Tag: UEFA Youth League

  • ‘Respect the shirt’: Status quo squashed as Popovic issues Socceroos selection statement

    ‘Respect the shirt’: Status quo squashed as Popovic issues Socceroos selection statement

    Well, that was surprising. Tony Popovic’s 26-player squad to face Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in two crucial World Cup qualifiers over the next fortnight has dismantled the status quo.

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    The family, as the squad and environment were so often described under former Socceroos coach Graham Arnold, has been broken up and, in its place, sits an eclectic mix of new faces and ones that seemed to be surplus to requirements.

    Others, meanwhile, are completely missing through their own choosing; as is the case with Cardiff City midfielder Alex Robertson, or have been excluded, where they were previously part of the furniture.

    Popovic, after taking on the role just weeks before the last international window in October, said he wanted to ensure that nobody felt they had a right to a Socceroos jersey. With this squad he has done just that and perhaps the biggest story surrounds three players who won’t feature in Melbourne and Bahrain this month.

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    THE MISSING PLAYERS

    Alex Robertson

    When Alex Robertson made his debut for Australia in a friendly against Ecuador in March last year, it seemed like the next 100-cap Socceroo had been discovered.

    The midfielder, who is now on the books of Championship side Cardiff City, is one of those players blessed with both tactical and technical skill in abundance and it appeared as though the battle for his allegiance was won.

    After all, with his father Mark and grandfather, also named Alexander, in the stands in Sydney that night, he became a third-generation Socceroo.

    Mark represented Australia in 2001 and Alexander in the mid 1980s.

    But Robertson is also eligible to represent Scotland, England and Peru through birth, residence and family.

    After playing his junior football in Sydney, Robertson made the move to the UK as a teenager and represented England at youth level.

    The 21-year-old hasn’t featured for Australia since a 2-nil friendly defeat to Argentina in Beijing in June last year and whether he adds to his two caps is now up in the air.

    Last month, Robertson’s absence from the squad for games against China and Japan was explained as a paperwork issue with FIFA that hadn’t been resolved yet.

    Now, it seems, Football Australia has done everything it can to resolve the matter.

    “That sits in his hands now,” Popovic said after unveiling his squad in Melbourne.

    “If he wants to play for the Socceroos, he needs to make himself available.

    “It’s an Alex decision on what he wants to do.

    “If he wants to make himself available for the Socceroos then we can look at whether we select him, but at the moment we don’t have that option.

    “You have to respect the shirt, the badge; you have to respect the honour of playing for the Socceroos and we also have to respect the fact that everyone can make their own choice.

    “Right now, his decision is not to make himself available.”

    It’s a measure of Robertson’s immense talent that Popovic went on to say that the door hasn’t been closed because of this latest development, but fans who have long called for his inclusion in green and gold, at least now have some clarity on the matter.

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    Nestory Irankunda

    The other big name missing from the squad list was that of Nestory Irankunda.

    The 18-year-old, who swapped Adelaide United for Bayern Munich in the off-season, has made a positive start to his time at the German powerhouse.

    The winger has been scoring for both Bayern II in the Regionalliga and also in the UEFA Youth League, but his output at international level has been mixed.

    He looked lively and dangerous in the last fixtures of the Graham Arnold era, but struggled in his first match under Popovic, when handed a starting role against China in Adelaide last month and then didn’t feature against Japan.

    Nestory Irankunda of Australia controls the ball during the round three 2026 FIFA World Cup AFC Asian Qualifier match between Australia Socceroos and Bahrain at Robina Stadium on September 05, 2024 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Popovic’s system, where the wingers play a more inverted role, doesn’t seem to suit the teenager. He’s more comfortable wider on the right, and so far, that is at odds with Popovic’s preferred tactical set-up.

    “It’s just a selection decision,” Popovic said.

    “We know he’s a young man with a lot of potential, who is signed at one of the biggest clubs in the world.

    “We just feel it is an opportunity for him to settle in at Bayern and get the development that he needs there and the growth.

    “We still hope that we really see this potential moving forward from him in the national team in years to come.”

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    Keanu Baccus

    It won’t be a major headline, but the decision not to call-up Keanu Baccus is still notable.

    The combative, deeper lying midfielder, was a mainstay under Arnold, who shot to prominence at the World Cup in Qatar in 2022 while locked in a fierce battle with Argentina’s Lionel Messi in a heart stopping round of 16 defeat in Doha.

    Under Popovic, Baccus has only seen 10-minutes of action, and that was in a largely unfamiliar right-back role against Japan, in the 1-1 draw in Saitama.

    The new coach has plenty of options in central midfield too in the form of Jackson Irvine, Aiden O’Neill, Max Balard, Anthony Caceres and Patrick Yazbek.

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    THE NEW PLAYERS

    Anthony Caceres

    Anthony Caceres has often been referred to as the best player never to represent Australia at any level.

    Now 32, it appeared the chance of the Sydney FC midfielder shedding that tag was slim, but the door has finally opened.

    Caceres seems perfectly suited to Popovic’s system where those further forward are required to be comfortable and make good decisions in extremely tight spaces.

    In fact, he’s done just that his whole career.

    There was a school of thought over the years that while Caceres was technically gifted, he lacked a killer edge in the final third.

    But with three goals, 10 assists and 13 goal involvements to his name last season, those concerns have been allayed, if Popovic ever had them at all.

    “He’s been a player that I’ve admired for a very long time,” said Popovic.

    “He deserves his chance.

    “Every coach has their ideas and this is his chance now.

    Max Balard

    It’s perhaps the ultimate compliment, that after moving from the Central Coast Mariners to Dutch Eredivisie side NAC Breda this season, the local media in the Netherlands quickly dubbed the 23-year-old the ‘Australian Kante.’

    It’s a nod to former Leicester City and Chelsea star N’Golo Kante, now playing for Saudi Pro League club Al-Ittihad, who is one of the finest ball-winning midfielders of his generation.

    Balard missed selection for last month’s window, but should now get the chance to shine, after proving to Australia’s new coaching staff that he can be just as damaging with his range of passing as well.

    “He’s had some very good performances this year,” Popovic said.

    “We’ve been monitoring him prior to the last camp, but I think in the last month, his game has become more consistent; more balanced in his play, with and without the ball.”

    Hayden Matthews

    The 20-year-old Sydney FC central defender only signed his first professional contract in January this year and has now earned his maiden international call-up.

    At 195 centimetres, he is a towering figure, and although on the surface, it looks like Matthews has been included to get some experience in an extended 26-player squad, it’s interesting that he’s on the radar of the national team boss so early in his career.

    Keanu Baccus did not find himself in Popovic’s squad. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    THE RETURNING PLAYERS

    Rhyan Grant

    The last time Rhyan Grant featured for the Socceroos was in a third round World Cup qualifying defeat to Japan in Sydney in 2022.

    The tireless right-back has seen a long list of players cycle through that position in an Australian shirt since then, but never in his wildest dreams did the Sydney FC captain think he’d be considered again.

    “I honestly didn’t see this coming, but I’m absolutely delighted,” Grant said.

    The 33-year-old, who has 21-caps to his name, thought his time had passed, and stressed that point whenever the topic of a recall to international football surfaced, but could well be the answer to the problematic position again.

    Brandon Borrello

    The search for a striker who can score on a consistent basis is just as puzzling as the absence of an established right back.

    Brandon Borrello will fight for minutes alongside Mitch Duke and Kusini Yengi.

    The Western Sydney Wanderers quarter-final exit at the hands of Adelaide United in the Australia Cup left the forward short of minutes for the October window, but with 266-minutes and two goals from three games under his belt in the A-League this season, he’s moved back up the pecking order.

    Milos Degenek

    Few people are more passionate about the Socceroos jersey than Milos Degenek.

    In an extraordinary interview at the World Cup in Qatar in 2022 he offered an insight into the mentality he takes into games.

    “The lion mentality is, you either eat or you get eaten, and that’s the simplest way to put it,” Degenek said at the time.

    “I used this term before the Peru game with the boys, I said ‘there’s bread on the table’.

    “Either we eat tonight; my kids, my wife and my family eats tonight, or they eat and my kids go home to sleep hungry and my wife as well – and I don’t want that to happen.”

    Degenek has missed most of 2024 due to injury but is back on the park and played in FK Crvena zvezda’s first round Serbian Cup game just over a week ago.

    The 30-year-old, who can play as a central defender or right-back, adds versatility to the squad and even if he doesn’t feature on the field, he’ll be a force for good around the squad.

    Few people are more passionate about the Socceroos jersey than Milos Degenek. (Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Martin Boyle

    Martin Boyle looked out of sorts in the September window as the Socceroos stumbled against Bahrain and Indonesia in, what turned out to be, the final days of the Arnold era.

    He didn’t feature in Popovic’s first squad, but his form for Hibernian, in Scotland, has been hard to ignore.

    The 31-year-old has five goals and five assists to his name this season and could potentially be deployed as an inverted winger or striker.

    His experience will also help the side deal with the scale of the challenge in-front of them.

    A victory over Saudi Arabia next week will go some way towards rectifying the Socceroos dire start to the third round of qualifying.

    Australia is currently second in group C but locked on five points with their next opponents, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

    A top two finish in the group earns automatic qualification for the next World Cup in 2026, so the stakes around every fixture from here are high.

    Squad: Max Balard, Aziz Behich, Brandon Borrello, Jordy Bos, Martin Boyle, Cameron Burgess, Anthony Caceres, Milos Degenek, Mitch Duke, Joe Gauci (GK), Jason Geria, Craig Goodwin, Rhyan Grant, Ajdin Hrustic, Jackson Irvine, Paul Izzo (GK), Hayden Matthews, Riley McGree, Lewis Miller, Aiden O’Neill, Kye Rowles, Mat Ryan (GK), Harry Souttar, Nishan Velupillay, Patrick Yazbek, Kusini Yengi.

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  • ‘Trying to keep it together’: Inside eye-opening rise of Aussie teen who wowed Euro heavyweights

    ‘Trying to keep it together’: Inside eye-opening rise of Aussie teen who wowed Euro heavyweights

    They say it takes a village to raise one child, let alone two.

    For the Pavlešić family, the old adage rings true.

    On those cold, frosty winter mornings when football season was in full swing, Anthony and Adam Pavlešić’s parents would be up early, driving their kids all across Sydney to games.

    And if the parents couldn’t drive?

    “The grandparents, the uncles, the aunties, it doesn’t matter who it was, they’d help,” Anthony told foxsports.com.au.

    It’s the beauty of growing up in a football-mad family, who would all travel to watch the two goalkeepers in action as they rose through the youth ranks at Sydney United.

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    The dedication from the Pavlešić clan paid off handsomely: Adam is now the back-up goalkeeper to Andrew Redmayne at Sydney FC and already has a handful of appearances for the Sky Blues to his name.

    As for Anthony?

    He’s rubbing shoulders with his childhood idol and a host of international superstars at Bayern Munich at just 17 years of age.

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    WHY AUSSIE KNEW DREAM MOVE HAD TO ‘BE NOW’

    Pavlešić was on duty with the Australian U17s earlier this year for a tournament in Turkey when the window of opportunity flung wide open.

    His management had been in touch with a contact at Bayern for some time, sending over clips of Pavlešić in an effort to get the teenager a trial.

    Given the distance from Australia to Germany, it would have been a difficult ask.

    But as soon as the contact became aware Pavlešić was on the continent in Turkey, the Aussie received an invite for a two-and-a-half-week trial with the German giants.

    Of course, it had to come with the blessing of the Central Coast Mariners, Pavlešić’s team at the time, which it did.

    Was it a daunting experience going on trial at Bayern, one of the most successful clubs in world football?

    “It was a little bit,” Pavlešić said.

    “But I think I was ready for it. I was confident.

    “I didn’t really know what to expect, what level they would be, what the environment would be like.

    “But I came off a decent tournament playing two games in Turkey and thought, ‘Just give it a crack now, if I’m ever going to be ready, it’s going to be now.’

    “Physically I was feeling good, my body was in a good place. I just wanted to challenge myself and experience what the level would be like over there, which is where I want to get to.”

    Anthony Pavlešić represented the Young Socceroos in Marbella. Picture: Sergio LopezSource: Supplied

    As it transpired, Pavlešić was more than ready for the opportunity and Bayern felt the same as they agreed a six-figure sum with the Mariners to bring the teenager over to Bavaria.

    On Pavlešić’s part, there “wasn’t any hesitation at all” when it came to wanting to move having proved himself capable of performing at the required levels.

    But one needs more than talent to make it at a European giant like Bayern, so Pavlešić sought out advice on what to expect from then-Mariners coach Nick Montgomery and goalkeeping coach Miguel Miranda, who had previously worked with Ederson and Jan Oblak.

    So, what did Montgomery tell Pavlešić to expect?

    “Just the professionalism, the mentality of everyone, the hunger you need to succeed over there and how hard you really have to work,” Pavlešić said.

    “He (Montgomery) brought those philosophies to Central Coast which helped us succeed. But those things that you need to be a top player, he also had a very good career himself, you listen to his words very closely.

    “It helps knowing it all before you go over there, how much harder you have to work than everyone else.”

    With Montgomery’s words of wisdom ringing in his ears, Pavlešić’s move to Bayern became official in June.

    But the challenges would soon come thick and fast for the young Australian gloveman.

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    THE CHANGING ROOM EXPERIENCE WITH IDOL THAT PROVED ‘SACRIFICE’ HAS BEEN WORTH IT

    Moving your entire life to the other side of the world is no small feat for a 17-year-old.

    Add in the potential language barrier and it makes it even more difficult.

    But Pavlešić was welcomed with open arms to the Bayern campus, a sprawling 30-hectare site which boasts eight football pitches, 35 apartments for academy players not from the local area and several other first-class facilities.

    And, perhaps most importantly for Pavlešić’s transition to life in Munich, most people speak English.

    “Me not knowing any other languages at the moment, if I went there and everyone was only speaking German and no-one was interacting with me, it would have been very different,” Pavlešić said.

    “I think I’ve been lucky that I’ve moved onto Bayern campus. I’ve got a lot of other players around my age, teams above and below and even players in my team that I’m living with. It helps with relationships early on.

    “You’re seeing these people all day, every day at lunch, dinner, breakfast. Then you train with them, you go out with them every now and then.

    “You need to surround yourself with other people that can take up your time and distract yourself, then try and not think about missing home so much.

    “You stay focused on what you’re there to do and you realise that’s why you’ve gone and you know the sacrifice of moving from home. It’s not easy.

    “But I’m lucky that I have good people around me in Munich which helped me over there.”

    Spoiled with everything he could want for and more when it comes to a footballing experience, Pavlešić couldn’t stress just how “surreal” it had all been from the moment he first put on a Bayern training kit and stepped onto the pitch at the campus.

    But it gave him a timely reminder he belonged with several of Europe’s brightest prospects.

    The incredible Bayern Munich campus. Picture: Bayern MunichSource: Supplied

    “You feel a part of it, especially after the first few weeks go by,” Pavlešić said.

    “This is where you are now, you deserve to be there, they signed you for a reason.”

    As good as he has it now, Pavlešić needs no reminding it might not last forever, so he has to “make the most of it” while he is still at the club because “things can change very quickly.”

    If Pavlešić hadn’t pinched himself enough during his first few weeks in Bavaria, the rush of a lifetime was still yet to come.

    Bayern had just beaten Manchester United 4-3 in a scintillating Champions League clash at the Allianz Arena and those who started were afforded a day off from training.

    To help make up the numbers a handful of Bayern youth players were invited for a training session with the first team, including Pavlešić.

    Also taking part in the session was modern legend Thomas Muller, electric winger Kingsley Coman and teenage sensation Mathys Tel, who joined Bayern in the summer from Rennes.

    At times during various drills, Pavlešić couldn’t help but admire the “art” that was unfolding in front of his very eyes.

    “The first few times you see them, especially in the first few drills, you don’t know what to expect and you don’t know what the level is going to be of these guys,” Pavlešić said.

    “But all the small details that you’re told as a kid or some players skip on, these players have everything.

    “Their touch, their awareness, it’s all there. It’s like art.

    “How good they are at what they do and every small detail they’re really focused on, it was really cool to see.”

    Pavlešić also noted the breakneck pace at which these players do everything.

    “If you’re not as good at something, especially as a goalkeeper, they can expose you,” Pavlešić said.

    “The shots are so much harder and quicker. Time on the ball is so much less.

    “You have the ball at your feet, you’re getting pressed a second later.”

    Thomas Muller is a Bayern Munich legend. (Photo by Ahmad Mora/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Although Pavlešić was thrown very much into sink-or-swim territory in that training session with the first team, he received a few early pointers from a 37-year-old goalkeeper who calls Bayern home: Manuel Neuer.

    With over 300 appearances for the Bundesliga giants and 117 games for Germany, Neuer is one of the greatest goalkeepers of the modern era.

    He’s also Pavlešić’s idol.

    And you best believe the Aussie had to do everything in his power not to have a fanboy moment in front of the four-time FIFA World 11 goalkeeper when they first met.

    “It was surreal when I first met him,” Pavlešić said.

    “I think it was when I first walked into the changing rooms. He was there.

    “I walked over to introduce myself and said hello. That was pretty much it for then.

    “But then you walk around for the next few minutes, you’re just trying to keep it together. It was really good.

    “Then you go out and start training and you’re in awe of how good he really is and how nice he was as well.

    “He was helping me a little bit and talking to me, he spoke really good English and helped me out.”

    But as jaw-dropping as it has been to rub shoulders among Bayern’s big names, Pavlešić knows he can’t allow himself to continually be starstruck.

    “Part of being a good professional is that you have to realise you’re there for a reason,” Pavlešić said.

    “As much as it’s really cool to be there and to see everyone, all of these professionals that you looked up to your whole life, you know you’re there for a job and you’re there to train and you have to be one of them.”

    Pavlešić has trained alongside Bayern superstar Manuel Neuer. (Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    WHY NEXT GEN OF AUSSIES CAN QUASH ‘DISADVANTAGED’ NOTION

    Unfortunately for Pavlešić, it took some time before he was able to make his debut due to paperwork issues that had yet to be resolved with FIFA.

    But since then, he has made five appearances for Bayern’s under-19 side including a UEFA Youth League fixture away to Galatasaray and also played for Bayern’s reserve team in the German third division.

    Pavlešić also was a part of the Young Socceroos team that beat France, the Netherlands and Denmark at the Marbella Week of Football earlier in October, with each win coming via penalty shootout.

    A victory over one of those nations would have been impressive on its own, let alone three wins from three.

    But Pavlešić believes it’s yet another sign the next generation of players from Australia are not there to take part, but to take over.

    “It just shows what we can do,” Pavlešić said.

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    “People underestimate what we do because we’re from Australia, but under the right circumstances with a good team and good staff, we can be beating these top international teams.”

    Future success at these types of tournaments for the Young Socceroos will only attract interest from clubs of a similar standing to Bayern.

    It’s why Pavlešić doesn’t expect he’ll be the last to join the ranks of a European behemoth.

    “It shows that coming from Australia doesn’t make such a big difference,” Pavlešić said.

    “People think we’re very disadvantaged in Australia, but we have a decent youth system now and we can produce some good players.

    “If clubs like Bayern Munich are coming after me and other players are going to other clubs, it gives us all confidence knowing that we have the ability.

    “Some of us that are lucky enough get the opportunity, but we’re good enough to be in these places so it gives us a lot of confidence.”

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