggart and Brandon Borrello.

    There also wasn’t room for Nestory Irankunda once again despite the 19-year-old being named the Swiss Super League’s Player of the Month for February after his move from Bayern Munich to Grasshoppers.

    The games against Indonesia on Thursday in Sydney and China in Hangzhou on Tuesday shape as crucial to Australia’s hopes of sealing direct qualification to the 2026 FIFA World Cup in USA, Canada and Mexico. The Socceroos currently sit in second spot in Group C with four games left in the third round. If they stay there, they’ll earn an automatic berth to the game’s global showpiece. It makes two wins from these next two fixtures vital with Japan at home and Saudi Arabia away to come in June. Just one-point separates second placed Australia from last placed China.

    “I’m looking forward to seeing the players and getting the squad together on the pitch in preparation for what will be a great occasion at the Sydney Football Stadium,” Popovic added.

    Extended 26 player Socceroos squad:

    Daniel Arzani, Aziz Behich, Brandon Borrello, Martin Boyle, Cameron Burgess, Anthony Caceres, Jason Davidson, Milos Degenek, Jason Geria, Thomas Glover (GK), Craig Goodwin, Alex Grant, Jackson Irvine, Paul Izzo (GK), Fran Karacic, Lewis Miller, Aiden O’Neill, Kye Rowles, Mat Ryan (GK), Adam Taggart, Ryan Teague, Marco Tilio, Nectarios Triantis, Kai Trewin, Nishan Velupillay, Kusini Yengi

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  • North Korean dictator bans Ange’s Spurs from being shown for petty reason

    North Korean dictator bans Ange’s Spurs from being shown for petty reason

    Kim Jong-un has banned Tottenham Hotspur matches from being shown in North Korea.

    The Korean dictator has outlawed the Premier League club, coached by Australian Ange Postecoglou, because the team is captained by South Korean star Son Heung-min.

    As reported by The Sun, the rogue regime leader has banned all Premier League games from being broadcast in his country — if the team has a South Korean players on its roster.

    It means the so-called tyrant’s favourite team — Manchester United — will also be blacked out in his country because the Red Devils play Tottenham on Monday morning (AEDT).

    A report also revealed coverage in North Korea of last year’s Premier League did not include Wolverhampton Wanderers because of their South Korean forward Hwang Hee-chan, or Brentford, who have his countryman, defender Kim Ji-soo.

    Match coverage in the secretive state is shortened from 90 minutes to 60 and games are shown before news bulletins — and about four months after they are played.

    Ange Postecoglou and Kim Jong-un. Photo: KCNA VIA KNS / AFP and Shaun Boterill, Getty.Source: Supplied
    Son Heung-Min applauds fans. Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP.Source: AFP

    With his team languishing 14th in the league, Tottenham fan Tom Bell said: “The way this season has gone for Spurs, North Koreans can count themselves lucky not being subjected to their games.”

    The findings come in a report by the independent US think tank Stimson Center’s probe into North Korea.

    State TV is rife with propaganda but sport is “one of the few moments each day when state TV is not trying to send an overt or underlying message to its viewers,” analysis found.

    The Center’s Martyn Williams said: “We thought it was interesting.

    “We just saw a lot of football on KCTV. It’s the main international sport they broadcast.”

    The report says that in 2022, North Korean telly carried coverage of England’s top flight plus Germany’s Bundesliga, Spain’s La Liga, France’s Ligue 1 and Italy’s Serie A.

    But the following year, KCTV settled the Premier League, the UEFA Champions League and the World Cup.

    Ange Postecoglou (L) embraces South Korean striker Son Heung-Min. Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP.Source: AFP
    North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency photo shows Kim Jong Un visiting the Ministry of National Defence.Source: AFP

    English football has also found fans among other dictators.

    Late Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro was an Arsenal fan and Zimbabwe tyrant Robert Mugabe, who died in 2019, supported Chelsea.

    Press coverage being diverted away from Postecoglou’s tenuous hold on his job will be a welcomed distraction for the club.

    The former Socceroos manager’s second season with the London club has been a trainwreck with the side collapsing to be 14th on the Premier League table – as well as being knocked out of the League Cup and FA Cup.

    Fans have turned on Postecoglou, but fans have been far more vocal in calling for Spurs chairman Daniel Levy to be ousted.

    As first reported by The Sun, Spurs fans have planned a mass protest for Monday morning’s game against United, where they will demand Levy to stand down.

    The club has not won a major trophy since 2008.

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  • Ruthless call puts stars on notice; moments that exposed Socceroos’ biggest issue: Talking Pts

    Ruthless call puts stars on notice; moments that exposed Socceroos’ biggest issue: Talking Pts

    Former Socceroos coach Graham Arnold tried to warn anyone who would listen.

    Qualifying for the 2026 World Cup wouldn’t be easy.

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    FIFA’s decision to expand the tournament from 32 teams in Qatar to 48 in Canada, USA and Mexico made it a harder message to sell.

    After all, the Socceroos have qualified for the last five editions of football’s showpiece event. How on earth could Australia miss out with double the spots on offer through Asia?

    Arnold had raised the alarm time and again about the record amounts of investment being ploughed into national team programs across Asia – teams Australia had rolled through with relative ease in the past.

    His warning, in some respect, has come to fruition during this qualifying campaign.

    The Socceroos are enduring another rocky road to a World Cup. The latest speed bump in the route will come in Bahrain on Wednesday morning (AEDT) where Australia can either keep their fate in their own hands or face two agonisingly tense international windows next year.

    BAHRAIN PRESENTS A BIG CHANCE

    The Socceroos currently sit second in Group C during the third round of qualifying but have just one win to their name. No second placed side, in any of the other qualifying groups, has fewer victories.

    Second place presents the golden prize of automatic World Cup qualification come the final international window in June next year.

    The only reason they are still in charge of their own destiny is because other sides have continually let opportunities to take control of their own fate slip.

    Saudi Arabia, perceived from the outset as a fellow group heavyweight, like the Socceroos, have one win, three draws and one defeat.

    China, in fourth place, have one more victory to their name than Australia, but have lost three of their five qualifiers.

    The only pattern is that there isn’t one.

    Consistency, apart from Japan who sit seven points clear at the top, has been elusive across the board.

    Spurs star cops 7-game suspension | 00:42

    Under Tony Popovic there are signs the Socceroos are starting to find their rhythm. Since taking over in October he has secured five points from three games. It has been a solid, but not spectacular start.

    The game against Bahrain is must win; especially with Saudi Arabia taking on last placed Indonesia in Jakarta.

    The reality of their situation has breached the walls of the camp. Harry Souttar was short, but sharp when asked about it in his final appearance before the cameras prior to the match in Riffa.

    “Very important,” the giant centre back said.

    “Obviously you can see the table, apart from the leaders Japan, you see how tight it is. It’s a huge game for us and it’s one we’re going to try and do our best at to get the three points.”

    Australia, Saudi Arabia and China all enter this matchday on six points with Bahrain on five.

    The margins are slim.

    KEEP THE EMOTIONS IN CHECK

    Bahrain set the first dose of third phase drama in motion back in September.

    The world number 76 left the Gold Coast with a 1-0 win in what turned out to be Arnold’s second last game in charge after a six-year tenure.

    Bahrain not only frustrated the Socceroos via an 89th minute Souttar own goal, but also by staying on the turf for lengthy periods after any contact.

    Stand-in captain Jackson Irvine believes the side let it become “the story of the game” and the teams leadership group has vowed to not let their opponents get under their skin again.

    “Of course, you want to maintain that discipline and not let it rattle us away from our game, but at the same time, you don’t want to let teams get away with certain kinds of behaviour and you need to have each other’s backs,” Irvine said.

    “Probably in the first game against them, we didn’t find that balance well enough.

    That’s the biggest thing you want to avoid. You want that drama to not be the centre of the game. You want our performance to be the main focus.”

    England thrash Ireland to earn promotion | 00:53

    SOCCEROOS MUST BE RUTHLESS IN FRONT OF GOAL

    The Socceroos have taken 58-shots during the third round with 14 of those classified as on target. Yet, after five games, they’ve scored only four goals.

    Now, like most statistics, they can be misleading or largely irrelevant when placed in context.

    The Socceroos haven’t scored enough goals, but it’s clearly not through the number of shots being taken.

    58 in five games is a large number.

    What that statistic, and even shots on target fail to measure, is both the quality of the chances and ones that should’ve ended up in one column or the other but didn’t due to decision making.

    The Socceroos should’ve beaten Saudi Arabia in Melbourne on Thursday night and to avoid a repeat performance against Bahrain they need to find a ruthlessness in-front of goal.

    In Melbourne, Mitch Duke had a chance to shoot after a superb bit of pressing from Aiden O’Neill forced a turnover on the edge of the Saudi 18-yard box. Instead, the veteran striker decided to lay it off to Ajdin Hrustic who under hit his shot into the waiting hands of goalkeeper Ahmed Al-Kassar.

    Similarly, Brandon Borrello found himself through on goal and one-on-one with the goalkeeper in the 84th minute. The Western Sydney Wanderers forward opted to square it to Riley McGree instead of finishing the chance himself. McGree was thwarted by a scrambling defender.

    Those two moments were pivotal.

    “It’s probably when you look at them all together, it probably looks like we need to have that more clinical edge,” Irvine said.

    “Whether it’s someone taking more responsibility earlier without the hesitation or whether it’s squaring the ball in the right time for someone else to have an easier moment.

    “There’s no right or wrong answer. It’s just about making sure we find that clinical edge individually and collectively to be able to put the ball in the back of the net.”

    Craig Goodwin’s return from suspension should help their pursuit of goals.

    The 32-year-old has seven goals to his name for his country and five of those have come in the space of 10-appearances in 2024.

    Socceroos survive late scare v Saudi | 03:00

    FIX THE EARLY WOBBLES

    The team, by their own admission, have been poor in the first 20-minutes of games so far in the third round.

    A lack of possession and a low percentage of passes completed have been consistent themes.

    On occasion, it has come through their own doing while in other matches, an aggressive press from the opposition has induced multiple mistakes with the ball.

    It has left the side chasing games once they’ve composed themselves, in what has proved to be crucial time lost.

    Having a squad of 26 in Bahrain allows training to become match simulation.

    A particular area of focus, according to Irvine, has been playing out from the back under pressure. Whether Bahrain will be bold enough to pressure Australia so high up the pitch remains to be seen, but the Socceroos are bracing for that possibility given how effective it has been against them so far.

    “It is a question of sometimes the players on the pitch being able to identify solutions in those moments, about trying to find answers quicker,” he said.

    “That was the main focus of training yesterday. Especially in and around our box and being calm and trying to find solutions in those areas. It was a topic of conversation post-game after Saudi and we’ve looked at it this week.”

    RYAN BENCHING HAS PUT PLAYERS ON NOTICE

    One of Tony Popovic’s first tactical decisions was to drop long time goalkeeper and captain Mat Ryan to the bench and promote Aston Villa’s Joe Gauci in his place.

    Gauci, who has seen some gametime for Villa this season in the League Cup, has played the last three games for Australia. Ryan, who is yet to take the pitch for his new club Roma in Serie A, is enduring his longest ever run out of the starting side since becoming a mainstay in 2013.

    According to Irvine, Ryan’s demotion has proved anyone, no matter how entrenched they may seem in the side, is capable of being dropped.

    “It shows everybody how key your performances have to be and you have to be on it all the time to make sure you maintain your place in the team,” he said.

    Ryan is now 32 which is still relatively young for a goalkeeper and will no doubt continue to fight for his place.

    At the very least he’ll be an experienced sounding board for 24-year-old Gauci who is just taking his first steps at a large European club.

    That is a journey Ryan knows well.

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  • ‘Deeply saddened’: Football world in mourning as Johan Neeskens dies

    ‘Deeply saddened’: Football world in mourning as Johan Neeskens dies

    Johan Neeskens, part of the Ajax and Netherlands teams that created “total football” in the 1970s and a key team-mate of Johan Cruyff, has died aged 73, the Dutch football federation said Monday.

    “With Johan Neeskens, the Dutch and international football world loses a legend,” the KNVB federation said in a statement, adding that the midfielder had died on Sunday from an unspecified illness.

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    Neeskens was part of the Ajax team that won three straight European Cups in the early 1970s and was also a member of the ‘Clockwork Oranje’ Dutch team that reached consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978.

    He won 49 caps for the Netherlands.

    “With his characteristic tackles, sublime insight and iconic penalties, (he) will forever remain one of the leading players that Dutch football has ever produced,” said the KNVB.

    After his playing career, Neeskens took part in coaching programmes around the world including as an assistant to Australian national team manager Guus Hiddink for the 2006 World Cup where the Socceroos progressed from the group stage to the Round of 16.

    Known on the pitch for his uncompromising tackling, he also had a softer side, the KNVB said in its statement.

    He was “a world citizen and a gentle family man who was proud of his children and grandchildren and who, until the very end, knew how to touch others with his love for football.” The KNVB said it would hold a minute’s silence at the next two international matches against Hungary and Germany.

    Ajax wrote on X: “We are deeply saddened to hear about the passing of Johan Neeskens. Our thoughts are with his family at this time.” “Rest in peace, Ajax legend.” Barcelona, where he was known as “Johan The Second” (after Crujff), according to Dutch public broadcaster NOS, also tweeted condolences.

    “A blaugrana legend who will forever be in our memory.” Current Dutch coach Ronald Koeman described Neeskens as his “great idol”. Playing football in the street as a boy, Koeman said his friends either wanted to be Crujff or Dutch star Willem van Hanegem.

    “But I wanted to be Neeskens,” said Koeman, cited by local news agency ANP. “His style really appealed to me. His fight, for example. And he was also a great penalty specialist.”

    Neeskens, tough midfielder in Cruyff’s Ajax and Dutch teams

    Johan Neeskens, who has died aged 73, was the powerful but smooth engine of the Ajax and Netherlands teams that created “total football” with Johan Cruyff at their heart.

    Neeskens was part of the Ajax team that won three straight European Cups and a key component of the “Clockwork Oranje” Dutch team that reached consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978, losing both.

    “He was worth two men in midfield,” Ajax team-mate Sjaak Swart once told FIFA.com.

    Neeskens was a relentless runner and tough tackler, but he was also skilful. He finished the 1974 World Cup with five goals, second to only to Grzegorz Lato of Poland and top scorer in a Dutch team that also contained Cruyff and the flamboyant Johnny Rep.

    “I always liked to play with style — and to win,” Neeskens said. Johannes Jacobus Neeskens was born in Heemstede, west of Amsterdam, on September 15, 1951. He was signed from his home-town club by Ajax coach Rinus Michels in 1970.

    Neeskens was right-back when the club beat Greek side Panathinaikos 2-0 for their first European Cup win in 1971. He then switched to central midfield, playing there as Ajax won two more titles in 1972, against Inter Milan, and 1973, against Juventus.

    The Ajax team led by Cruyff and Neeskens formed the spine of the Dutch side that dazzled on the way to the 1974 World Cup final in West Germany.

    After just two minutes in Munich, Neeskens set two World Cup final records, scoring the quickest goal in as he converted the first penalty, awarded before any West German and most Dutch players had touched the ball.

    “As a player it is a little bit strange because sometimes you need the feeling,” he later told FIFA.

    “I’d hardly touched the ball and wasn’t even warm. Then you have to make that penalty in front of 80,000 who are against you and of course the whole world is watching it.

    “That was the first time that I was a little bit nervous in taking a penalty,” he said.

    “When I started running, I was thinking: ‘which side am I going to shoot?’ It was more or less always in the right side of the goal. At the last step, I thought ‘no, I’m going to shoot the other way’. It was not my meaning to kick the ball straight through the middle.” But he also said: “If you’re not sure, just hit it as hard as possible. If you don’t know where it’s going, nor will the keeper.” The West Germans fought back, equalising with the second ever World Cup final penalty, converted by Paul Breitner, and winning with a goal by Gerd Mueller.

    Despite the loss, “that tournament was a dream,” Neeskens told FIFA. “I was 22 and a key player.” The Dutch had caught the eye, but West Germany took the trophy. “We lost that game but everybody was talking about our team and our football,” Neeskens recalled. “We deserved to win that final.”

    – ‘Kamikaze pilot’ –

    Four years later in Argentina, as Cruyff opted to stay at home, Neeskens was again a key part of the Dutch team that reached the final.

    He was injured early in a group loss to Scotland and missed the revenge victory over West Germany. He returned for the last two matches, including the 3-1 defeat in extra time as the Dutch again lost the final to the host nation.

    By then Neeskens had followed Cruyff to Catalonia, where Barcelona fans dubbed the midfielder “Johan the Second”.

    In five years at Barca, he won a Copa del Rey and European Cup Winners’ Cup before heading to the United States for five seasons with the star-studded New York Cosmos.

    Bobby Haarms, Michels’ assistant at Ajax, was quoted in “Brilliant Orange”, a book on Dutch football by David Winner, as saying Neeskens was “like a kamikaze pilot.” He coached in the Netherlands, Turkey, Switzerland and South Africa and spent more than four years as Netherlands assistant coach under first Guus Hiddink and then Frank Rijkaard.

    He was also Rijkaard’s assistant at Barcelona and Hiddink’s assistant with Australia.

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  • Tottenham coach Ange Postecoglou laments ‘disappointing day’ after loss to Arsenal

    Tottenham coach Ange Postecoglou laments ‘disappointing day’ after loss to Arsenal

    Tottenham coach Ange Postecoglou made no attempt to hide his frustration after Spurs suffered a 3-2 loss to Arsenal in a North London Derby on Monday morning AEST.

    The Gunners silenced the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium with a three-goal blast before halftime; Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg’s own goal put Arsenal ahead before Bukayo Saka and Kai Havertz netted to leave the visitors in complete control.

    Cristian Romero and Son Heung-min struck for Tottenham after the interval to set up a nervous finish, but the visitors clung on by their fingertips.

    “It was a disappointing day for us,” Postecoglou told reporters in the post-match press conference.

    “It was a big game, a big game for the club, for our fans. We didn’t get the outcome we wanted so obviously very disappointing.

    “We wanted to win today for our supporters and for the club. We didn’t do that.”

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    With fourth-placed Aston Villa seven points clear of fifth-placed Tottenham, Postecoglou’s side must win their two games in hand to have any chance of staying in the race for Champions League qualification.

    Postecoglou was visibly frustrated with the costly mistakes, particularly while in defence, littered through the team’s second-consecutive defeat.

    “I thought our general football was good, was decent,” he continued.

    “We controlled the game for long periods for the most part but we know that. We know we’re a team that can do that.

    “It’s about now over the course of time getting from where we are to where we want to get to. To do that we’re still not absolutely laser focused on the details, the small things that get you from where we are to become a team that contends.

    “You can’t give time and space to the opposition, you can’t make decisions or lose focus in any given moment.”

    However, Postecoglou had nothing but praise for Romero, who put together an “outstanding” performance for Tottenham.

    “I’ve just got to get some of what’s in him into some of the others,” Postecoglou said.

    The Australian coach also vented about the VAR after Netherlands international Micky van de Ven was denied a crucial goal during the first half.

    “Games are not refereed in the stadium any more,” Postecoglou said

    “They are refereed somewhere else and no one will convince me otherwise. It’s not even re-refereed, it’s refereed somewhere else. That’s why I don’t celebrate goals anymore. I wait for somebody down the road.

    “I just don’t think referees in the stadium any more have that authority they used to make decisions. They just go, ‘You know what, I’ll just wait and see what the bloke down the road thinks’. It’s a shame, I don’t like it but it’s here to stay and I’ve got to accept it like everyone else.”

    Tottenham will next face Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Friday morning AEST.

    ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE

    Arsenal 35 25 5 5 85 28 80

    Man City 34 24 7 3 82 32 79

    Liverpool 35 22 9 4 77 36 75

    AstonVilla 35 20 7 8 73 52 67

    Tottenham 33 18 6 9 67 52 60

    ManUtd 34 16 6 12 52 51 54

    Newcastle 34 16 5 13 74 55 53

    WestHam 35 13 10 12 56 65 49

    Chelsea 33 13 9 11 63 59 48

    Bournemouth 35 13 9 13 52 60 48

    Wolves 35 13 7 15 48 55 46

    Brighton 34 11 11 12 52 57 44

    Fulham 35 12 7 16 51 55 43

    Crystal Palace 35 10 10 15 45 57 40

    Everton 35 12 8 15 37 48 36

    Brentford 35 9 8 18 52 60 35

    NottmForest 35 7 9 19 42 62 26

    Luton 35 6 7 22 48 77 25

    Burnley 35 5 9 21 38 70 24

    SheffUtd 35 3 7 25 34 97 16 (relegated)

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  • ‘I’m done’: Warner drops retirement news after T20 loss

    ‘I’m done’: Warner drops retirement news after T20 loss

    Playing his final international innings in Australia powerhouse opener David Warner went big but his one-man effort couldn’t reel in what would have been a record T20 run-chase as the international summer ended in a fizzling defeat to the West Indies in Perth.

    Warner, who revealed after the match he’d be “done” after this year’s T20 World Cup, became the second man to pass 3000 T20 runs for his country as he blasted 81 off 49 including 54 runs in boundaries.

    But it proved a one-man effort as the Aussies, with captain Mitch Marsh opening in a batting order re-jig, failed to match the six-hitting onslaught of Windies powerhouse Andre Russell who powered his team to a massive 6-220, finishing at 5-183 in the 37-run defeat.

    After being named man of the series, Warner confirmed the T20 World Cup would be his last matches in Australian colours.

    “I’m well and truly done, it’s time for the youngsters to come through and showcase their talent,” he said at the presentation.

    “We’ve got extreme talent here. We’re in good stead for the future.”

    That wasn’t on full display on Perth as the Windies took their run-haul through the three match series to a mammoth 629 against the fill-in T20 attack as superstar slugger Russell destroyed star Aussie spinner Adam Zampa slapping seven sixes in a 29-ball innings of 71.

    He swatted Zampa, whose final figures of 1-67 were his worst ever in T20 internationals. for four maximums off the penultimate over of the innings, which went for 28 runs, as part of a world-record sixth wicket partnership of 139 with Sherfane Rutherford (67 not out off 40), the duo combining for 12 sixes.

    Needing to record the biggest international T20 run-chase in Australia, and looking for a 6-0 clean sweep across two white-ball series, Warner rebounded after being floored by a nasty ball from Russell in the fourth over to make a 26th T20 half-century.

    But after selectors opted against handing batting tyro Jake Fraser-McGurk a T20 debut, there was no batting support, the 41 from Tim David, after some late slogging, the next best score as the Australians suffered just the second loss in 11 matches across the home summer against first Pakistan then the Windies.

    Instead it was Russell, who rescued his team from 5-79 to record a much-needed win as they build to their home World Cup, with the tournament being hosted in the Caribbean and USA.

    The Aussie run-chase floundered after national selectors followed the advice of Fraser-McGurk’s South Australian coach, Jason Gillespie, to “calm the farm” around the 21-year-old batter who was called in to the squad but didn’t play, having blasted a brilliant 18-ball 41 in his second ODI.

    “It’s a big deal to be called up to play for your country and he’s shown some signs he’s a player of the future,” Gillespie said of Fraser-McGurk earlier on Tuesday in Adelaide.

    “He’s a young player, and let’s remember he’s 21 – he’s very early in his journey.

    “We just need to make sure we’re calming the farm, and just allow him to learn and develop.”

    X-FACTOR

    International cricket seems to like Xavier Bartlett, who, given an Australian T20 debut to add to his two ODI caps, was in the wickets again and must be on the T20 World Cup selection radar, given he’s also proved economical.

    The big Queensland fast bowler returned unbelievable figures of 8-38 in his two 50-over outings, and took wickets in each of his first two overs in Perth after being inserted as a replacement for Josh Hazlewood.

    He finished with 2-37 and now has international cricket figures of 10-75 to start what could be a long and impressive career in the green and gold.

    MASS APPEAL

    It was either extremely passive aggressive, or humorous, when at the very first opportunity every single Australian player appealed, and loudly, for a close run-out when Mitch Marsh threw down the stumps early in the West Indies innings.

    Bowler Jason Behrendorff went twice, vocally, and there were arms in the air all over the field, a clear and direct response to the incident in Adelaide on Sunday night when the lack of an appeal, at least according to umpire Gerard Abood, resulted in Jason Holder not being given out in similar circumstances.

    The behaviour of the Australian players, who circled the umpire confused at what happened before being diffused by captain Mitch Marsh, raised some eyebrows, and the nature of the appeal in Perth, even though it was a close call, might do the same.

    Originally published as David Warner has played his last international match in Australia confirming he’ll finish after the T20 World Cup

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  • Asian Cup 2024: Socceroos vs South Korea, start time, how to watch, live stream, updates, blog, Son Heung-min

    Asian Cup 2024: Socceroos vs South Korea, start time, how to watch, live stream, updates, blog, Son Heung-min

    The Socceroos face South Korea at 2.30am on Saturday morning (AEDT) for a place in the Asian Cup semi-finals in a blockbuster rematch of the 2015 tournament final.

    Australia beat the team – now ranked 23rd in the world – in extra time to lift their maiden title on home soil.

    Now, in their first tournament meeting since that thrilling final, the two Cup contenders will do battle in Qatar, and it promises to be another epic encounter.

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    Neither team fully hit their stride in the group stages, but the world number 25 Socceroos racked up three clean sheets in their first four matches – including the 4-0 win over Singapore in the Round of 16.

    So far, they’ve scored eight goals and conceded just once, continuing to build on an unbeaten run that now stretches to eight matches.

    PREVIEW: Nine-year hurt behind Socceroos grudge match — and how friendly fire could ruin Aussie dream

    Socceroos gear up for South Korea clash | 01:27

    And Australia have a key boost for the crunch clash against South Korea – the Aussies played their Round of 16 match a full 50 hours before their opponents, who were taken all the way to a penalty shootout by Saudi Arabia.

    “I think there’s gonna be some sore bodies and tired bodies from the South Korea camp,” Socceroos striker Mitch Duke said on Thursday.

    “We’ve got to exploit that with our high energy and our physicality of how we play anyway, I think it could be an advantage for us to use for sure and I’m sure we’re going to look at that in the coming days.”

    But South Korea coach Jurgenn Klinsmann – a former German playing great – said his side were ‘ready to suffer’.

    “Rest days are what they are. You accept it, you move on. We are ready,” Klinsmann said.

    “We are ready for this huge game and we are very hungry. We want to go through.

    “And if you want to go through in the knockout phases of a big tournament, you have to suffer. You have to be ready to suffer, you have to deal with pain, because you are banged up from the last game.

    “That’s normal. It’s normal. And the players play this way at their club teams. Many of them play in Europe every three or four days. So it’s no problem.

    “It will be a 50-50 match, it will be a hard-fought match. We are ready for the battle. We battled through 120 minutes against Saudi Arabia and we will go and battle through whatever it will takes against Australia.”

    MORE COVERAGE

    ‘He said those exact words’: How Ange’s bold halftime call sparked ‘extraordinary’ comeback

    ‘Get into a UFC cage and see how brave they are’: Why Ange is ‘not a fan’ of PL stars’ antics

    Key to South Korea’s hopes of victory is Son Heung-Min, the Tottenham talisman who is back to his best form since Australian manager Ange Postecoglou took over at Spurs this season.

    In a funny twist of fate, Postecoglou was in charge of the Socceroos for their 2015 Asian Cup campaign – when Son scored in the final but was not able to overcome Postecoglou’s Socceroos.

    Asked about his plans to shut down Son, Graham Arnold joked: “I rang Ange and asked Ange if he can take him back!”

    Son Heung-Min is the danger-man leading South Korea.Source: Getty Images

    South Korea, ranked two places higher than the Socceroos, will be their hardest opponent of the tournament so far and were considered one of the pre-tournament favourites.

    But Keanu Baccus said the Aussies weren’t afraid of South Korea’s bevy of superstars including Son, Kim Min-Jae (Bayern), Lee Kang-In (PSG), and Hwang Hee-Chan (Wolves).

    “We’re not too worried about them, we just worry about ourselves, but yeah they’ve got some individual players that are great, and we’ve got talent too, we respect them, but we don’t fear them,” he said.

    “We go out and play our game and do what we’ve been doing this tournament. We’ve only conceded the one goal this whole tournament, if we do that again the rest will take care of itself.”

    While South Korea pose an immensely difficult task, both teams will be bullish about their chances of reaching the final should they win tonight.

    World no. 87 Jordan or Tajikistan, ranked 106th in the world, loom as the semi-final opponent for the victor.

    LIVE BLOG

    Follow the action in our live blog below! If you can’t see the blog, click here.

    FIXTURE DETAILS

    Australia v Korea Republic

    Saturday, February 3rd 2024

    Al-Janoub Stadium, Al-Wakrah

    Kick-off: 6:30pm local (2:30am AEDT)

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  • Ange is on Liverpool’s ‘radar’… but this ‘tricky’ reality makes blockbuster PL move unlikely — UK View

    Ange is on Liverpool’s ‘radar’… but this ‘tricky’ reality makes blockbuster PL move unlikely — UK View

    English powerhouse Liverpool are on the hunt for their next manager following Jurgen Klopp’s decision to step down at the season’s end and several names have been floated.

    Bayern Leverkusen’s Xabi Alonso, Brighton’s Roberto De Zerbi and club legend Steve Gerrard are all contenders to take over the Reds’ top job.

    However, Tottenham’s Ange Postecoglou is “on the radar” for the Liverpool job according to The Athletic after an emphatic start to life in the Premier League.

    MORE KLOPP-LIVERPOOL EXIT NEWS

    KLOPP STUNNER: Inside Liverpool boss’ two-month ‘secret’… and ‘promise’ he made

    CONTENDERS: Here’s who could replace Klopp… including Ange?

    Ange swerves Klopp question in presser | 00:15

    The Australian coach took over at Tottenham ahead of the 23/24 season, losing the club’s talisman in Harry Kane in a hammer blow which many predicted would see the North London side slip out of European contention.

    But instead the former Celtic boss inspired a record-breaking start to Spurs’ campaign, recording the most points by any manager in their first nine games with 23.

    During his eight month stint he has also had to contend with several injuries, including long term sideline stints for two star recruits in James Maddison and Micky van de Ven.

    Now there are suggestions Liverpool could make a play for the Tottenham boss, who has previously admitted to being a fan of the Merseyside club.

    “Like any kid, I had the posters up on the wall. Liverpool was my team, but you grow up, things change,” Postecoglou previously said.

    So, what are the chances of Postecoglou actually landing the Liverpool gig and what is the UK press saying about the main factors to consider in a potential switch?

    Spurs cop controversial late winner | 00:43

    Well, Molly Hudson of The Times UK wrote that the “allure” of Liverpool, one of Europe’s most decorated clubs, could tempt Postecoglou to make the move.

    “The Tottenham Hotspur head coach has a similar magnetic charm to Klopp and has immediately shown an ability to connect with a fan base, while transforming Tottenham Hotspur’s playing style and mentality since arriving from Celtic last summer,” Hudson wrote.

    “Postecoglou, 58, may be unlikely to leave Tottenham so soon, but Liverpool’s status as one of the best teams in Europe could be alluring.

    “He has taken an unusual path to the Premier League, lifting trophies in Australia, Japan and Scotland, and has a distinct style of play — brave on the ball and exciting in attack.

    “He has managed to revamp Tottenham’s approach despite a raft of injuries and the departure of Harry Kane, the England captain, to Bayern.

    “Postecoglou is a Liverpool fan, and said he grew up watching the club in the 1970s as their games were among the few broadcast in Australia. He has also complimented the tempo and intensity with which Liverpool have played under Klopp.”

    Klopp drops shock resignation bombshell | 01:58

    Meanwhile, The Athletic’s Andy Jones wrote it would be “a tricky one”, highlighting the timing could be wrong for Liverpool to make a bold play to poach Postecoglou, having only been at Tottenham for eight months.

    Spurs have also made it clear they won’t allow the coach to depart the club and will do whatever it takes to retain his services.

    Jones also highlighted the gun coach’s ability to secure crucial competition points without key players, sticking to their distinct high press method.

    “The 58-year-old has breathed new life into a Tottenham side that looked well short of it last season,” Jones wrote.

    “His use of inverted full-backs to create overloads in central areas in his 4-3-3 system looks like an approach that could be replicated at Liverpool, and his possession-based style results in plenty of attacking flair.

    “One of the biggest compliments afforded to Postecoglou has been that despite the numerous injuries and suspensions he has had to deal with, the team’s style has not changed.

    “He is wedded to it and even when circumstances are against them — such as going down to nine men against Chelsea — they remain determined to play their way.

    “Had the Klopp departure come 12 months further on, a move for Postecoglou would certainly have been plausible as he has rarely stayed in a job for more than two or three years.”

    City take Cup win, but Chelsea struggle | 02:33

    Sam Brookes of the Daily Mail also echoed Jones’ opinion and claimed the Liverpool job may have come up too soon for Postecoglou to leave London.

    “Postecoglou has taken every challenge in his stride, refusing to moan when Harry Kane left on the eve of the new season, and his positivity has rubbed off on the fanbase,” Brookes wrote.

    “For the first time in years, Tottenham fans have reason to be optimistic about the future, and the main reason is the man in the dugout.

    “That could be taken away from them, though, if Liverpool make their move for the Australian.

    “Yet Postecoglou is just six months into his project at Spurs, and seems to want to see the job through, so the Liverpool vacancy may have come a little too soon for him to seriously consider it.”

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  • ‘Can’t stand him’: Top UK journo causes stir with bizarre takedown of ‘salesman’ Ange Postecoglou

    ‘Can’t stand him’: Top UK journo causes stir with bizarre takedown of ‘salesman’ Ange Postecoglou

    An English journalist’s public attack on Ange Postecoglou is causing a stir.

    The Australian coach was on Monday morning (AEDT) widely praised for his tactical moves during Tottenham’s thrilling 3-3 draw with Manchester City.

    The Spurs boss also won a public pat on the back from City manager Pep Guardiola and had Sky Sports pundits speaking about him with admiration despite the London club coming off a run of three-consecutive defeats.

    The blokey Aussie was made a romantic figure in some sections after Spurs exploded out of the blocks at the start of the season.

    But there is one English reporter that is doing his best to be a Christmas grinch with several public swipes at the former Socceroos coach.

    The Guardian’s Jonathan Liew recently launched into a bizarre rant against the former Brisbane Roar boss where he accused the 58-year-old of telling “bulls***”.

    “I’m just not having Ange,” Liew said last month on The Guardian’s Football Weekly podcast.

    “I’m not having Ange Postecoglou. As a coach, I can’t stand him.”

    When put to him by host Max Rushden that Postecoglou is a “lovely man”, Liew responded: “He comes across as a lovely man. All of the people saying he’s great, saying he’s a great bloke — nobody knows him.

    “All you know about him are the little 45 second clips that come from his press conferences or that turn up on your Twitter feed every week.”

    Ange Postecoglou shakes his head as he faces the press.Source: Supplied

    Liew then took pot shots at Postecoglou, mocking his Aussie drawl and use of the word “mate”.

    “Honestly, it’s just such bulls***,” Liew said.

    The veteran football columnist described Postecoglou as an “unbelievable salesman” that doesn’t align with the performances and results of his team.

    “He is an unbelievable talker,” he said.

    “On the pitch, thing have been going well, but they have a good squad. There was a thirst there for these players to go out and play a high line. I’m not saying he hasn’t coached them well. I’m just saying he hasn’t coached them brilliantly. He’s just said some things. Made them feel good about themselves and his good players have been infused with good vibes.

    “What we’re seeing now and what we’re going to see over the medium and long term is that Spurs are going to regress. They are nowhere near title contenders. They don’t have a coach or a squad that’s going to get them anywhere near the title race.

    “They’ll probably drop to about sixth or seventh because there are better funded and better coached teams out there.”

    He said Postecoglou’s charm as a doe-eyed outsider to the English football hegemony “doesn’t ring true”. Postecoglou has had several headline-grabbing, cheeky exchanges with reporters since arriving at Spurs.

    The best manager on the planet – and Pep Guardiola. Photo by Darren Staples / AFP.Source: AFP

    “This is the thing. He’s able to sell authenticity,” Liew said.

    “I don’t doubt there is a kernel of something genuinely heartwarming and whatever in his story. But the way he’s commodified it and it may be a completely unthinking process. But the way he’s been able to commodify it — it’s sold as authenticity in this big bad league.

    “That’s the pulse of it. It doesn’t ring true for me because I don’t think it’s remotely sustainable. It’s a product of Spurs fans feeling despondent and needing something new and the Premier League just needing content.”

    One clip of the savage comments has started to spread across Australian football circles this week — and Liew is not winning any fans with his character assassination of the well-loved Aussie.

    One Twitter user wrote: “Imagine this was a person of any other nationality, the way he mocks his accent is disgusting! Very odd to be so bothered by someone talking about their own life experiences”.

    Another Twitter user wrote: “He’s not a good coach because he doesn’t play games with the media and tells it how it is? And what does his upbringing and nationality have to do with anything? This logic means you’d hate most Aussies then. Just sad and pathetic”.

    Twitter user Dean Rosario wrote: “Just heard Jonathan Liew’s disparaging comments about Ange’s coaching & even lampooning Ange’s personal life stories. Reminded me of a drunk fan in a pub, who thinks he’s amusing”.

    It is far from the first time football commentators have taken swipes at Postecoglou in recent weeks after a run of three-straight losses.

    He was called stubborn for his refusal to change his attacking philosophy when the team was struggling to deal with a series of injuries.

    Jermaine Jenas, former Tottenham midfielder, said after the third loss to Aston Villa that there has been a “naivety to some of Postecoglou’s decisions”.

    “At the moment there is a feeling they are able to lose games but still feel good about it — but that won’t last forever,” he wrote for Yahoo Sport.

    Postecoglou was also labelled “arrogant” after his team’s 4-1 loss to Chelsea.

    Big Ange. Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images.Source: Getty Images

    Spurs were down to nine men after two red-cards were flashed — but Postecoglou refused to retreat from his high defensive line.

    Former Chelsea defender Jason Cundy said on talkSPORT: “He gave the opportunity for Chelsea to get in behind. It felt almost inevitable that we were going to get in behind, it was just a matter of time. I have to say there was a bit of an arrogance about not changing it.”

    Liew this week took another shot at Ange when delving into the Australian’s relationship with Guardiola ahead of Tottenham’s match against City.

    The scribe again questioned whether Postecoglou’s public persona is a true reflection of the coach he is underneath the surface when writing for The Guardian.

    “For all the attention devoted to his homespun manner and natural charm, less is said about perhaps the key driving force behind Postecoglou: his ruthless personal ambition, the desire to keep progressing and keep challenging himself,” Liew wrote.

    “Postecoglou builds his teams with the fierceness of a family, but he is not afraid of abruptly breaking them up. He has not spent more than three years at any club since the 1990s. He walked out on the Australia national team just before the 2018 World Cup because he felt the aims of the national federation did not align with his own.”

    He went on to write: “It is both genuine and an act, in the sense that a large part of coaching itself is essentially an act, the process of selling a vision to players and supporters.

    “It is no coincidence that Postecoglou has made himself extremely visible in the media since arriving in England, always giving interviews, always explaining, always proselytising.”

    That’s a bloody outrage it is!

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  • Australian Boomers coach Brian Goorjian has reached out to Josh Giddey with ‘full support’

    Australian Boomers coach Brian Goorjian has reached out to Josh Giddey with ‘full support’

    Australian Boomers coach Brian Goorjian says NBA star Josh Giddey has his “full support” as the 21-year-old deals with an NBA investigation over allegations of improper behaviour.

    Giddey, who played with the Boomers at the FIBA World Cup this year and looms as key to Australia’s medal chances at the Paris Olympics, is being investigated following an allegation in a since-deleted anonymous social media post.

    The NBA has confirmed Giddey, who took to the court for the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday, was being investigated with the young Australian making no comment when asked pre-game by local media.

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    Goorjian said the issue was “out of my wheelhouse” but sent a message to Giddey expressing his support.

    Josh Giddey playing for the Boomers at the World Cup. (Photo by Takashi Aoyama/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The veteran coach said he’s be travelling to the United States next month to meet with Giddey and other Boomers playing in the NBA and expected to be made more aware of the situation.

    “It’s really out of my wheelhouse,” Goorjian said on the Gold Coast on Monday.

    “All I’ve done is messaged him and let him know the support is there. I am going to go over in early December and see him face-to-face.

    “I just want to let him know right now he’s got our full support.”

    Oklahoma City have not stood Giddey down after the emergence of images and video last week and then more across the weekend.

    Coach Mark Daigneault declared the NBA’s investigation wouldn’t impact Giddey’s availability.

    “Just with the information that we have at this point, that’s the decision that we’ve made, it’s really not even a decision to be honest with you,” he said.

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