Tag: international window

  • Poppa masterstroke as exiled star fires; wake-up call behind forgotten prodigy’s return: Talking Pts

    Poppa masterstroke as exiled star fires; wake-up call behind forgotten prodigy’s return: Talking Pts

    The Socceroos might’ve finished 5-1 winners against Indonesia in their crucial World Cup qualifier in Sydney and taken a giant step towards automatic qualification for next year’s World Cup in North America, but coach Tony Popovic made it clear there’s still plenty of room for his side to improve describing the performance as “solid but it wasn’t great.”

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    Goals to Martin Boyle, Nishan Velupillay, Lewis Miller and a double from Jackson Irvine send Australia to China with three vital points in the bag and full of confidence, but all too aware that its job half done when it comes to jumping the hurdles this international window presented.

    The mental resilience the side showed to escape unscathed – albeit with some fortune – from a tricky 15-minute opening period is also a sign of growth as is a welcome surge in the way chances were finally converted into goals. This result bloats Australia’s goal difference column too and that could be one less thing to worry about come the final matchday of round three in June.

    It wasn’t all good news though with Martin Boyle and Adam Taggart coming off at halftime. Popovic revealing post-game that both have fitness concerns.

    OMINOUS SIGN BEFORE A BALL WAS KICKED

    A crowd of 35,241 packed into the Sydney Football Stadium and the Indonesian fans not only made their presence felt but had the decibel reader reaching its upper limits.

    The Indonesian national anthem was greeted with full voice by those in red and more than one Socceroos player turned to look at the raucous away end. It did not sound,

    look or feel like a Socceroos home game until the goals started flying in.

    Remarkably, the Team Garuda faithful were still chanting at 5-1 down in the second half.

    “It’s part of football and it’s what we love about it, that teams can come away from home and bring that energy and atmosphere,” midfielder Jackson Irvine said.

    “I thought our fans were equally brilliant and pushed us in the key moments of the game and gave us that extra leg up probably when we needed it.”

    A TALE OF TWO PENALTIES

    Perspective is in the eye of what colour jersey you were wearing.

    The decision to award Indonesia a penalty in the seventh minute after the Brisbane Roar’s Rafael Struick was ruled to have been fouled by the recalled Kye Rowles was

    contentious through an Australians lens, but while it was on the softer side it was the right call.

    Kevin Diks dulled the debate by hitting the woodwork. A sprawling Mat Ryan guessed the right way in any case and might’ve saved it.

    Indonesia coach Patrick Kluivert, in his first match in charge, believed his side struggled to shrug off that setback.

    “If you shoot the penalty in it would be a totally different match of course,” Kluivert said.

    “From that moment we changed something in our minds.

    “We had a grip of the game. I think that we played better than Australia.

    “If you score 1-0, I’m sure it will be a totally different game.”

    10-minutes later Australia was sent to the spot after Nathan Tjoe-A-On pulled off a tackle on Lewis Miller in the box that looked more like something James Tedesco would execute on this ground in a Roosters jersey. Boyle did the honours from the spot.

    The goal helped calm the nerves after the Socceroos were let off the hook just moments prior. The side looked far more settled from that point and Australia led 3-0 at the break thanks to two more goals from Velupillay and Irvine.

    “It’s the hardest I’ve been pressed in a home game in a long time,” Irvine said.

    “There was absolutely no time on the ball in the middle of the park.

    “Once we broke that pressure it looked like we were going to score every time we went through.”

    3-0! Socceroos dominant first half surge | 01:31

    POPPA PULLS THE RIGHT SELECTION CALLS

    This was not an easy squad to pick.

    Six regular starters were missing through injury and Popovic had key calls to make when it came to his starting wingers and striker.

    As Velupillay wheeled away to celebrate with the fans in the 20th minute he had fellow winger Martin Boyle and striker Adam Taggart to thank for the opportunity.

    Boyle’s pass found Taggart whose lunging effort resulted in Velupillay being able to run onto the ball and calmly slot Australia’s second.

    “It’s a special moment for the boy,” Popovic said.

    “Starting your first game, pressure, a stadium that’s full. It doesn’t come bigger than that.

    “When he looks back, he should be really proud of that.”

    This was the first time Boyle had seen minutes under Popovic after failing to get on the pitch in the November window against Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. 14-goals and 9

    assists in 36 games for Hibernian in Scotland made a compelling case for selection.

    Velupillay is working his way back into form after a nasty ankle injury suffered against Saudi Arabia in Melbourne. To start him in a game of this magnitude was bold. Taggart deserved his spot after five goals in his last 11-games for Perth Glory in the A-League but hadn’t even been picked in a squad by Popovic yet before this window.

    For a goal that released the pressure valve in this campaign to be created by two players who’d never featured under this manager and scored by one still not quite at

    top form domestically must be applauded.

    Unfortunately, Taggart and Boyle were both substituted at half time with potential fitness issues. Taggart appeared to feel for his groin multiple times just before the break. Asked if there was anything amiss with both players Popovic said “there could be.”

    “They both had a bit of a niggle, maybe Adam a little bit more than Martin Boyle.”

    “Adam was definitely coming off and Martin was a bit of a precaution.”

    IRVINE GOAL A FULL CIRCLE MOMENT

    Jackson Irvine is the heartbeat of the Socceroos midfield. His goals in the 34th and 90th minutes were the 12th and 13th of his international career and came on the same

    ground where he scored his first ever for Australia in 2017.

    “From a personal point of view a special night,” he said.

    “I never take it for granted being here and I haven’t played in this stadium since that night.”

    THE RETURN OF DANIEL ARZANI

    Arzani replaced Velupillay in the 72nd minute and was greeted by warm applause. It was his first appearance for Australia since a 26-minute spell in a World Cup qualifier

    against Bangladesh in June last year.

    His last minutes prior to that came against Kuwait in a friendly match in 2018. That was just before the anterior cruciate ligament tear on debut at Celtic that would change the trajectory of his then skyrocketing career.

    It took just two minutes for Popovic to call Arzani to the sideline for a chat after his introduction, but generally he worked hard in defence and looked lively in attack.

    All of this after Popovic told Arzani his effort in camp during the October international window last year “wasn’t good enough” and that his “level was really poor in

    training.”

    It appears to have been the wake-up call the 26-year-old – once dubbed the next big thing in Australian football – needed.

    Five months on from that camp and Arzani has impressed his mentor this time around. Popovic does not give out easy minutes even with Australia 4-0 up at the time.

    It was an impressive response from a player who can only enhance the fortunes of himself and his country with similar application.

    Socceroos calm ahead of crucial clashes | 01:56

    STATE OF THE PITCH

    There’d been concerns about the state of the Sydney Football Stadium pitch in the days prior to kick-off and those fears weren’t alleviated once the game got underway.

    Several players lost their footing or looked unsure on the ball. It was not ideal and hampered the fluidity of the game.

    “Tough pitch for the players,” Popovic said.

    “Very hard underneath and slippery on top. The players were in two minds. Half the players wore studs, and half the players had moulds. It was a difficult one for them tonight. It took a lot out of them.”

    MAT RYAN BACK TO HIS BEST ON AN HISTORIC NIGHT

    Lost in the euphoria of scoring five goals was the three incredible saves Mat Ryan pulled off between the sticks.

    On a night where the goalkeeper became the third most capped player in Socceroos history with 97, moving ahead of another former skipper in Lucas Neill and now only

    behind Mark Schwarzer with 109 and Tim Cahill on 108 appearances, Ryan was immense.

    He stopped Jay Idzes’ header from a freekick in the 5th minute, made a superb diving save to his left in the 53rd minute and another clutch reflex save down low to his right

    in the 84th minute.

    “I have to say I’m not surprised after seeing him when he came into camp,” Popovic said.

    “Just a different demeanour and that comes from playing.

    “You can see he’s full of confidence and he showed that when he came in. He was a real presence around the group and tonight he stood tall.”

    The fact the captain was dropped to the bench for the first three games of Popovic’s tenure now seems a distant memory. His move to Lens in France from Roma in Italy

    has been a masterstroke.

    Davidson hoping to re-ignite Roos career | 02:26

    ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT AT THE BACK

    Australia’s backline was hardest hit by the current run of injuries between November and March.

    Popovic picked Lewis Miller, Jason Geria, Cameron Burgess, Kye Rowles and Aziz Behich.

    Geria, Burgess and Rowles formed the central trio of that combination, and the coach made it clear there was plenty to work on. Indonesia’s goal was well taken, but the lead-up was scrappy.

    “The goal they scored probably summarised how we defended,” Popovic said.

    “They didn’t create, we gave them chances, we gave them the penalty, we gave them the goal as well.

    “Defensively we weren’t great, we were a little bit on edge, a little bit sloppy in our defending.”

    WHERE ARE THE SOCCEROOS AT WITH PROJECT POPPA AND WHAT’S NEXT?

    Project Poppa is progressing, but it’s far from the finished article. That’s not a bad thing, but just the reality of only being in the job for six-months.

    “I aim quite high,” Popovic said with a smile when asked how far along the side is when it comes to implementing his game style.

    “They’re not where we want to be, but that’s not a negative that’s a positive. They’ve taken strides forward and it’s not easy to do what they did tonight.”

    Popovic pointed to decision making as an area that needs work.

    “How do we identify quicker what is happening on the field?” he said.

    “That will happen with more games together.

    “I felt that this camp or this window of the first game is the first time I’ve felt in training and just around the hotel that this group is now starting to build into something.”

    Now, it’s off to China for their next qualifier on Tuesday night.

    Australia remains second in group C and in control of its own fate when it comes to securing automatic qualification for next year’s World Cup.

    That goal could be a maximum of three games away.

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  • ‘Absolutely gutted’: Disastrous injury confirmed for Socceroos giant in already-weakened spot

    ‘Absolutely gutted’: Disastrous injury confirmed for Socceroos giant in already-weakened spot

    Harry Souttar has been dealt a devastating blow, with the Socceroos’ defender facing up to 12 months on the sidelines after rupturing his Achilles.

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    Souttar suffered the injury in the final moments of Sheffield United’s 2-0 loss to Burnley in the Championship on Friday morning (AEDT).

    The 26-year-old was sent for scans which confirmed the worst.

    The incident occurred after Souttar took a heavy touch and lunged to clear the ball. It was immediately clear he was in discomfort and had to be helped off the pitch at Bramall Lane.

    “He is absolutely gutted,” Sheffield United manager Chris Wilder told BBC Radio Sheffield after their 1-1 draw with West Bromwich Albion on Monday morning.

    “Devastated for him, he loved it here.

    “He has been a great player to work with; great personality, great character.

    “Big disappointment to lose the big fella because he has been incredible.”

    Sheffield United and Australia’s Harry Souttar.Source: Getty Images

    It is the second serious injury setback for the towering centre back in three years. In November 2021, Souttar ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his knee during a World Cup qualifier against Saudi Arabia in Sydney.

    Remarkably, he returned to action with former club Stoke City just before the World Cup in Qatar 12-months later, playing a starring role as the Socceroos stunned the world with a run to the round of sixteen.

    “Thanks to everyone at Sheffield United,” Souttar said on his Instagram account.

    “Amazing club with great people.

    “Unfortunately, that’s me out for a while but I wish everyone at the club all the best for the rest of the season and beyond.

    “Once a blade always a blade.”

    This latest injury is a cruel blow. Souttar moved to Sheffield United on loan after struggling for game time at Premier League battlers Leicester City.

    Wilder had placed significant trust in the 6-foot-7-inch centre-half, with Souttar starting 21 of Sheffield United’s 23 matches in the second-tier Championship before his injury.

    Socceroos coach Tony Popovic. Picture: Michael KleinSource: News Corp Australia

    His absence also creates a significant headache for Socceroos coach Tony Popovic.

    With four crucial matches remaining in the third round of World Cup qualifying, the Socceroos currently sit second in Group C. Maintaining that position will secure automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup in North America.

    The Socceroos face Indonesia in Sydney in March before an away game against China five days later. A clash with current group leaders Japanin Perth and a trip to face regional heavyweights Saudi Arabia awaits in June.

    Popovic will now have to fill a Souttar sized hole in the heart of his defence for all those fixtures.

    He’s also unable to call on 21-year-old centre back Alessandro Circati, who ruptured his ACL during a training session with Italian Serie A side Parma in late September.

    It leaves Cameron Burgess, Kye Rowles and Hayden Matthews as the most likely options moving forward for Popovic.

    Burgess is starting regularly for Ipswich Town in the Premier League while Rowles is doing the same with Hearts in the Scottish Premiership.

    However, both are left-footers and it remains to be seen how that could impact any potential partnership.

    Kye Rowles celebrates scoring a goal against Lebanon with Jackson Irvine.Source: Getty Images

    Matthews is right-footed and continues to grow in stature at Sydney FC.

    The 20-year-old only signed his first professional contract earlier this year, but Popovic not only handed Matthews his Socceroos debut during the last international window in November but named him in the starting side in their last start 2-2 draw with Bahrain.

    Souttar will be desperately hoping the Australians can navigate the next four fixtures and secure their spot at the 2026 World Cup.

    Even a 12-month recovery should see him back on the park with six months to go before the tournament gets underway.

    The defender has left Sheffield and headed back to Leicester to start rehabilitation.

    He is contracted to the Foxes until the end of the 2028 season giving him time to rebuild his career once back to full fitness.

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  • Kerr question lingers amid crucial Matildas change; ‘ideal’ new coach revealed: Talking Pts

    Kerr question lingers amid crucial Matildas change; ‘ideal’ new coach revealed: Talking Pts

    There won’t be an international window like the one the Matildas have just experienced until after the World Cup in Brazil in 2027.

    Watch every ball of Australia v India LIVE & ad-break free during play in 4K on Kayo | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer.

    Results from the two games against the South American champions and the pair of fixtures against Chinese Taipei were both everything and, at the same time, completely irrelevant compared to other objectives.

    Impressive crowds followed the team from Brisbane to the Gold Coast and on to Victoria and winning for those who paid their hard-earned money will always be the goal. However, with continental and global silverware up for grabs over the next two and a half years, those games will be the last where player selections, formations and form won’t be scrutinised heavily for some time.

    Stylish Tillies crush Chinese Taipei | 03:08

    THE SELL OUT CROWD STREAK

    The Matildas streak of selling out stadiums on home soil stopped at 16.

    47,501 packed into Suncorp Stadium and 25,297 rocked up on the Gold Coast for the games against Brazil.

    The 26,795 in attendance at AAMI Park in Melbourne for the first match against Chinese Taipei fell just shy of ensuring the house full sign went up.

    The teams who featured on the sellout list make the length of the streak even more impressive.

    It started with 50,629 packing into Marvel Stadium for the last fixture the side played before the Women’s World Cup, against France, in 2023.

    By the time the full-time whistle went in their third-placed play-off defeat to Sweden in Brisbane the streak sat at eight.

    The wave of enthusiasm didn’t wane after the World Cup.

    59,155 were at Optus Stadium in Perth for an Olympic qualifier against the Philippines. That fixture was wedged either side of sellouts at HBF Park against Iran and Chinese Taipei.

    54,120 against Uzbekistan at Marvel Stadium in Melbourne saw them seal qualification for the games in Paris while 76,798 were in attendance at Accor Stadium in Sydney for a clash with China. It doubled as a farewell match for the side prior to the ill-fated Olympic campaign and veteran goalkeeper Lydia Williams’ final game on home soil before retirement.

    That figure is almost unheard of for a Monday night in Sydney and it came off the back of 52,912 at Adelaide Oval for the first game against China.

    Those are remarkable numbers.

    THE COACH SEARCH

    When will Football Australia settle on Tony Gustavsson’s replacement as Matildas coach?

    All the governing body will confirm is that the search is ongoing.

    It’s been ongoing since August and is likely to continue into 2025.

    There are six international windows next year as the side prepares for the Asian Cup on home soil in March of 2026. The side will head to America in the first of those windows in February for the SheBelieves Cup. They’ll take on Japan, the USA and Colombia and it’s unclear, at this stage, if the search for a coach would’ve concluded by then.

    Players, former players and pundits have all aired their opinions over the last few weeks on the qualities the new coach should possess.

    The man currently filling the void, Tom Sermanni, also had some thoughts.

    “Somebody young,” the 70-year-old quipped when asked.

    “Ideally its someone that has to be here; that has to be invested in the game here, that has to take greater responsibility than just a one singular national team.

    “That would be the ideal role.”

    That would require any foreign candidate to relocate and immerse themselves in pathways programs.

    In the meantime, Sermanni has turned his attention to the SheBelieves Cup.

    “I’m in here as a coach. I haven’t thought about it as if I’m just here in the interim. What I’ve tried to do is do what I would’ve done had I come in here under a two, three or a four-year contract.”

    Incredible story behind Tillies new star | 01:12

    THE YOUNG AND THE RETURNING

    The experience of Sermanni – this is his third stint as coach of the Matildas – perhaps explains why Football Australia feel like they’ve got time to settle on the right coaching candidate.

    He’s already set about building depth in the squad. Sermanni created headlines – something the affable Scot is not prone to doing – by saying depth building was something the program hadn’t done well enough. It was seen as a shot at Gustavsson and was widely reported as such. He was at pains to clarify on Friday that he meant it was a decade old problem that Football Australia needs to address.

    Either way, it’s a valid point on the road to the Asian Cup and World Cup.

    His solution, so far, has been to not just name generation next in the squad, but actually give them game time.

    Bryleeh Henry, Daniela Galic, Winonah Heatley, Sharn Freier, Natasha Prior and Leah Davidson all got minutes at stages, and none looked out of place at international level.

    Freier is the most established of those players and looks increasingly dangerous with every appearance.

    “I think the first thing that we learned is that some players have come in and really stepped up to the level that we’re playing at,” Sermanni said.

    “We actually have some talent around that we need to try to utilise a little bit better.”

    More established players like Emily Gielnik, Chloe Logarzo and Remy Siemsen, who missed the profile boom of World Cup induced Matildas-mania, have also returned to the fold.

    A mix of the young and the returning will be required for the side to get its hands on silverware.

    CLARITY ON SAM KERR

    Sam Kerr has been sidelined with an anterior cruciate ligament injury since suffering the setback at a Chelsea training camp in January.

    Hard details around her recovery have been difficult to come by since.

    Now, new Chelsea coach Sonia Bompastor has provided a ballpark timeframe for Kerr’s return.

    “We are looking to have her back with us in February, March, not before that,” Bompastor said.

    “She didn’t start yet to train, even being modified with the group, so she’s still on her individual process rehab and I think it will take at least two or three more months for her to be fit enough to be with the squad.”

    That means the SheBelieves Cup will, most likely, come too soon and Chelsea would surely hold reservations about Kerr departing for international duty if she was only just back on the park.

    Having Kerr fit and firing for the Asian Cup in 2026 and the World Cup in 2027 must be the goal after an injury interrupted run at the last edition before missing the Olympics in Paris completely.

    Tillies snap losing streak with 3-1 win | 01:34

    THE HARDEST MOMENT TO WATCH

    Chloe Logarzo made her first appearance for the Matildas since October 2022 in the game at AAMI Park against Chinese Taipei.

    After a lively first half-hour spent cleverly linking up with the strike pairing of Emily Gielnik and Michelle Heyman, a head clash while competing for a ball saw her night come to an end.

    The next day she was ruled out of the second match in Geelong.

    “She has got the old egg on the side of her head at the moment,” Sermanni said after the AAMI Park game.

    “She is devastated at having to go off. She waited quite a long time to get back in the team.”

    It’s not hard to understand why Logarzo was pleading for the medical staff to let her continue.

    The 29-year-old has had a horror run with injuries.

    The midfielder tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her knee during a friendly against Ireland in September of 2021.

    Issues with her foot followed the completion of rehabilitation on her knee.

    Logarzo wasn’t fit enough for the World Cup and turned television pundit for the tournament instead.

    The Western United star will be desperate to be on the pitch instead of in a TV studio when the Asian Cup rolls around.

    The tears that followed her substitution in Melbourne were a raw and honest expression of how cruel professional sport can be.

    THE BEST MOMENT OF THE FOUR MATCHES

    Clare Polkinghorne take a bow.

    You know you’ve made it when you enter the Australian consciousness just by your nickname.

    “Polks” got a celebration game against Brazil in-front of family and friends in her home state in Queensland and then a farewell game against Chinese Taipei in Geelong.

    The defender made her international debut in 2006 against China in Shanghai as a 16-year-old and went on to be picked for five World Cups, five Asian Cups and three Olympic Games.

    The 35-year-old exits the game with 169 appearances for the Matildas to her name that saw her go from playing in-front of small crowds to selling out stadiums.

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  • Socceroos 2024, Australia football news: Issues Tony Popovic must solve in World Cup qualifiers

    Socceroos 2024, Australia football news: Issues Tony Popovic must solve in World Cup qualifiers

    Tony Popovic will pick his first squad as Socceroos manager this week after being thrown headfirst into the complicated world of international football management.

    The former Socceroos defender, unveiled as national team boss last week, has built an impressive resume as a head coach over the last 12-years, but is unlikely to have encountered a situation before where the weight of expectation is so high, and the preparation time to meet that moment is so short.

    Come kick-off in their next World Cup qualifier, against China in Adelaide on October 10, Popovic would’ve been in charge of the Socceroos for just 17 days. But in that period, he’ll only get one or two training sessions with the players, at most, before his first match at the helm starts.

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    The 51-year-old seems at peace with that prospect; he’s had little choice but to embrace the chaos of the last fortnight.

    Popovic decided to move his family to Croatia, after not renewing his contract with Melbourne Victory at the end of the last A-League men’s season.

    He also admitted he’d only watched the Socceroos last two qualifiers, against Bahrain and Indonesia, just days before walking into Football Australia’s headquarters in Sydney.

    Now, the fate of that side rests in his hands.

    The Socceroos don’t do World Cup qualifying campaigns devoid of tension; so in a way, the situation Popovic has walked into has almost become an expected mode of operating when it comes to booking a spot at football’s showpiece event.

    Long-term, as investment in national team programs across Asia outpaces what Football Australia is currently capable of, continually finding a way to jump out of the fire is unsustainable.

    That might be Popovic’s problem in the future if he does manage to turn things around.

    In the short term, however, these are the four biggest issues facing the new boss ahead of this looming international window.

    Popovic confirmed as new Socceroos coach | 02:27

    HOW QUICKLY CAN POPOVIC GET HIS MESSAGE ACROSS?

    Popovic is a self-confessed, meticulous planner with training sessions delivered in great detail, but how much he can convey to his new players in such a short amount of time is one of the biggest unknowns ahead of the clash with China.

    A lack of time on the training pitch was the part of the job that former Socceroos coach Graham Arnold found the most challenging – even six-years into his tenure.

    Players don’t arrive in camp until completing commitments with their club sides around the world.

    It means the full squad isn’t likely to assemble in Adelaide until 48 hours prior to kick-off against China.

    That would be less consequential at the start of a qualifying campaign. During the third phase, and with automatic qualification spots up for grabs, it becomes a huge factor.

    It leaves Popovic with one or two sessions, at most, to get his message – a new message for the players – across.

    How quickly that message not only sinks in, but turns into performance on the pitch, will be crucial.

    Popovic has promised Socceroos fans, unhappy with the style of play under his predecessor, a change.

    “There are obviously some areas there that I believe we can improve,” Popovic said at his unveiling last week.

    “We can be a little bit more dynamic, we can move the ball quicker, we can get more players in the box.”

    Translating that onto the pitch, with limited preparation time, against an opponent they’ll be expected to beat, is the first hurdle for Popovic to jump.

    Tony Popovic, the newly-appointed head coach for Australia’s national football team. Photo by DAVID GRAY / AFPSource: AFP

    WHERE IS THE CREATIVE SPARK?

    Arnold named an abundance of wingers in his squad to face Bahrain and Indonesia at the expense of more creative players in behind the strikers.

    The plan was to dominate one-on-one situations out wide before delivering a decisive ball into the box.

    It made the side one-dimensional in a 1-nil defeat to Bahrain on the Gold Coast, but tactical tweaks were evident against Indonesia just five-days later with largely the same personnel.

    The Socceroos were incredibly unlucky not to come away from Jakarta with more than a draw but, largely, the responsibility for creating chances during those two fixtures fell to the wide-men.

    The conundrum when it comes to the Socceroos is that they often play better against higher ranked opponents than their usual foes in Asia.

    At a World Cup, Australia enters matches as the underdog, and higher ranked teams aren’t shy when it comes to attacking.

    The Socceroos’ game-plan at the last World Cup in Qatar, for example, was built around an ability to soak up pressure and then rapidly counter-attack opponents who had left space in behind.

    In Asia, that isn’t the case for most matches during the qualifying phase. Australia is one of the powerhouses of the region, and as a result, expected to be the aggressor against teams who prefer to sit back with men behind the ball.

    Breaking down opponents, who defend in large numbers in and around their own box, is the next step in Australia’s progression as a national side.

    A different type of player; one who can pull the strings in-behind the strikers and unlock defences with clever passes is needed, to compliment the pace out wide.

    Tony Popovic. Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images for Football AustraliaSource: Getty Images

    Three players, all of whom missed selection for the last international window, currently fit that profile: Cardiff City’s Alexander Robertson, Salernitana’s Ajdin Hrustic and Middlesbrough’s Riley McGree.

    Hrustic spent part of last season on loan at Heracles in the Eredivisie, before sealing a permanent move from Serie A outfit Hellas Verona to Serie B side Salernitana in the off-season.

    Riley McGree suffered a foot injury against Lebanon in Sydney in March that required surgery, ruling him out for the rest of Middlesbrough’s campaign in the second-tier Championship in the UK.

    A knock picked up in pre-season halted his comeback, but he got 76-minutes under his belt in a 2-0 win over Stoke at the weekend.

    Under Arnold, McGree has mainly been used on the left of a front three, but like Hrustic, possesses the required tactical nous to play in a more central role.

    Arnold preferred to let 21-year-old Robertson settle into life at Cardiff, who also play in the Championship, after a move from Manchester City.

    The decision was understandable. The young Aussie was sent on-loan several times while at City, eventually landing at Portsmouth in 2023, as they secured promotion from League One. After establishing himself as a regular starter at Pompey, he suffered a season-ending hamstring tear at training in January.

    A round-trip from the UK, that included stops on the Gold Coast and Jakarta wouldn’t have been ideal for a player who is trying to establish himself after a nomadic existence at club level. But he hasn’t been seen in green and gold since the Socceroos’ friendly against Argentina in Beijing in June of 2023, and with the stakes this high, the national side is in desperate need of a player with his unique abilities.

    Tony Popovic speaks to media. Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images for Football AustraliaSource: Getty Images

    WHERE DO THE GOALS COME FROM?

    The Socceroos stormed through the second round of qualifying, scoring 22 times without conceding, but the goals have dried up in the third round.

    They failed to score against Bahrain and Indonesia and finding the back of the net was made even harder, after striker Kusini Yengi was sent off against Bahrain, meaning he missed the game in Jakarta through suspension.

    He has one-game of that red card ban left to serve and is also battling a groin injury, so his participation in the October window, where he’d only be available for the showdown against Japan, is in doubt.

    It’s a huge setback. Yengi has scored four goals in nine international appearances so far and looks the man most likely to lead the line for the Socceroos moving forward.

    In his absence, Arnold turned to 33-year-old Mitch Duke and 18-year-old Nestory Irankunda, who is on the books of German giants Bayern Munich, against Indonesia.

    Popovic has options, but none that have shown themselves to be prolific. Aside from Mathew Leckie, who has struggled with injury since the World Cup in 2022, Duke has the most goals of any current Socceroo. But his return of 12 goals from 42 appearances sees him hit the back of the net every 195 minutes on average.

    Former Melbourne City striker Jamie Maclaren is the next best with 11 goals from 31 games.

    The A-League Men all-time top scorer departed for Indian Super League club Mohun Bagan Super Giant in July, and is yet to open his account for his new club after two substitute appearances from their three games.

    Maclaren was also left out of the Socceroos Asian Cup squad earlier this year by Arnold, and contemplated international retirement as a result. While a re-call would be a risk on current form, the 31-year-old is a proven goal scorer.

    Apostolos Stamatelopoulos is also an option after playing the last two games for Motherwell in Scotland. The former Newcastle Jet missed the last set of internationals after injuring his quad against Rangers in mid-August.

    Denmark based John Iredale has been used sporadically this year as well.

    Popovic set to be NEW Socceroos coach | 00:54

    CAN HE MAKE UP FOR MISSED EASY POINTS?

    It was put to Popovic at his first press conference, that perhaps there were easier times to take over as Socceroos coach.

    He met that query with: “Why wouldn’t it be a good time?”

    The Aussies sit fifth in a six team group after two games, and although there’s eight games remaining in this phase of qualifying, four of those fixtures are against group heavyweights Japan and Saudi Arabia.

    A chance for bankable points against Bahrain and Indonesia also went begging, but as Popovic would go on to say “that’s football.”

    While that’s true, it hardly makes the road ahead smooth sailing – especially when a top-two finish in the group will seal automatic qualification for the next World Cup in two years’ time.

    The Socceroos were ticking along like a marathoner comfortably churning out the kilometres until the most recent window. Now, the pack has kicked and increased the pace as they head for the finish line.

    Popovic will need to get his side back-up to speed quickly, or another wild ride; filled with play-off jeopardy potentially awaits.

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  • Olympics on the line in Olyroos’ massive U-23 cup … but one big problem could ruin Paris dream

    Olympics on the line in Olyroos’ massive U-23 cup … but one big problem could ruin Paris dream

    The Matildas have already booked their place in the Paris Olympics as they chase a first-ever medal. Now the Aussie men are hoping to join them there – but the under 23 ‘Olyroos’, not the Socceroos.

    In a relic of the debate over professionalism in the Olympics – which was originally intended to be for amateur athletes – and to keep the FIFA Men’s World Cup as the showpiece international tournament, the men’s football tournament at the Olympics is limited to players aged 23 and under. Each team is allowed three over-age players.

    It means that the Olympics become a crucial proving ground for young talent. It is a valuable opportunity for youngsters to develop against quality opponents on a high-pressure stage – and to put their names up in lights.

    As midfielder Adrian Segecic said: “I think for a lot of players, it’s a life changing, career changing thing, so I think a lot of players are going to be looking forward to it.

    “We’re going to give everything we can to make sure that we get to the Olympics.”

    But the age limitation also poses significant challenges – and the Olyroos’ stocks have taken a major hit thanks to some unique problems with the U-23 regulations.

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    ‘Why should we win the league?’: Klopp | 00:56

    The Olyroos on Monday night begin their U-23 Asian Cup campaign, where a third-place finish or better would seal qualification into the Olympics.

    Finish fourth, and Australia will play off with the fourth-placed African team, Guinea, for a place in Paris.

    But Australia aren’t just at the tournament to make the Olympics: they’re here to win, having never done better than third place (in 2020).

    Goalkeeper Steven Hall said: “I think any competition that we go into, we always want to win, we always set our bar as high as we can set it.

    “I think all the boys believe that we can go all the way and qualify for the Olympics, but also win this tournament.”

    Australia, who finished fourth at the last edition in 2022, have been drawn alongside hosts Qatar, Jordan, and Indonesia in the group stage.

    Australia beat Jordan 1-0 in the group stage in that 2022 tournament, while Qatar failed to win a game in their own group. Indonesia are making their debut in the U-23 Asian Cup this time around.

    Yet the rapid development of Asian football in recent years – and particularly when it comes to youth programs – means that won’t be easy.

    WHY IT IS A BIG DEAL

    Competing at the Olympics is a lifelong dream for many athletes, and it’s no different when it comes to football.

    As Hall says: “It would be a dream come true to go to the Olympics, I think it’s something not everyone gets to do.

    “For myself, it would just be amazing to represent my country at the Olympics.”

    But the Olympics is also a crucial stepping stone for players’ careers. Firstly, it is an invaluable opportunity to compete on a major stage, often leading to players earning transfers to bigger clubs. That was the case with many of the Olyroos who competed in Tokyo in 2021 – the team’s first appearance on the Olympic stage since 2008.

    Back in 2008, now-Socceroos coach Graham Arnold was in charge, as Australia faced the likes of Argentina – featuring players like Lionel Messi, Sergio Aguero, and Pablo Zabaleta. They are proof that the Olympics is a breeding ground of future legends.

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    Argentina’s player Lionel Messi, (r), crosses the ball past Australia’s James Troisi in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.Source: News Limited

    Recognising the importance of the tournament in developing the next generation, Graham Arnold also took charge of the Olyroos team in 2021 alongside his duties as Socceroos coach.

    From that squad in Tokyo, 12 players (excluding the designated over-age players) have played for the Socceroos – and a handful more have been called into national team camps but haven’t yet debuted.

    Some have become genuine standouts: Harry Souttar and Kye Rowles in defence, Keanu Baccus and Connor Metcalfe in midfield, and playmaker Riley McGree.

    Seven of the Tokyo team were included in the Socceroos’ most recent squad.

    If more proof was needed of the value of the Olympics in unearthing and refining the next generation of Socceroos stars, that statistic says it all.

    But there’s a major problem that could prove disastrous to the Olyroos’ hopes of making the Olympics.

    Spain’s forward and captain Mikel Oyarzabal (R) shoots while Australia’s defender Harry Souttar (L) attempts to block during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games men’s group C first round football match between Australia and Spain at Sapporo Dome in Sapporo on July 25, 2021. (Photo by ASANO IKKO / AFP)Source: AFP

    THE UNDER-23 PROBLEM

    This tournament does not take place during a FIFA ‘international window’ – the designated times for international matches to be played. All Socceroos matches take place in the designated men’s international windows (typically two weeks long, or a month for competitions like the Asian Cup or World Cup). It’s the same with the Matildas.

    But in a controversial decision, this tournament – and frequently many other U-23 tournaments – do not take place in a FIFA window.

    During an international window, clubs are forced to allow their players to represent their national team. Outside of things like injury or international retirement, players also have to accept a call-up from their national teams during a window – they can’t simply say no if they are officially called up. That distinction will become relevant a little further on when we discuss Adelaide United’s teen talent Nestory Irankunda.

    Outside of an international window, clubs aren’t forced to let their players go on national team duty (or Olyroos duty in this case). There are many reasons clubs refuse. Perhaps they are chasing promotion, or avoiding relegation, or they have a big cup match coming up. There’s the fear of a player suffering injury while on national team duty – or in Australia’s case, the long flights for players competing in Europe can lead to problems like fatigue.

    It’s wholly understandable that clubs want their best players available.

    But it means that players can be denied crucial development time with their national team set-up – and it means the Olyroos will be without an array of their best players as they attempt to qualify for the Olympics.

    That includes Socceroos duo Alessandro Circati (Parma, Italy) and Patrick Yazbek (Viking FK, Norway).

    Coach Tony Vidmar said: “I’ve been open and honest with my disappointment that the Asian Cup falls outside of a FIFA window, but we knew access to players would be a challenge and it’s something we’ve planned for in recent months.

    “I just feel for those who’ve not been given the opportunity to join us, as representing your country at any level is something you never forget, and they would have benefited greatly from the experience.”

    Alessandro Circati was banned from playing for the Olyroos this tournament.Source: Getty Images

    He added recently: “I visited a majority of the clubs where the players were, we were confident that we were going to get a good percentage of those players. And then when it came closer to the time, we lost (Nicholas) Bilokapic, (Nectarios) Triantis, (Calem) Nieuwenhof, (Patrick) Yazbek and (Cameron) Peupion.

    “(Alessandro) Circati was always going to be a difficult one. I spoke to Circati and he was keen months ago to be involved. So all of these players were so keen and desperate to be involved and we’re very disappointed that the clubs haven’t released them.”

    And in a late twist, Louis D’Arrigo was denied joining the Olyroos by Polish club Lechia Gdansk, despite the club previously committing in writing to allowing him to play.

    Convincing clubs to release players is a difficult task, but often clubs are persuaded given their young players will get match minutes, training, and the chance to shine on the international stage – something which can lead to big transfer fees for their clubs should they subsequently sell them.

    But in the difficult tug of war between club and country, Australia has been left without a half-dozen stars for this crucial tournament – and it might just cost the Olyroos their place in the Olympics.

    Talented youngster Nestory Irankunda will be absent.Source: Getty Images

    THE IRANKUNDA DRAMA

    One particularly fascinating case has dominated headlines over the last week: Australia’s supremely talented Nestory Irankunda, an Adelaide United attacker who will move to German mega-club Bayern Munich in June.

    The 18-year-old is one of the most gifted products to emerge in recent decades, and is being tipped for a long career for Australia’s national teams.

    But the raw and emotional teen has born the brunt of an overwhelming media spotlight since his transfer to Bayern was announced – and he has often struggled with the limelight.

    That’s why Olyroos boss Tony Vidmar did not call up Irankunda when he named his squad for the Asian Under-23 Cup.

    “With Nestory, we have to be mindful, I’ve met with him on a couple of occasions,” Vidmar said. “What has happened to him this season, I think he’s on a rollercoaster 24/7 – that’s the way he is and we have to look at the bigger picture.

    “We don’t have the luxury of having a thousand of those players where you can throw them against the wall and they break and you don’t use them. He has been through so much this year, I’d hate to be in his shoes. He has been prodded and poked and everyone wants a piece of him.

    “He’s just turned 18, it’s a big ask for him … the person is number one.

    “I could be selfish and just bring in him for the sake of it but we feel that the bigger picture is the Socceroos, you want to be talking about him for the next 15 years as a national team player.”

    But things took a major twist when star attacker Marco Tilio withdrew from the squad with a quad injury. Football Australia reportedly sounded out Irankunda – informally – about replacing Tilio in the Olyroos squad.

    Irankunda declined, preferring to stay at Adelaide and finish the season off before moving to Germany.

    Had the Olyroos officially called Irankunda up to the team, he would have had to accept – or be banned from playing for Adelaide for the duration of the tournament.

    Farewell party ruined for Adelaide | 01:05

    That’s why rival A-League clubs – many of which had sent their own players off to the Olyroos for the tournament – were upset.

    But Football Australia did not formally call Irankunda up, only privately sounding him out – and reportedly through a third party.

    Adelaide coach Carl Veart said after Adelaide’s 2-1 loss to Macarthur on the weekend, where Irankunda scored again before missing a late penalty, that there was “no contact whatsoever” between the FA and player.

    Nestory Irankunda of Adelaide United was in tears after losing on the weekend.Source: Getty Images

    Nevertheless, the debate over Australia’s top young talent only served to reinforce the ongoing tensions between club and country – and the difficult situation that the Olyroos find themselves in when it comes to getting the best squad available.

    There are plenty of excellent players in the Olyroos squad, of course. It features the likes of Garang and Alou Kuol, the gifted brothers, and plenty of in-form A-League players. They are determined to make history by not just qualifying for the Olympics with a top-four finish in the Asian Cup, but winning the whole thing for the first time.

    If they do make it to the Olympics, Irankunda will be back in the frame for selection.

    “He’s always been in consideration [for Paris] and on our list of players,” Vidmar said.

    “He is one where after the Olympic qualifiers it’ll be about having that discussion again and he likes that contact.

    “He’s been open with me about a lot of things, but I don’t want to divulge them because that’s a trust and a relationship I’m building with him.”

    For now, it’s up to the players at Vidmar’s disposal to get the job done.

    AFC U-23 CUP GROUP STAGE FIXTURES

    Olyroos vs Jordan U-23

    Monday, 15 April 2024

    Kick-off: 4.00pm AST / 11pm AEST

    Abdulah Bin Khalifa Stadium, Doha

    Indonesia U-23 v Olyroos

    Thursday, 18 April 2024

    Kick-off: 4.00pm AST / 11pm AEST

    Abdulah Bin Khalifa Stadium, Doha

    Qatar U-23 v Olyroos

    Sunday, 21 April 2024

    Kick-off: 6.30pm AST / 1.30am AEST (Monday, 22 April)

    Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium, Doha

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  • Debutant’s ‘first class’ showing, supersub shines against Kiwis: Player Ratings

    Debutant’s ‘first class’ showing, supersub shines against Kiwis: Player Ratings

    The Socceroos have secured the Soccer Ashes with a dominant 2-0 win over New Zealand in London.

    Aussie boss Graham Arnold made five changes to his lineup which included a welcome recall for Massimo Luongo as hyped defender Alessandro Circati made his Socceroos debut.

    Foxsports.com.au takes a look at how EVERY Aussie performed in Socceroos Player Ratings!

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    DEFENCE

    Mat Ryan: 7

    The skipper was rarely troubled throughout but made crucial saves when he needed to, pulling off a brilliant save low to his right in the 30th minute to deny Chris Wood.

    Ryan’s distribution was equally impressive as well, helping to kickstart attacks or keep the ball.

    Aziz Behich: 6

    Behich provided plenty of energy and looked to get forward as much as possible down that left flank.

    Had an interesting dynamic playing behind Bos, who’s predominantly a left-back himself, but Behich still did plenty to keep New Zealand’s right side in check.

    Harry Souttar: 7.5

    Once again an impressive performance from the towering defender.

    Got on the scoresheet — albeit in contentious fashion — and helped the Aussies keep a clean sheet by nullifying a Premier League striker in Chris Wood.

    Did have a few careless moments in possession, but otherwise another dependable performance at the back from the Leicester City man.

    Souttar thought he scored the opener. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Alessandro Circati: 8

    Trying to keep Wood quiet is no easy task, let alone in a Socceroos debut, but Alessandro Circati was immense.

    The youngster looked calm and composed with the ball at his feet and did his defensive duties perfectly.

    His centre-back partner Souttar thought Circati was “first class” and felt the youngster had a “bright future” give how well he played, while Arnold said he “looked like he’d already played 30 or 40 caps.”

    It’s hard to disagree.

    Lewis Miller: 6

    Miller earned a starting berth at right back and although he endured a bit of a shaky start, the Hibernian man grew into the contest.

    He whipped in the cross that led to the opening goal and was involved in some tidy passages of play in the final third, but only got one half of football before he was taken off for Ryan Strain at the break.

    MIDFIELD

    Keanu Baccus: 5

    Baccus had a bit of a mixed bag when it came to his performance.

    He always looked to help take the ball off of defenders and move it around the field, but was sometimes guilty of gifting the ball away in dangerous areas.

    Baccus also made a number of crucial tackles yet also gave away some careless fouls in dangerous areas.

    Not his finest performance, but he’s definitely proven he belongs at the base of the Socceroos’ midfield.

    Massimo Luongo: 7

    You could see as early as the national anthems what this recall to the Socceroos meant for Luongo, as he couldn’t wipe the smile from his face.

    He most certainly carried over his impressive club form for Ipswich Town onto the international stage and looked lively across all areas of the field.

    His eagerness got the better of him at times when he held onto the ball for too long, yet Luongo has certainly made the case for keeping his place in the next international window.

    Luongo performed well in his first Socceroos appearance in five years. (Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Jordan Bos: 6

    Bos’ attacking qualities are no secret as a left-back, but he didn’t exactly have his best game as a left winger.

    He was often tasked with set pieces but his deliveries didn’t quite hit the mark, although he almost had a goal when he cut inside and unleashed a curling effort with his right foot that was well-saved.

    Bos can definitely do a job at left wing if needed, such is his boundless energy.

    But just as Luke Wilkshire and Alex Brosque pointed out, the youngster is best served as a left-back going forward.

    Martin Boyle: 7

    The man simply cannot stop running.

    Boyle was once again full of energy down the right wing, chasing lost causes and burning opposition defenders with his electric pace.

    Also notched a late assist when his corner found Jackson Irvine at the back post for the second goal.

    ATTACK

    Connor Metcalfe: 7

    Metcalfe seemed to be given free licence to roam in the final third as he popped up in all areas of the field.

    It certainly troubled the Kiwi defenders and midfielders who struggled to lock him down.

    He’ll be kicking himself for missing a golden chance in the first half when Luongo slipped him through on goal and had his effort well saved by the All Whites goalkeeper.

    Mitchell Duke: 6

    He had a goal, then he didn’t, then he finally did.

    Duke scored the Socceroos’ first goal but his volley took the slightest of deflections off of Souttar, yet it was the former who was eventually credited with the opener.

    Aside from his goal though, it was another showing from Duke where his work off the ball was perhaps more notable than what he did on it.

    Duke’s volley opened the Socceroos’ account in London. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    SUBS

    Ryan Strain: 6

    Came on in the 46th minute for Lewis Miller.

    Had a difficult chance to double Australia’s advantage when he sidefooted a high ball wide of goal from range.

    Strain looked to get forward as much as possible but didn’t quite find the rhythm he’d have liked in the 45 minutes he spent on the field.

    Craig Goodwin: 7

    Came on in the 66th minute for Jordan Bos.

    Goodwin immediately made an impact at left wing, exploiting the acres of space he often found himself in and tracked back well.

    You almost felt that the Socceroos were going to score whenever he had the ball as Goodwin continues to cement his spot as the Aussies’ first choice at left wing.

    Brandon Borrello: 7

    Came on in the 66th minute for Mitchell Duke.

    Borrello zipped around the field like a madman as he looked to make his case for inclusion in future windows.

    His eagerness got the better of him on a handful of occasions as he was flagged offside, but the intent was certainly there from the Wanderers ace.

    However, Borrello will rue a golden opportunity as he missed an open goal to score the Socceroos’ third.

    Jackson Irvine: 8

    Came on in the 66th minute for Massimo Luongo.

    Irvine was the true game-changer for the Socceroos when he came on, making driving runs from midfield and getting back to do his defensive duties.

    The St Pauli midfielder was especially dangerous on the transition as he helped spark attacks with his passing.

    He capped off a strong showing with a goal from a Martin Boyle corner just 10 minutes after coming on.

    Aiden O’Neill: N/A

    Came on in the 81st minute for Connor Metcalfe.

    Sammy Silvera: N/A

    Came on in the 82nd minute for Martin Boyle.

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  • How miracle club went from heaven to hell — and the ‘colossal’ error that sealed PL demise

    How miracle club went from heaven to hell — and the ‘colossal’ error that sealed PL demise

    It seemed unfathomable.

    They were deemed too big to go down.

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    After all, they’d overcome 5000-1 odds to win the Premier League seven years prior, made it to a Champions League quarterfinal in 2017 and hoisted the FA Cup in 2021.

    But now, Leicester City must face the cold, harsh reality that now stares them in the face: they are a Championship club.

    Despite a 2-1 victory over West Ham United on the final day, a long range pile-driver from Everton’s Abdoulaye Doucoure rendered the Foxes’ victory irrelevant and condemned the club to relegation.

    An off-season of uncertainty awaits, with no fewer than eight players out of contract and a raft of stars like James Maddison and Harvey Barnes set to be sold.

    The wage and transfer budget will have to be slashed to comply with the significantly decreased income due to the vast difference in revenue streams between Premier League and Championship clubs.

    It still feels remarkable how steep this decline has been.

    But it is the culmination of a mess entirely of the club’s doing.

    And it is one former Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers saw coming before a ball had been kicked in anger this season.

    Full wrap of final day EPL action | 07:44

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    HOW £50M ‘COLOSSAL DISAPPOINTMENT’ BEGAN INEVITABLE SLIDE

    En route to Leicester’s Premier League title in 2016, one aspect of their football department was the envy of not just England, but the world.

    The Foxes’ fearsome trio of Jamie Vardy, N’Golo Kante and Riyad Mahrez had been bought for a collective $AUD13 million, highlighting the club’s unrivalled eye for talent.

    Although Vardy has remained at the club, Kante and Mahrez were flipped for a combined $142 million.

    Over the coming seasons Leicester developed a reputation for selling a player for significant profit and reinvesting it in the squad.

    Harry Maguire was bought for $22 million in 2017 and sold two years later to Manchester United for a staggering $142 million, a world record fee for a defender.

    Ben Chilwell, who came through Leicester’s academy, moved to Chelsea in the summer of 2019 for $82 million while Wesley Fofana departed to the Blues last August for $131 million.

    But, as The Telegraph’s John Percy noted, Leicester’s greatest weapon soon became its biggest enemy.

    “For many years, Leicester were a well-run club but, equally, recruitment in recent times has been a colossal disappointment,” Percy wrote.

    “The £50 million spent on Patson Daka, Boubakary Soumare and Jannik Vestergaard in the summer of 2021 was a huge waste. Ryan Bertrand also signed as a free agent on big wages and has not started a match since December 21.

    Jannik Vestergaard struggled to make his mark at Leicester City. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “After winning the title in 2016, most of the signings who followed were underwhelming.”

    The Foxes soon struggled to find homes for players deemed not good enough.

    The club also had to deal with players they knew would be out of contract at the end of the 2022/23 season, but no willing buyers — well, at the valuation Leicester wanted for them — emerged.

    Percy described the contract farce as “mismanagement on a grand scale”.

    Compounding the club’s financial woes further was the vast expenditure on the new training ground at Seagrave.

    It is a facility to make most European clubs green with envy, but set the Foxes back an estimated $188 million and is a large and costly operation to continue running.

    With the big outlays on players and the training ground and receiving little in the way of transfer fees or European qualification money, it forced Leicester to turn off the money tap for Rodgers.

    It was a situation that caught the Northern Irishman, who had already commenced conversations with prospective transfer targets, by serious surprise.

    Almost immediately, the goalposts were shifted.

    And not for the better.

    Leicester City invested heavily in their new training facilities. (Photo by Ashley Allen/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “From that moment onwards, Rodgers adopted a negative tone, talking about a challenging season before a ball was kicked and about the target being 40 points,” The Athletic’s Rob Tanner wrote.

    “People around the club were genuinely shocked when he placed the bar so low. That message didn’t match Leicester’s ambition or the surrounds of the media suite at Seagrave where he said it.

    “Ultimately, Rodgers has been proven right, but that negativity had already seeped into the psyche at the club, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

    In the end, Leicester made just one signing in the summer: centre-back Wout Faes from Reims for $27 million.

    But just two players of note went out the exit door in the form of Fofana and former skipper Kasper Schmeichel, who moved to Nice in Ligue 1.

    It was the latter’s departure that spun the wheels of relegation faster, even if he was one of the club’s highest earners, with Percy labelling the sale as “a grave mistake.”

    The Foxes failed to replace Schmeichel and instead put their faith behind backup goalkeeper Danny Ward, a decision that backfired significantly.

    It wouldn’t take long for Leicester’s botched recruitment plans to seep out onto the field as the irreversible decline of the 2015/16 champions set in.

    Danny Ward was symbolic of Leicester’s failures this season. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    PROPHETIC RODGERS WARNINGS EVERYONE IGNORED

    Rodgers already had plenty of credits in the bank as Leicester boss.

    Since his arrival from Celtic in February 2019, he guided the Foxes to consecutive fifth-place finishes and an FA Cup triumph in 2021 before dropping back to eighth last season.

    The divide between the manager and Leicester’s passionate fanbase slowly crept in last season.

    An embarrassing 4-1 thrashing in the fourth round of the FA Cup at the hands of Nottingham Forest, a Championship outfit last season, was a key moment that highlighted the disconnect.

    After the defeat, Rodgers claimed the majority of his team “had achieved everything they can” in what was yet another prophetic call from the manager.

    If anything, the eighth-place finish glossed over the fact two of Leicester’s three wins in the final four games of the season were big wins against teams who had already been relegated in Norwich City and Watford.

    It was a wildly inconsistent season in which they won as many as they lost and failed to string more than two consecutive wins together.

    Leicester’s malaise worsened at the start of the 22/23 season as the Foxes drew its first game against Brentford before losing their next six games in a row, including 5-2 and 6-2 defeats to Brighton and Tottenham Hotspur respectively.

    With the Foxes rooted to the bottom of the ladder, Percy felt the Spurs defeat was “surely the time to part ways,” especially since it was around the first international break of the season.

    Yet Leicester owner Aiyawatt “Khun Top” Srivaddhanaprabha and director of football Jon Rudkin boldly elected to stick rather than twist.

    Percy felt the decision simply proved what many had feared: Leicester had essentially blinded itself from the worst fate possible.

    “The absence of ruthlessness allowed the club to drift,” Percy wrote.

    The fans turned on Rodgers. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    “It seemed to suggest a mindset of ‘everything will be OK’, despite all the warning signs.”

    However, results turned in Leicester’s favour after the international window with five wins from eight games and went into the mid-season World Cup break sitting in 13th.

    But normality for Leicester in terms of their season as a whole quickly resumed post-Qatar.

    Four consecutive losses didn’t quite send Leicester plummeting down the table, but it certainly decreased the gap between them and the chasing pack fighting tooth and nail for survival.

    A mini-revival of two wins in February over Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur — in which they scored eight goals — proved to be nothing more than a false dawn.

    Despite several more defeats, including one against rock-bottom Southampton, Rodgers still remained in the dugout at the King Power Stadium.

    However, the baffling patience of Khun Top and Rudkin wore out after Leicester’s 2-1 loss to Crystal Palace on April 1 as Rodgers was dismissed the next day with the club sitting 19th.

    Although it left Leicester with 10 games to salvage its season, it seemed as if there was no way to halt what felt like the inevitable.

    “There was a realisation that things were going in one direction and Leicester’s slide has proven to be irreversible,” Tanner wrote.

    “The damage was done.”

    Adam Sadler and Mike Stowell were installed as caretaker managers in the hope of providing a bounce which often accompanies a change in the dugout, but it was not forthcoming.

    Sadler and Stowell oversaw two defeats from two before former Aston Villa manager Dean Smith was handed the keys with only eight games left.

    Smith had masterminded a miraculous escape once before with Villa during the Covid-affected 19/20 season and no doubt felt he could do the same again with former Foxes boss Craig Shakespeare and John Terry alongside him.

    Rodgers’ successful tenure as Leicester boss rapidly spiralled out of control towards the end. (Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    A win against Wolves and draws against Leeds and Everton provided glimmers of hope, but consecutive defeats to Fulham and Liverpool ultimately proved to be the death knell for Leicester.

    Even though the Midlands side did all they could on the final day to survive, their reliance on Bournemouth to get a result against Everton proved fruitless.

    An off-season of significant change awaits Leicester.

    The likes of Caglar Soyuncu, Ryan Bertrand, Jonny Evans and Youri Tielemans will leave the club as free agents, representing a net loss of $115 million.

    Then there’s the group of Leicester stars who will be forced out the exit door to help finance new signings.

    James Maddison, who is also out of contract at the end of next season, is almost certain to depart in a deal estimated to be $65 million.

    Electric winger Harvey Barnes is another likely departure too.

    But most pressing is which manager will be entrusted with the duty of getting Leicester promoted.

    Former Chelsea and Brighton manager Graham Potter is the Foxes’ dream candidate but at this stage it seems highly unlikely he would drop a division.

    Regardless, Manchester United legend Roy Keane believes the vacancy is one that will have several parties highly interested.

    “A lot of managers would love to take that job,” Keane told Sky Sports.

    “Especially if you get the backing they’ve had over the last few years — obviously it’s not been great the last 12 months — but generally Leicester have had good backing.”

    It remains to be seen if Dean Smith will stay on as Leicester boss next season. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    WHY REMARKABLE DECADE HAS FOXES PRIMED FOR PL RETURN

    Although it is a sombre mood at the King Power Stadium, it presents a time to reflect on what has been the greatest period of the club’s rich history filled with long-lasting memories.

    There’s the great escape of the 2014/15 season under Nigel Pearson when the Foxes looked dead and buried, only to survive by the skin of their teeth.

    It provided the platform for Leicester to complete one of the most remarkable stories in the history of sport when they won the Premier League title.

    A memorable run to the Champions League quarter-finals in the following season also provided plenty to sing about.

    Unfortunately the period of success was not without a tragedy which rocked the entire football world.

    Former Leicester owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was one of five people who died in a helicopter crash just outside the King Power Stadium after the Foxes’ game against West Ham United on October 27.

    His son Khun Top continues to work tirelessly to honour his late father’s vision he had for the club he loved dearly.

    There is certainly frustration in the manner with which Leicester went down, especially since it was largely preventable.

    But they are no strangers to the Championship and, with the star power they already have in the squad, are primed to bounce straight back.

    Socceroos star Harry Souttar, a January signing for the club, could prove to be a key figure in Leicester’s push for an immediate return given Soyuncu and Evans, two fellow centre-backs, will depart in the summer.

    It promises to be a massive off-season for the club as they prepare for life in the second division for the first time since 2014.

    With a new face in the dugout required and a squad refresh, this moment presents a golden opportunity for Leicester to turn a new page.

    But it’s also a timely reminder for other clubs: if you dare to fly too close to the sun, it will end in flames.

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  • FIVE possible debuts as new era dawns; Mooy loss creates huge chance: Socceroos Burning Qs

    FIVE possible debuts as new era dawns; Mooy loss creates huge chance: Socceroos Burning Qs

    The Socceroos return to home soil this week for their first matches since this historic success in Qatar last year, facing fellow World Cup participants Ecuador in a pair of friendlies on Friday and Tuesday.

    Heralded as the ‘Welcome Home’ series, it is an opportunity to celebrate Australia’s finest men’s World Cup showing, as well as the dawn of a new World Cup cycle – a chance for young players to stake their claim in the next iteration of the Socceroos.

    Here are the biggest questions ahead of the two blockbuster clashes.

    JUST HOW BOLD WILL ARNIE BE?

    This question can easily be reframed as such: Will coach Graham Arnold prioritise the next generation or celebrate those players who starred in Qatar?

    It will be a difficult balancing act, made harder by the remarkable depth at his disposal.

    20 Aussies received match minutes at the World Cup, and 15 of them have been named to this squad. Add to that a handful of others named to this squad (like defender Thomas Deng, midfielder Cameron Devlin, and attacker Marco Tilio) who were at the World Cup but didn’t take to the pitch.

    His selection headaches might be made a little easier by injury-forced absences of a quartet of Mat Leckie, Ajdin Hrustic, Aaron Mooy, and Jamie Maclaren. That’s four World Cup heroes who Arnold almost had to play at some point in this pair of games. Instead, he has the chance to give minutes to other players – meaning more chances for fresh faces.

    And there’s no shortage of fresh faces. In fact, there are five possible debutants in the 27-man squad: Jordan Bos, Joe Gauci, Aiden O’Neill, and Alexander Robertson, plus train-on player Nestory Irankunda – who Arnold said was in with a strong chance of making the squad for the second game.

    “He’s in there as a train-on at this moment, but there are two games, (and) that the back-up (between) the games is very short.

    “We play Friday (then) Tuesday, and there’ll be a good chance for the second game especially that he’ll be in the squad.”

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    Robertson set to be 3rd gen Socceroo | 02:25

    With the four aforementioned veterans ruled out, the squad is tilted towards youth. The average age of the 26-man squad (thus excluding the 17-year-old train-on Irankunda) is 25.8 years. Besides the five possible debutants, 12 other players have seven caps or fewer.

    Youth and international inexperience is partly what makes this series so exciting. Will Arnold hand out debuts to all of the exciting quartet of youngsters at his disposal, including the teen sensation Irankunda? If so, who misses out?

    Those sorts of tricky questions face every position. Assuming locked-in first-choice goalkeeper and skipper Mat Ryan plays one of the matches, does Arnold reward veteran Andrew Redmayne – the ‘Grey Wiggle’ – for his heroics in the World Cup play-offs by giving him a game?

    Or does Arnold look to the future (and reward superior club form) by giving young Adelaide FC gloveman Joe Gauci a debut between the sticks?

    At least a couple of debuts are a veritable certainty this series. But who starts, and just how much Arnold is willing to roll the dice on youth, will be one of the big things to look out for.

    “It’s a blank sheet of paper, and these guys have been given the first chance,” Arnold said.

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    TACTICAL TINKERING OR REVOLUTION?

    Graham Arnold has remained largely consistent in his tactical approach throughout his Socceroos reign. Typically that sees him deploy a 4-3-3 formation with roaming inverted fullbacks to support an emphasis on wide play, and a willingness to play long balls to stretch defences or to a holdup attacker.

    Combined with an emphasis on physicality, workrate, and dogged determination – the ‘Aussie DNA’ he champions – it has proven remarkably successful, particularly in backs-to-the-wall situations against more vaunted opposition at the World Cup.

    But with the Asian Cup not until January 2024, and the tougher stages of World Cup qualifying further down the track, Arnold now has an opportunity to revolutionise or at least revamp his approach.

    Will we see a new formation? A new focus or style in attack?

    Man City teenager headlines Aussie squad | 03:24

    While the World Cup was our greatest-ever, significant problems confronted the Socceroos through their gruelling slog to qualify for Qatar. The focus on wide play and bombing balls into the box proved ineffective against well-marshalled defences such as Japan and Saudi Arabia, the two top rivals in Asian qualifying last time out.

    But the unique skill-sets and attributes of the younger generation also offers Arnold room to change his approach. Australia is blessed with a raft of extremely talented rising stars, such as Melbourne City’s 20-year-old left-back Jordan Bos.

    He presents a contrasting style to the incumbent Aziz Behich, the 32-year-old who has 57 caps over a decade.

    “He’s a completely different player to Aziz Behich as a left fullback,” Arnold said.

    “I don’t think I’ve seen one like this one since Scott Chipperfield. I hate to put a name on it, but he’s a very, very similar player to Scotty.

    “He gives you that extra way that we can play, that maybe we don’t need to play with an inverted full back now.

    “We can play with a fullback that can be high and wide and give us something different.

    “During a game, for example, if we are playing with that inverted fullback, we can change our style and change our way with one substitution.

    “That’s what he brings to us now.”

    Australia’s depth in central defence – Harry Souttar and Kye Rowles played every game in Qatar, but Thomas Deng, Milos Degenek, and Bailey Wright are still beating down the door – could even tempt Arnold to move to a three-man defensive line.

    Jordan Bos of Melbourne City has been in sublime form of late.Source: Getty Images

    NO MOOY IN BIG MIDFIELD CHANCE

    Tom Rogic, Aaron Mooy, and Jackson Irvine. For almost a decade, Australia’s midfield has been largely dominated by three men, each of whom have played over 50 times for the national team. But Rogic missed the World Cup – having pulled out of the Socceroos earlier last year in mysterious circumstances – and a lack of game time at West Brom in England’s second tier means he hasn’t earned a recall. Mooy pulled out of this series due to a back injury, meaning Irvine is the sole midfield veteran in the squad.

    Ajdin Hrustic, Australia’s best player in the previous World Cup qualification cycle, is also out with injury.

    Irvine, in stunning form at St Pauli in Germany’s second division, will play a key role in the midfield this series. But Mooy’s absence throws up some interesting questions.

    Mooy has played largely as a six – a deep-lying playmaker or defensive midfielder – for the Socceroos in recent years. For Celtic, however, he typically plays in a more attacking role, where he has added plenty of goals to his exceptional passing and creativity.

    Irvine and Casemiro’s wholesome moment | 00:36

    Arnold strongly suggested he had planned to deploy Mooy this series in a similar role to his club position, due to both the absence of playmaker Hrustic and the greater depth of defensive midfielders in the current squad – namely Keanu Baccus and Cameron Devlin.

    The recalled Connor Metcalfe, an unlucky omission from Qatar, provides a more box-to-box option alongside potential debutant Aiden O’Neill, who has been in sensational form for Melbourne City.

    Another potential debutant is Manchester City midfielder Alexander Robertson, a genuine number eight who has huge expectations on his young shoulders.

    Arnold typically deploys three midfielders – either two holding midfielders in a double-pivot, or one holding midfielder and two further forward. Irvine will take one of those positions in at least one of the two matches, while Riley McGree could be shifted from his usual role on the flanks to an attacking midfield role usually reserved for Hrustic.

    But who Arnold taps to fill the other spaces – or whether he shifts formation to drop from three to two midfielders – could give a big hint as to the future.

    FULL SOCCEROOS SQUAD FOR ECUADOR FRIENDLIES

    GOALKEEPERS

    Mat Ryan

    Andrew Redmayne

    Joe Gauci

    DEFENDERS

    Nathaniel Atkinson

    Aziz Behich

    Jordy Bos

    Milos Degenek

    Thomas Deng

    Harry Souttar

    Bailey Wright

    Kye Rowles

    Ryan Strain

    MIDFIELDERS

    Keanu Baccus

    Cameron Devlin

    Jackson Irvine

    Connor Metcalfe

    Aiden O’Neill

    Alexander Robertson

    Riley McGree

    FORWARDS

    Brandon Borrello

    Jason Cummings

    Mitchell Duke

    Craig Goodwin

    Garang Kuol

    Awer Mabil

    Marco Tilio

    Nestory Irankunda (train-on)

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