Filling Hiddink's Qiu Qiu Onlineshoes
Socceroos coach Pim Verbeek didn't quite measure up to his illustrious predecessor in charge of South Korea. On Wednesday night, Verbeek retried Guus Hiddink's shoes on for size as Australia mounted their maiden World Cup qualifying campaign through the AFC.
If Verbeek's 3-0 victory
over Qatar wasn't quite Satta King eenough to prove the bulk of his doubters wrong, it must
have gone mighty close.
There will still be those
- the cynics who harboured a personal preference of the shining CV of Omar
(formally Philippe) Troussier over Hiddink's countryman and former assistant -
who might remain unconvinced.
Let's see how Verbeek's
inevitably jetlagged Socceroos handle the altitude of southwestern city Kunming
in their first AFC qualifier overseas against China next month, they might
remark.
But most of the
50,000-plus clad in the green and gold at the Telstra Dome in midweek, not to
mention a host of interested TV viewers, will be jointly relieved and excited
by a ruthless first-half display which saw the outgunned Qataris put to the
sword in the opening 33 minutes.
The first test of the
unheralded Verbeek was always going to be his wider influence in the boardrooms
of Europe's grandest.
His sway over the often
reluctant full-time employers of Tim Cahill and the like increased in magnitude
when the Dutchman, in what has already become typical of his forthright style,
discarded virtually every one of his original A-League contingent, labelling
them not up to international standards.
Only Queensland's Craig
Moore made Verbeek's first starting XI, excelling alongside captain Lucas Neill
in central defence. Although whether the former skipper and 2006 World Cup
goalscorer is truly considered a member of the A-League gang is doubtful.
In any case, Moore, 32,
pulled the pin on his national team career immediately after the match.
Verbeek also showed his
ruthless streak in quietly electing not to call-up Harry Kewell - to
surprisingly little fanfare - and then axing Norway-based defender Michael
Thwaite after he'd already completed the arduous trip home.
"I have better
players in his position," was the coach's blunt assessment. "That’s
the only reason. Michael did well at training and I really appreciated that he
took the time and energy to come here but I have better players in his
position. That’s football."
It would take a
narrow-minded individual not to spot Verbeek gently asserting his control over
a notoriously big-headed bunch.
Another absentee was Mark
Viduka. The Newcastle United frontman played against Middlesbrough in the
Premier League the Sunday previous with Boro goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer proving
the flight home possible by doing it himself.
However, while Viduka's
self-imposed international exile continues, Verbeek is not prepared to give up
on him without a fight.
The Dutchman made a public
play for Viduka's future services in the wrap up of the Qatar victory and said
he would fly to the north east in person to share a coffee and a chinwag.
"Mark is always on
the list," Verbeek clearly stated. "I would prefer to have five
strikers to choose from and it's always better that players have a headache
over fighting for their position than coaches have a headache."
Viduka might be on his
shortlist, but at 33 this year and with first team football under Kevin Keegan
at Newcastle no certainty, Verbeek needed to trial Plan B and stylishly did so
in Melbourne, Viduka's hometown.
After toying with the idea
of playing just one up front, he paired long-haired Karlsruher SC targetman
Josh Kennedy with Scott McDonald, the stocky Celtic forward who hasn't stopped
scoring in the SPL since moving to Glasgow in the off season.
Kennedy headed the opener
from Brett Emerton's whipped delivery while McDonald was a menace all night,
supplying the low centre which Cahill dummied for Mark Bresciano to tuck away
for the clincher.
PSV's Jason Culina, in a
holding midfield role, also received plaudits after the game, as did
revitalised left-footer David Carney, now at Sheffield United in England's
second tier.
Kennedy and McDonald
aside, the names weren't actually that different from the failed Asian Cup
campaign last July. But the attitude was.
However, with just one
full training session to work with a group he'd mostly never before met, the
nagging feeling about Verbeek's influence hasn't instantly gone away.
The March 26 game in China
is another non FIFA-designated matchday which means Verbeek will have a
similarly limited time with his players to prepare.
But at least for the next
month or so he has, as Hiddink did before, Australia's goodwill behind him.
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