Tag: balancing youth

  • Socceroos dreaming of Asian Cup redemption, but tricky WC reality hangs over them: State of play

    Socceroos dreaming of Asian Cup redemption, but tricky WC reality hangs over them: State of play

    The Socceroos’ journey to the 2026 World Cup began this month with two wins over Bangladesh and Palestine.

    While the outcome was the same in both games – a valuable three points secured in the lengthy qualification journey – the matches themselves were starkly different. It began about as well as Socceroos’ fans could have hoped with a 7-0 thumping on home soil, but was followed by a tense 1-0 win where Australia performed well below their best.

    Now the road to 2026 is put on hold for Graham Arnold and his Socceroos as attention turns to a more pressing concern: January’s Asian Cup in Qatar.

    It is a rare chance for major silverware for the Socceroos, who have won the competition just once before (in 2015 in Australia).

    And on the back of a best-ever World Cup performance in 2022 – also in Qatar – expectations are understandably high for Australia.

    But much has changed for the Socceroos in the 12 months since that World Cup began, and Arnold now faces a tricky balancing act between short-term trophy-hunting and the long-term development of his squad with 2026 on the horizon.

    With a host of young talents on the rise, there will be plenty of difficult selection decisions to make – but the tournament provides a key opportunity for Arnold’s Socceroos to take a major step forward.

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    WHY THE TIMING IS ALL WRONG

    The tournament itself comes at an awkward and inopportune time for Australia. It was scheduled to be held in June of this year, only for China to withdraw from hosting in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Qatar picked up the tournament but, like the World Cup, weather conditions forced a shift from mid-year to the cooler months.

    Had it been held in the middle of 2023 as initially planned, Arnold’s approach would probably have been more straightforward: the ageing core of the squad used throughout the previous World Cup cycle could push through for one last title tilt.

    After the Asian Cup, Arnold could have focused fully on the next generation and his plans to rebuild with ’26 in mind.

    Instead, Arnold has been forced to delay the full-scale overhaul of the roster until after this cup – given the established core of stalwarts provide the best chance of winning the tournament. They are, particularly in the wake of Qatar 2022, battle-hardened and tournament ready.

    The next generation are not. Not quite yet, anyway.

    But on the road to 2026 and the big dance, the Asian Cup is the single biggest opportunity for the next generation to experience elite tournament football – to gel as a unit and experience the unique pressure of playing repeated games on short turnarounds on the other side of the world.

    It is just another factor in the difficult decisions that face Arnold in the months ahead.

    The core question is simple: should he prioritise winning the cup or blooding the next generation?

    The answer will be anything but simple.

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    So far, Arnold has unleashed plenty of young guns this year, thanks to a rare bevy of friendlies including tough tests against top opposition like world champions Argentina, England, and Mexico.

    Mixing youth with experience has not been such a problem in this environment – the youngsters are allowed to learn the standards from the older generation and develop in that environment, rather than battle against the likes of Lionel Messi without the guidance of those stalwarts who have been there, done that.

    But in prioritising the stability (and win-now readiness) of the current team rather than immediately committing to a long-term rebuild has meant that – including in the two recent World Cup qualifiers – some rookies have been kept on the outer rather than handed valuable match minutes.

    Think of Jordan Bos playing against Bangladesh before being benched against Palestine in favour of the veteran Aziz Behich.

    But balancing youth and experience while rebuilding the team is never an easy proposition – and the mix hasn’t always been right. It’s something that Graham Arnold acknowledged after the clash with Mexico in September where the Socceroos gave up a two-goal lead with some poor errors.

    In that match, a series of second-half substitutes tilted the balance too much towards inexperienced youngsters, who struggled under the pressure of a high-octane opponent roared on by partisan Mexican fans.

    Arnold recently told the Herald Sun: “It’s crucial you have the blend right – It’s OK to have a lot of young players, but you need senior players and good leaders around them.

    “Against Mexico, you look at the players I had on the field in the last 10 minutes when we folded a bit, they were all kids … they didn’t deal with the pressure of 75,000 Mexicans in the stands going crazy.”

    Call it a warning on the risks of youth, or call it a valuable learning experience – for both Arnold and the young players involved in that draw.

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    WHAT HAPPENED LAST TIME?

    The last edition of the Asian Cup was also a brutal learning curve for the manager and the team.

    In 2019 in the UAE, Australia were the defending champions and the second-highest ranked team in the competition.

    But it came just months after Arnold took over the Socceroos job, and he inherited a team very much experiencing a generational change. Tim Cahill and Mile Jedinak had retired after the 2018 World Cup, leaving Arnold with a new-look team where 11 of 23 players had fewer than ten caps entering the tournament. Arnold’s much-changed team laboured from the start.

    They squeaked out of the group thanks to a 93rd minute goal to Tom Rogic, before overcoming Uzbekistan on penalties in the Round of 16 following a goalless draw. A difficult tournament came to an end at the quarterfinal stage in a 1-0 defeat to hosts UAE.

    This time around, the likes of Aaron Mooy and Tom Rogic have retired. Mat Leckie hasn’t featured in the A-League Men’s campaign yet after a September injury, while Riley McGree has been injured since early October and won’t return to club action for some weeks yet. Milos Degenek and Trent Sainsbury have also fallen out of favour as new defenders rise through the ranks.

    These are just a handful of the difficult choices that confronting Arnold. Should he opt for experience and solidity, or youthful exuberance and potential, in other words Aziz Behich or Jordy Bos?

    In some cases (particularly Connor Metcalfe) the performances from young guns have been so impressive that they simply demand selection.

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    WHY THINGS ARE EASIER FOR THE YOUNG GUNS NOW

    But there is one key reason why backing the youth is not so risky as it was in 2019. Arnold has now managed more (A-International) games than any other Socceroos manager. He has been in charge for five years and has successfully embedded his tactical system not just at the senior international level but also at the Under-23’s or Olyroos, who he took charge of in both qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics and in that tournament proper.

    It meant that many youngsters entered the Socceroos set-up already understanding the system and their individual role, making it easier to slot into the squad successfully. Combine that with the difficulty of opponents that the youngsters faced in friendlies this calendar year, and there’s no doubt that the rookies have been forged in fire – and are more capable of stepping up to the difficulties of tournament football.

    Perhaps that gives Arnold a better opportunity than ever to roll the dice on youth, even if that comes with the risk of repeating the sort of collapse that occurred against Mexico.

    But after all, on the road to 2026 there will be no better teacher in the demands of tournament football on the road than this Asian Cup, where Australia’s path to glory includes likely knockout matches with Saudi Arabia then Japan.

    Arnold has enough credit in the bank from the 2022 World Cup – and a long-term contract to boot – that his future is secure even if things go sour at this tournament.

    That won’t mean he won’t go for gold. But perhaps that means he can trust the next generation to do the job – and bet all his chips on building for 2026.

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  • ‘It’s time’: The tricky balancing act for Boomers ahead of Giddey call that is key to staying ‘at the top’

    ‘It’s time’: The tricky balancing act for Boomers ahead of Giddey call that is key to staying ‘at the top’

    Being ahead of schedule is nothing new for Josh Giddey and two years ago, before he started breaking records in the NBA, the young Australian point guard looked on the verge of achieving a lifelong dream.

    But it wasn’t meant to be. Giddey had already learned how to deal with that kind of adversity, having missed out on multiple state-level basketball teams during his teenage years.

    This was different though. This wasn’t just a state team. This was the Boomers. This was the Olympics. This was, as Patty Mills put it in an interview with GQ, “the pinnacle” for Australian basketball.

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    Josh Giddey was cut from the Olympic team. (Photo by Kelly Defina/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    And one of the country’s most impressing young talents wouldn’t be there as the Boomers went on to make history.

    Giddey was the final cut made by coach Brian Goorjian ahead of the trip to Tokyo, missing out despite impressing as the youngest member of the team’s selection camp back in 2021.

    In fact, Boomers big man Jock Landale — who will miss out on this year’s FIBA World Cup with an ankle injury — still remembers the lasting impression Giddey made during that camp.

    “Mate, we saw,” Jock Landale told ESPN earlier this month.

    “I think we were all looking around at each other at that time, saying, ‘wow, this guy, he’ll be ready to roll when his number’s called’.”

    It was a brutal call at the time, but one that needed to be made and with Giddey’s best interests at heart too as Goorjian explained the decision to SEN 1170 at the time.

    “We had a four day window to look at everybody,” Goorjian said.

    “This was a one-off opportunity for a 12-year build, again, I always use the same phrase, I’m being honest here, he had a lot on his plate when we went into Irvine and practised.

    “I thought a lot of times during that, he was fatigued … he’d have a workout with the Warriors, he’d have a photoshoot in the city, he’d come back, and this thing was competitive.”

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    Josh Giddey is now the future of the Boomers — and in many ways the present too. (Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    In the end it came down to Giddey and now Boomers teammate Josh Green.

    “And the Josh Green kid just played better,” Goorjian said.

    That wasn’t the only reason why he got the nod though. You see, with the NBA draft fast-approaching, Giddey was also dealing with the extra commitments that came with being a potentially lottery pick.

    “We knew when we got to the Village, it was going to be draft day,” Goorjian said.“

    We were dealing with the flag, the march, and a lot of things were sidetracking us from what needed to be done, which was difficult.

    “In the four day process it wasn’t just what we do … he was getting ready for the draft … he didn’t have much time.”

    It just wasn’t meant to be and according to Giddey’s father Warrick, it only made the rising Australian NBA star that more eager to don the green and gold at this year’s World Cup.

    “After the last success in Japan in the Olympics in Tokyo, [for Australia to] get a bronze medal and not to be a part of it, I think that just drove the fire a little bit more in Josh, and he’s just desperate to be a part of this World Cup,” he told Sporting News.

    Patty Mills celebrates with his bronze medal. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    This time Goorjian had no choice but to pick Giddey. In fact, the question wasn’t whether the 20-year-old would be selected — it was whether he would take over Mills as the focal point of the Boomers offence.

    Goorjian answered that question in pretty emphatic terms in an interview with ESPN earlier this month.

    “He’s a huge piece of this moving forward,” the Boomers coach said.

    “Not just this, but it’s like an Andrew Gaze, as far as the Boomers. What he is, and as we get him with the group, and as it expands, a lot of it’s gotta be built around him.”

    That discussion surrounding Mills and Giddey’s role is part of a broader one ahead of the World Cup, one that started back in May when the 18-man extended Boomers squad was first announced.

    Outside of Ben Simmons, there was another notable omission from that list — veteran centre Aron Baynes. Matthew Dellavedova would soon follow him, among the first three players to be cut during Australia’s training camp in Cairns.

    Sometimes the uncomfortable conversations are often the most important ones and in the case of setting up the Boomers for the future, they were ones that needed to happen with Baynes and Dellavedova.

    It was also a case of learning from past mistakes; not wanting to repeat what happened after the 2000 Olympics when Andrew Gaze, Luc Longley, Andrew Vlahov and Mark Bradtke all retired.

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    “The way they are doing it [now] is spot on,” former Boomers player Chris Anstey told foxsports.com.au.

    “They had to move on some very highly-credentialed veterans like Matthew Dellavedova, bring in some highly-talented youth like Giddey and Daniels. I think the balance is good.

    “Australian basketball didn’t quite get it right after the Sydney Olympics where the vast majority of key veterans hadn’t played in most tournaments and we had veteran teams and everybody moved on at the same time and we struggled for a couple of Olympic cycles.”

    And as much as Australia may be a genuine contender at this year’s World Cup, the tournament also offers coach Goorjian a chance to look to the future and specifically Paris in 2024.

    Of course, Simmons could figure as a central part of Australia’s plans for next year’s Olympics should he be fit to play and mentally in the right place to suit up.

    Either way, both Mills and Joe Ingles are at points in their career where their specific roles in the team can be questioned while still also acknowledging their veteran presence and leadership is a value add to the roster at the same time.

    Patty Mills, Joe Ingles and Matthew Dellavedova. Pics Adam HeadSource: News Corp Australia

    It is a point ESPN’s Brian Windhorst made on the ‘Ball and the Real World’ podcast this week.

    “Having watched Patty Mills in the NBA the last year or two and knowing that Ingles is coming off the ACL, it is time for those gentlemen to move towards the sunset,” Windhorst said.

    “They have had their incredible moment in the sun with getting the medal and to me, I know the World Cup is an important thing, but this is about preparing for Paris which is going to be in my view the hottest contested international basketball tournament ever.

    “I know the standard for the Aussies is to medal and I’m not saying that shouldn’t be it. But if they walk out with these young guys playing well and holding a bid [for the Olympics], I think they will have had a successful event.

    “With all due respect, Josh should be the guy that is focused on and I do think it’s time because to me if this is a transitional tournament it’s not the end of the world.”

    Windhorst’s perspective is particularly interesting given it offers one, small glimpse into how other members of the basketball world may view the current and future state of Australian basketball.

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    Although even former Boomers players understand this tournament’s important role in facilitating that changing of the guard.

    “That’s [balancing youth and experience] one of the hallmarks of teams that can be good for long periods of time,” former Boomers assistant coach and now Technical Director of the NBA Global Academy, Marty Clarke, told foxsports.com.au.

    “As people say, it’s harder to stay at the top than get to the top and I know that the top we’re talking about is being on the podium.

    “But you look who gave it to Patty, you know, there were guys that came before him. I hope I don’t miss anyone here, but we’re talking about Matt Nielsen, David Andersen, Andrew Bogut and now Baynesy has moved out of that group and someone’s got to fill the void.

    “But to fill the void you have to have others teach and it’s teaching about leadership and teaching about culture. So, Patty and Joe will no doubt be handing that information on so that when they leave there’s a smooth transition for Giddey.”

    And according to Clarke, Giddey is just one of many current and future Australian NBA players who will lead the charge for the Boomers in the years to come.

    Dyson Daniels is also a key part of the future. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)Source: AFP

    “No doubt he’s fully embraced the whole Boomers thing as he did when he was here,” Clarke said, referencing Giddey’s time at the NBA Global Academy in Canberra.

    “It was all about, ‘I want to make the Boomers. I want to make the Boomers’.

    “I think the other one in that group is Jock and Jock’s pathway was different. He didn’t do much with Australia and junior basketball because of where he was at school and everything else, he went to college, but he’s totally immersed in the Boomers.

    “He’s a little bit older than those guys, so he’ll be able to help them through. Dyson [Daniels] is there, Tyrese Proctor’s coming through.

    “There’s a number of guys that I think that torch will be handed to over the next couple of major tournaments.

    “Because there’s a really good crop of guys coming through that I think are allowed to understand what being a Boomer is about without being thrown into the deep end and that’s often hard.

    “If all those guys retired after this, I think it will be difficult for the next group to pick it up. They need to be around for a little bit longer.”

    Even Rocco Zikarsky, the towering 7-foot-3 top prospect who signed with the Brisbane Bullets as part of the NBL’s Next Stars program, could soon find himself in the green and gold.

    Rocco Zikarsky has already played on the international stage and is already been touted as an NBA prospect. He trains at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin OllmanSource: News Corp Australia

    The injury to Landale exposed Australia’s already limited frontcourt depth ahead of this year’s World Cup and Clarke said it has already been a topic of conversation with Zikarsky, who spent the last few years developing his game at the Global Academy.

    “Timing is always part of things,” Clarke said.

    “I was talking to him the other day and said, ‘The timing is perfect for you. The stocks of big men are now kind of moving out and there’s a bit of a void there and sometimes people that are in your position have to wait until they’re 26 until they get a look-in. You’re 17 and I think there’s a chance’.

    “There’s a chance something might happen within the next couple of cycles of major events. Josh Giddey didn’t quite make it as an 18-year-old but he’s there as a 20-year-old.”

    Now that opportunity to represent his country will only mean that much more, a lesson that it is not adversity that defines you but how you respond to it.

    And as much as it may seem like the window is closing for the likes of Mills and Ingles, the Boomers can take confidence in knowing they will always be ready if they receive that call.

    An enduring image. (Photo by Aris MESSINIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    Even for Dellavedova, who will still likely feature for Australia in other tournaments, this may not be the end — and if you don’t believe it, just consider his NBA lifeline last season.

    “The league is evolving, as it should and as every league and team and player does, they evolve and work out what’s really important,” Clarke said.

    “Sometimes it’s not the most talented player, it’s the player who can get the most out of the talent that the team has.

    “Delly last year would be a classic example of that. He got called back into the NBA to be exactly that. There may be an opportunity for the same thing to happen with the Boomers.

    “He didn’t make this one but something might happen… and you know he’s sitting there waiting and you know if you call him he’s going to be ready and that’s a great luxury to have. It’s a quality that has to be considered when you’re selecting teams.”

    And it’s a quality that has and will continue to define the Boomers long into the future, regardless of who is passing on the torch.

    HOW TO WATCH EVERY BOOMERS FIBA WORLD CUP GAME

    As for the World Cup action itself, the Boomers are part of Group E and will play Finland in their first official game to kick off the tournament.

    That game is scheduled for 6pm AEST on Friday, August 25. Australia is also scheduled to face Germany (6.30pm, August 27) and Japan (9.10pm, August 29) to round out the group stage.

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