Sunday 22 January 2012

Football roadtrips.....bonding good enough to be bottled!

Never wish your life away...time will pass, an expression used by older people to youngsters eager for a big day or moment to arrive. Sitting here in oz it has been that sort of weekend, where mentally you are wishing the hours away. Spurs are away to Manchester Citeh the game kicking off 12.30am Australia time, early Monday morning. Probably one of the most significant EPL games of the 2011-2012 season, it is one that outshines even the Arsenal v Manchester United game later in the day. As a road trip it is the third time in 3 three seasons the two have met in a crucial match. At the end the end of 2010-2011 a Peter Crouch own goal effectively handed Citeh fourth spot and ECL qualification. The previous year Crouch had been the hero scoring in Spurs 1-0 win. That in itself giving them the ECL spot. The five or six thousand Londoners head that way with genuine hope but also being certain of  a 'true day out experience' in the 'cold harsh north'.
Such trips are great for the fans but also key in terms of bonding also for the players themselves. A couple of memorable road trips come to mind for sides I have coached in Australia. One in the nineties with John Paul II Senior High School, Blacktown. The other with St Pius X College, Chatswood more recently in the 2000's.
Both roadtrips involved the school's 1st XI sides.
In 1995 John Paul II were enjoying halcyon days in both football and Rugby League. They won the nationally based Commonwealth Bank Cup in league with a final played at the SFS live on Channel Nine. In football we were a little bit more low key but had won both divisions of the ultra strong Metropolitan Catholic Colleges competition. Our chance to travel came when we made the last eight of NSWCCC Cup Competition. It was traditional in that Cup that the four metro quarter finalist schools would go country in that round. We got our opportunity and were required to go to Kempsey, a town 420km  north of Sydney ...at that time a six hour drive in a slow mini-bus:) Our opponents that day were St Paul's College. Plans were made and we set off on the Sunday afternoon hoping to stay overnight in Kempsey, play the game at 12.00 noon  and head for home when the game ended. All went well until when we turned up at 11.00am at the school. The pitch looked a bit thread bare and the goal posts were those multi-purpose ones doubling up for rugby. We were not really phased by this low key venue but did quickly receive a shock when a young student came out to tell us that the game had been rescheduled for a time 3 1/2 hours later! It quickly became apparent that the Principal of  St Paul's had ordered the whole school to come out at the end of school to support the team. No problems here, we headed off back off  to town on our bus to have a light snack at our motel accommodation. Returning a couple of hours later we saw that the whole school was now  in attendance waiting for these city slickers from Sydney. No problems here...we were hoping for competition.
As we warmed up I couldn't help notice that the opposition had an untidy awkwardness about them. I kept my thoughts to myself but inevitably found my mind running a mental comparison with my own squad warming up professionally at the other end. Then it happened. The cup competition leveler arrived. Here was the cup competition's refereeing version of Yeovil Towns infamous sloping pitch. A country man, he walked up to our coaching group and spat an instruction that he needed to inspect the sides boots. Passively our players stood in front of him. He disdainfully looked them up and down liking nothing he saw! He disliked their hair, the jewellery they wore, the style of our white shirts and shorts  and most of all the fact that we were a bit of an ethnic smorgasbord. Sensing his latent hostility my last words to the team were....."stay calm, play football, let the referee run the game". Big mistake on my part! The John Paul II boys played their part and kept possession for at least 3 minutes. Then unfortunately, we saw the way the rest of the afternoon would progress as our full back was cleaned up way after the ball was cleared......'Play on, play on' the referee waved his arms exulting the game to continue. We continued to play our game but without fail the Kempsey boys flew in late and as they did so the three or four hundred school kids on the hill went up as one, cheering each challenge, no matter how late."Stay calm ...stay calm ....we were sounding a bit desperate from the sideline....we hit both posts in the first half but when the whistle went for the break it was still 0-0. Our boys were fuming and the first few minutes of half time were wasted as they complained  bitterly about the refereeing...the opposition and the crowd, who were really giving it to everyone playing down that side.
The second half continued pretty much the same as the first only now we were beginning to accumulate yellow cards for dissent.....usually for protesting  the kicking which went on unabated.  Our nerves were now starting to fray. Kempsey were now beginning to mount a few breaks and several times went close to scoring. In the John Paul II side we had an Australian Schoolboy, several NSW representatives and many good club players. It was a surprise to most in our group then, that with ten minutes to play I decided to takeoff my best two players. It seemed a real limited choice to me. Without refereeing protection they would be either sent off for retaliating or carried off with broken legs! The stares of our squad at this decision stay with me even today. Then, just as we were moving towards extra time, a low shot was spilled by their, up until then faultless, keeper and we followed up to score. What relief....I looked at the lineman before celebrating and within a minute the game was over. The crowd were not happy and the game finished to an eruption of pushing and shoving. Quickly we got the boys literally straight onto the bus without changing. We headed to the motel and were gone escaping with our hard won NSWCCC Cup semi-final place. Regardless to say, no other match came close to that experience in 1995. We beat St Francis Xavier, Hamilton 5-0 in the semi-final and then Christian Brothers, Lewisham 2-0  in the final at Melita stadium. The player bond we formed up in Kempsey was truly invaluable.

In more recent years St Pius X College, Chatswood has got into the routine of going on tour to Brisbane in the three week holiday break. This break actually dissects the ISA season and it can mean a long period without games. In 2007 we decided to enter a tournament in Brisbane where we would have six games in a week. The first Monday back we were due to play our main rivals St Patrick's College, Strathfield. Having  won the Plate Trophy up north we  returned with the squad playing well and more importantly match fit. The backdrop to the St Pat's fixture was that it was the first time we had played them since the 2006 Grand Final where they had hammered us 7-2! Half our side had played the previous year in that side and were hungry to prove a point. The game at Oxford Falls was a revelation! Unbelievable we raced to a 4-0 lead within 20 minutes. The opposition had probably not conceded four goals in the previous decade in any match. Early in the second half we scored again to make it 5-0. Inevitably, St Pat's rallied somewhat and reduced the deficit with two quick goals...5-2. Then almost immediately we broke away again to score another 6-2! I suppose the moral of this story is that preparation can bring large swings in form and performance. Our Queensland trip certainly set us up and despite only winning the return game 2-1 St Pius X College went on to be undefeated Champions dropping just two points in winning he ISA competion in 2007.
Yes, going away as a team is a good way of building comradery and the experiences gained put any side in good stead as a result. COYS!

Wednesday 18 January 2012

Tell me again .....what formation are we playing? Numerical bingo.........

Is it me or have we seen a shift this season in the way mainstream coaches are approaching games in terms of formations? This question arises because the topic of formations seems to be on many supporter and pundits lips.
Personally, I have a belief that generally, in the short to medium term, a coach needs to adapt his preferred formation to fit his the personell he has available. Some ways of playing demand a particular type of player. Okay, in a perfect Dutch valhalla, all players would be able to play all positions in 'total football' but that is not what we tend to get. In the longer term recruitment can aim to get in what you need.
Here in Australia in my twenty years of involvement I have tended to use a sweeper in 95% of teams I coach. This, for many years, was probably a more popular stategy here than worldwide but gradually we are seeing a world resurgence of its use. To go with the defensive libaro I use two marking mobile centre backs making up a three at the back. In addition to three at the back I employ two wing backs. What is a wing back? Think Gareth Bale and you have the picture. More of a 200 or 400 runner than a sprinter, able to go up and back multiple times including recovery runs to the corner flag to pick up the opposition wide player. Two points should be made here. As I said earlier, such players need to be available in the squad...if you don't have them you will be ineffective playing wing backs. A second point is that you will probably need three such players in the squad because wing backs by their nature tend to get used up quicker that more central players. The Asquith All Age winning 5 year dynasty was built around 3 5 2:)

Having chosen to play wing backs it is usually supplemented by three central midfielders to make the formation 3 5 2. The main variation here being 2 and 1 or 1 and 2 in the central midfield. This decision is largely driven by the game situation and who you have available. Occasionally the most attacking midfielder may be pushed on to make a third striker in a 3 4 3.
I remember a cup semi-final one day when we were 2-0 down. I asked how much time was left and mistakenly heard the reply to be 4 minutes. In response I reorganised  on the run to go with a 3 3 4! In the event we scored...then scored again and then again. I asked again,  "how much time do we have left" and to my astonishment the reply came as 7 minutes! Obviously I had heard wrong first time:) What to do now? Keep it the same......we had totally overwhelmed them and I saw no point trying to go safe....we went through to the final 3-2.


Having already said I like the old 3 5 2 line up probably the preference for 5 midfielders leads me to go 4 5 1 as a second preference.This in itself can give problems because to play up front alone takes a special player. I suppose Drogba would be as good as anyone in this role. Strong, athletic,a good touch and possessing that ability to tie up the central defence.
In Australia I have only had two or  three players who could do this job.
Jason Vella from JPII,  SPX' s Anthony Fiorenza from the nineties and Tom McAlister from the 2000's.

Anthony probably was best left alone up front because he had that individual goalscorers edge and it was difficult to get anyone else to stand up top and listen to his moaning:)

Tom McAlister was a supreme athlete, fantastic over 100 and 200 metres and a great finisher. He played for SPX 1st XI from Year Nine, recovering from a bad leg break to score 27 goals in his senior year.
This season 2011 with a young U15 side we actually went 3 6 1! The reason being that I had a multitude of small skilful midfielders who were still developing physically and one tall player able to play aross the front line on his own. Unauthodox but minor premiership winning effective:)


As can be seen from the formations link (excuse the soccer reference) there are truly multiple variations available to coaches.

http://www.soccer-training-guide.com/soccer-formations.html

Ranging from the stock standard flat 4 4 2 to the increasingly popular 4 3 3 (advocated so much by pundit Craig Foster, who believes that our whole Australian coaching system should be built around around this shape) there is a smorgasbord of choice.

Chelsea and more laterly Citeh go with this 4 3 3 shape. Again for me it does come down to personel available but Citeh do have 2 players for every position. The key is enough diversity in the squad for change. Dzeko, Ballotelli, Aguero, Silva and Nasri certainaly give Mancini plenty of scope for change and that is without two world class forwards in Tevez and Adebayor he fell out with!
At Spurs Harry has changed his 4 4 2 habits of a lifetime to generally play five midfielders. VDV has been the catalyst for such change...he has made Harry rethink. Such players have brought the term 'false number 9' to prominance. To me Spurs now play a 4 5 1 or a variation of it. Some observors have claimed to read more into it than me. They come up with 4 2 3 1 or 4 3 2 1. Perhaps it may be that but the key is the five midfielders and truly in a game the shape will change depending on the need. Few teams, Barcelona aside, can dominate a whole match and shuffling of personel is necessary, leading to the 2 and 1 or 1 and 2 in the central midfield mentioned earlier.
As ever possession is key. Here in Australia the most sucessful side at the moment is Central Coast Mariners, coached by ex-socceroo and Northern Spirit boss, Graham Arnold. Having seen him over the years I must say this a bloke who has truly improved working on the job. At Spirit I thought he was awful. Unimaginative, slow to adapt within a match and frustrating. Well Graham certainly learned a lot form his time as assistant to Guus Hiddink on the national squad. What does he play at Mariners? An Adapted 4 4 2 with a narrow diamond shape in the midfield....it is working very well for them largely because he has coached New Zealand wide international Mcglinchey and young Aussie Bozanic to play narrower. Luckily for Arnold he has two marauding full backs in Bojic and Rose to give the width. The diamond is made up of a deep defensive midfielder (Hutchinson or Griffiths) and an attacking midfielder the flame haired Amini who has been picked up by a major German side and loaned back to the Mariners.This young bloke will hopefully have a big role to play in Australia's next World Cup campaign.
To me three at the back and /or three up front, are two positive if not necessarily mutually dependent changes we are seeing in the game. As ever being a left footer is great but being both is better. Utility players will always have a role in the game...Gary Stevens of Brighton / Spurs went all the way as a player making the World Cup by being versatile. For youngsters asked the question "Where do you play", the answer would ideally be 'Where do you need me to play?" The formations/ lineups used by coaches are diverse and players need to be flexible to remain in a starting eleven.

Monday 9 January 2012

Excuse me, it's five o' clock and I need to listen to the football results..........

A lot is written about tradition in football and most in the UK will instantly identify with the classified football results being read on BBC radio at 5.00 on a Saturday on Sports Report, the reader was James Alexander Gordon.
The 'theatre' created by this man is discussed in two of the articles below. As has been said, he has a certain inflection in his voice that leads the listener to certain clearcut expectations as he reads the results.....most famously illustrated in the matches between East Fife and Forfar. There is also an audio clip here of one day when James lost his voice but it shows how he sounds and the style he epitomised.
In truth the 5.00 O' clock reading was truly set up by the distinctive 'Out of the Blue' tune that announced the scores were about to be read.

For me two moments in my life are forever interlinked with the BBC 5.00 Football results show. The first was on the day of my wedding, Saturday September 6th 1986. Spurs were playing away to the Arsenal and of course I was otherwise engaged! As we left the church and headed off to the reception in the Rolls Royce I realised that it was 4.50 and the game would have just finished. Looking at the clock I realised that we would be arriving at the hall just before 5.00. I leaned across and asked the chauffeur if he minded turning on the radio and perhaps going around the block one more time so I could hear the football results! Look, my wife Terrie knew what she was getting in to marrying me and once the Arsenal nil Spurs nil result was read out we could go in and join the guests at the reception:)

Another occasion when the 5.00 Results show almost got me in trouble was one Saturday when I had played for Old Parmiterians. The Southern Olympian League and Old boys football in general had a fine tradition whereby the home side would provide a meal and a few jugs of beer for the visiting sides. There we were on this particular Saturday, the time was 4.55 and as a non-drinker I was more concerned with finding out the football results, than having a drink. Knowing our crowd would be in the home sides club house for at least another half hour I decided to go out to listen to the radio in the car park. One of our players had an old MGB sports car and would let me go out and sit in it to listen to the scores while I waited for him. This day he threw me the keys and I headed off to the car park. True to form the team emerged about half an hour later and as I sat there in the little sports car I saw them approach. Then to my surprise they continued walking. Straight past the car and further up the car park! Quickly I rolled down the car window and shouted "Oi! Where are you lot going?" One of the players stopped the rest and shouted back to me......"Hey Quilty, what are you doing there?"
It probably took a few seconds for it to sink in but I realised that I was sitting in the wrong car! I had used the key to get into someone elses identical MGB and had sat there for half an hour listening to a strangers radio:) The team roared with laughter to see me just sitting there waiting for them.  I realised how fortunate I had been that the car owner had stayed in the club house longer than my team did!  Can you imagine what the conversation would have been as I sat there in his car listening to James Alexander Gordon read the football results? WTF are you doing in my car mate? Ah sorry is this yours.......I was just listening to the football results can you wait a sec....they are just up to the Scottish scores now................

Sounds of James Alexander Gordon.
http://audioboo.fm/boos/222685-james-alexander-gordon-loses-voice-john-bennett-takes-over

Article  on the BBC 5.00 show
http://www.twohundredpercent.net/?p=15981

Article on James Alexander Gordon.
http://www.newstatesman.com/200011270049

Theme tune for the BBC 5.00 Results show
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gv_idtcK1-E

Thursday 5 January 2012

The EPL holiday period is officially over!

Writing back on 29th December I suggested that the holiday period typically through up some 'turn up' results....this years holiday did not disappoint.....upsets a plenty! Some point out that professional clubs with large squads should be able to handle the strains of 3 or 4 games in eight days......However the task is not just a physical one....the holiday period really puts the routine out of whack. Clearly Wayne Rooney found it difficult to break his holiday plans going out for dinner with wife Coleen. Old red face took offence and fined him a weeks wages:)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2080836/Wayne-Rooney-axed-Manchester-United-Boxing-Day-dinner-Coleen.html

Trivia aside who were the winners and losers from this period? Apart from tracking who picked up the points it is just as relevant to look at the coaches in the EPL. Obviously some are under more pressure than others. Steve Kean at Blackburn could have possibly expected to pick up one win facing Man Utd and Stoke.....beating the former 3-2 on their own patch was the periods  biggest upset. Owen Coyle of Bolton got a win and a draw while Wigan boss Martinez only got a single point in the period. Double losers were QPR, WBA and Man Utd ....perhaps SAF should have sent the whole squad out on Boxing Day:) Chelsea coach Andres Villas-Boas will be hearing the ticking of the clock on his tenure, a bit like Captain Hook who was pursued by a crocadile, who had swallowed a ticking clock, they both need to recognise the signs....losing 3-1 at home to Villa is one.:)
Martin O'Neil has got off to a great start at Sunderland winning away to Wigan and beating leaders Citeh 1-0. Newcastle will be pleased to have a 3 points from the 6 on offer, facing Liverpool and ManUtd. Harry Redknapp seems a happy chappie at Spurs while Arsene Wenger just never seems pleased these days. The return of Thiery Henry might cheer him up and seems only for the good for the Gunners...losing players to the African Nations Cup in January is something several clubs will need to deal with. Citeh will lose both Toure brothers while Chelsea will be without Drogba. Arsenal lose Gervinho and Chamakh. Newcastle will be without Ba and Tiote.

http://goafrica.about.com/od/africafestivalsandevents/a/nationscup08.htm

That all said we are only at the half way point of the 38 game season. Distraction this weekend with the third round of the FA Cup. Personally it saddens me as a Spurs fan that some clubs, including my own, seem to discount the cup using the games as a run out for fringe players. In our case it may just be a sign of change of expectation....we have always been known as a cup side for that is where almost all our success has arisen. Third in the League at the start of the New Year we are reaching giddy heights indeed.

Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Barclays Premier League
Newcastle 3-1 Man Utd

Tuesday, 3 January 2012
Barclays Premier League
Monday, 2 January 2012
Barclays Premier League
QPR 1-2 Norwich |
Sunday, 1 January 2012
Barclays Premier League
Saturday, 31 December 2011
Barclays Premier League
Arsenal 1-0 QPR |
Stoke 2-2 Wigan |
Friday, 30 December 2011
Barclays Premier League
 
1Man City20153256164048
2Man Utd20143349202945
3Tottenham19133335201742
4 Chelsea20114539251437
5Arsenal20 11363628836
6Liverpool209742419534
7Newcastle20 9652925433
8Stoke City208572231-929
9Norwich206773035-525
10Sunderland206682622424
11Everton197392022-224
12Swansea205872023-323
13Aston Villa205872226-423
14Fulham205872226-423
15West Brom2064101928-922
16Wolves2045112135-1417
17QPR2045111935-1617
18 Bolton2051142543-1816
19Wigan2036111841-2315
Blackburn      
-

Wednesday 4 January 2012

Sport the uniting force


Telling someone an old story earlier, playing for the University in Leeds....one place we used to go to play had a football field right in the middle of the grounds of the local asylum. As we drove in on our coach there were all sorts of inmates just wandering the grounds. We only had a Referee and one Assistant on this particular day until just as the game began one of the inmates walked up.... picked up the spare flag from the ground and stood ready to run the line. Both sides looked at the ref appealing that surely this bloke couldn't run the line. Very quickly we realised that he wanted to do it...and despite his likely life problems ......seemed likely to be as impartial as the next person........bastard flagged me for offside as I went through to score....no not really:) My point here is that sport has a language of it's own.........and is a real uniting force

Sunday 1 January 2012

Haunting Swansea singing...the crowd being the twelth man for their team

Watched the Swansea v Spurs game 2am here in Oz after the New Year came in. Listening through the sound system, with head phones on, the noise was unbelievable. Told the wife how good it sounded and she laughed saying "Sounds a bit cliched talking about good Welsh singing".
The Hymns and Arias/ Land of my fathers song in particular was so haunting / sad.
People speak of crowds lifting teams and here last night was a prime example of just that....a real twelth man for Swansea. Have a listen of a Swansea one they prepared earlier.
 
Apparently there is some consternation among some Welsh people that this is a Rugby song but it sound great to my tone deaf ears:)
 
Elsewhere in the EPL we can hear some great song reditions which may be a bit less known to those outside the UK. One great example is Stoke City singing Delilah.
 
Man City sing the melodic Blue Moon...a song we had better get used to in 2012:)
 
Of course the scousers traditionally have set the benchmark with You'll never walk alone.
 
While on the subject of football crowds singing I'll just put in a bit of world perspective with a few examples from
Turkey - Besikas,
 
Egypt -Ahlawy
 
Poznan -Poland
 
I suppose my real point here is that fans at games can make a difference. Just  watching the Spurs game in Wales last night showed how emotive the crowd singing can be...a real twelth man if ever there was one.