Monday 31 October 2011

Heart 1-1 Sydney: Match Analysis

A vintage Arsenal Heart performance. Control of possession, impatience in constructing attacks, lack of a clear final ball and defensive frailty. A classic North London Red and White recipe. Sydney showed a measure of resilience, and could certainly take encouragement away from the improved performance by Brett Emerton, and the continued excellent form of Nick Carle in concert with Karol Kisel. In truth, Heart controlled the second half; it was theirs to win or lose, and a failure to kill the game after their late goal cost them dearly. Fate is exacting a heavy toll on Heart's mistakes so far this season; all they can do is hope that Karma will shine on them in the weeks to come.

Sunday 30 October 2011

Format Changes

PM has recently changed to a wider format, which displays more features, but may disadvantage readers with narrow screens. Indicate your approval/disapproval in the "Reactions" of this post, and PM may revert to the narrower width with only one sidebar.

Best New Signings

It's now Round 4 of the A-League season, which means that new arrivals have now add a little over a month to settle into their respective clubs and adapt or be accommodated into the preferred style of play.

Which players have looked the most impressive in their new surrounds? Add your own opinons in comments below.


Saturday 29 October 2011

Brisbane 7-1 Adelaide: Match Analysis

Un-f**king-believable. Brisbane produced a virtousic performance with a display of football that was at turns scintillating, exhilarating and utterly crushing. Brisbane's raw speed of movement, passing and thought, their creative flair, their disciplined and determined pressing; this was the beautiful game at its most elegant and elemental, a full realisation of football as an ideal. Brisbane were almost mechanical in their precision, and provided a demonstration of the merits of subordinating the individual talent to the expression of the collective.

Because of the sheer disparity in quality, it's hard for PM to analyse this match from a tactical prism - Brisbane won because of their superior style of play. Yet there are points of interest concerning Coolen's tactics and Postecoglou's line-up, most pertinently the decision to break up the McKain/Susak central defensive axis and shift Susak to right fullback, as well as the decision to field Caravella out of position on the left with the return of Levchenko to the double pivot.

Friday 28 October 2011

Round 4 Tips

Round 4 of Season 7 of the A-League is upon us, and here's PM's tips for the weekend:

Adelaide 1-2 Sydney: Match Analysis

Sydney turned in a much improved and more fluent performance to clinch a confidence boosting three points at Hindmarsh Stadium, a venue they had gone three whole years without winning at. Adelaide were effective in patches, but still seem to miss the fluency of the squad Coolen inherited from Vidmar.

THIS ANALYSIS SHOULD BE REGARDED AS INCOMPLETE, but PM thought there was merit in posting the tactical diagram.

Thursday 27 October 2011

Notice for Perth and Central Coast

Note to all Perth and Central Coast fans, few of whom ever visit this site.

PM hasn't devoted much coverage to either club since Round 1, but rest assurred, there are 'developments' behind the scenes for both the Mariners and the Glory.

Expect an analysis of the general systems/formations/shapes employed by Arnold and Ferguson, coming soon.  Conveniently enough, the two clubs are meeting in Gosford in Round 4, so in all probability, PM will cover that match, if there is demand for it.

If anyone is REALLY keen for a Round 3 Newcastle v Central Coast Analysis, speak up now (in the comments) or forever hold your peace.

Thanks for your support

LATER ADDITION;
The Round 3 Match Analysis for Adelaide and Sydney will be 'cancelled'. I'll post it anyway for the match diagram, but it should be regarded as incomplete.

Tuesday 25 October 2011

Victory 0-0 Heart: Match Analysis

Saturday's Melbourne Derby was an open and exciting affair, as well as an entertaining spectacle thanks to the fantastic atmosphere created by the Blue and White Brigade and the travelling Yarraside. Though it ended in a draw, Heart were conclusively the more dominant side throughout, but were unable to translate that into goals. PM have made the comparison before of Heart to Arsenal, and on the weekend the Red and Whites of Melbourne displayed that most evident failing endemic to the Red and Whites of North London; hesitancy up-front. At times, Heart seemed intent on walking the ball into the net, with Covic undoubtedly the home side hero, with only his snap reflexes keeping the Navy Blues in the game. There wasn't an overt tactical 'battle' during this match as there was between Postecoglou and Arnold. Nonetheless, Durakovic's starting XI was short on invention, and his substitutions worsened Victory's situation in midfield, while van't Schip's line-up was positive, aggressive and his substitutions were daring.

The football media have definitely not given enough attention, or more likely haven't even noticed the fact that Melbourne Heart and Brisbane have been trying to implement False Nines. The False Nine is a tactic that only the greatest Champions League sides have dared to attempt; Van Persie at Arsenal, Totti at Roma, Rooney at Manchester United and of course Messi at Barcelona. To that illustrious list we can now add Alex Terra of Melbourne Heart and Thomas Broich of Brisbane. Bravo Ange Postecoglou and John van't Schip, the two greatest innovators of Australian football.

Sunday 23 October 2011

Notice Round 3 Analysis

Just a note for interested readers on Round 3 Analysis; PM is planning on eventually compiling a Match Analysis on both the Melbourne Derby and Sydney v Brisbane, and we'll try Central Coast v Newcastle but no guarantees. We'd like to advise that, due to troublesome circumstances, these will probably be posted in the coming days, rather than this weekend.

Saturday 22 October 2011

Brisbane 3-0 Gold Coast: Match Analysis

This was a frenetic contest between the two bitter Queensland rivals. Miron Bleiburg did his homework, learning the lessons from Central Coast's and Sydney's previous defeats to the Roar. Despite the unflattering scoreline, Gold Coast had quite threatening periods of play, especially in the first half, and are justified in feeling unlucky to concede three against their neighbours. The first goal was a case of weak defending at a set-piece, while the third goal was a result of carelessness in possession. The second goal was a fantastic effort by the Oranje; a superb through ball by Murdocca coupled with a determined run and clinical finish by Berisha. It was Rigters however, who was culpable in his defending.

Friday 21 October 2011

Queensland Derby Preview

Later tonight will see the flamboyant Miron Bleiburg take his Gold Coast squad to face the reigning champions Brisbane Roar in the Queensland Derby.

Thursday 20 October 2011

A-League Training Camp

Holger Osieck and Aurelio Vidmar have called up a 31-man training camp, comprised of potential Olyroos and uncapped senior A-League players. Ostensibly for the older players in the prospective group, this is a chance to stake a claim for a berth in the Socceroos squad during the long and arduous qualification campaign for Brazil 2014. A camp such as this was only a matter of time, with Osieck having held a similiar training event for young Australians in Europe. This initiative is to be applauded as another signal of approval for the A-League from Osieck.

Wednesday 19 October 2011

Blog Rule

Pass and Move recommend interesting/fascinating articles or posts to our Aussie audience.

Tuesday 18 October 2011

Melbourne Derby Preview

Arise, arise ye sons and daughters of Melbourne, for the Derby is at hand.

This Saturday will see the two Victorian rivals take the field at Aami Park Etihad Stadium to determine, for good and all (or at least for the next few weeks), which club holds sway over the city of Melbourne - Victory or Heart.

Coming Soon...

Melbourne Derby Preview

Heart 1-2 Perth: Match Analysis

The majority of this match was largley disjointed. Neither side was able to establish a rhythm, and the first half played out like an aerial bombardment. Ferguson kept faith with the side that beat Adelaide, while Heart were compelled to replace Jason Hoffman. Heart ultimately fell victim to a degree of defensive naiveity and are justified in feeling unlucky to have yet to post points on the table.

Monday 17 October 2011

It's an oldie...

...but a goodie.

Blog Rule

Pass and Move recommend interesting/fascinating/infuriating posts by other bloggers to our Aussie audience.  

Sunday 16 October 2011

Sydney 0-2 Brisbane: Match Analysis

Saturdays's match between the Sky Blues and the Roar was initially a close fought contest. Lavicka altered his tactics and his starting XI from last week's City Classico against the Victory, trying to implement a more energetic and positive style. Initially, it seemed to work, but the fast tempo necessitated by the high press tired Sydney, and Brisbane were able to seize the advantage later on.

Saturday 15 October 2011

Twitter

Actually useful. Who'd have thunk it?

Just want to say thanks to John Didulica, Francis Awartefe and Brendan Schwab for the recommend. Your support is much appreciated.

Must say, PM isn't really active on Twitter, though we'll try to be. Our attempts at live commentary have failed, largely due to being too busy debating whether a bucket of chips at Etihad is worth more than $5. Conclusion; we'd rather go hungry.

Adelaide 1-0 Victory: Match Analysis

This was a taut, tense and heated affair between the two clubs with arguably the most vitriolic rivalry in the A-League; the Reds and the Navy Blues. South Australians scarcely need reminding of the utterly dominant record the Victorians hold over them, the highlights of which include Archie Thompson's 5-goal shellacking in the inaugural 2006-7 Grand Final, and a 5-year undefeated streak held against the Reds that Coolen was only able to break last year. For the Reds, this was a match to savour. Ultimately, the result was decided by a mistaken pass, Van Dijk's predatory instincts and confirmed by a questionable sending off of Leijer. While both managers employed 4-2-3-1 shapes, there were distinctive differences between the two; namely the roles of Harry Kewell, shifted from trequartista to centre forward, and Zenon Caravella, a passing midfielder who has found himself shunted out on the wing.

Friday 14 October 2011

Shout Out

Just wanted to convey PM's gratitude to Moss and Faithful. Had a gander at mvc.net, thanks for spreading the word. We'll try to tone down the pompousness.

As for black backgrounds being so-2004; Black is ALWAYS sexy. Plus it was a homage to ZM, which is Apple white. So there.

LATER ADDITION: PM have covered every match of Round 1. It's unlikely subsequent rounds will be as extensively covered, we just wanted a baseline of comparison. That's where our 'most exciting match' polls come in - we'll be using those as a guideline for which games receive a full Match Analysis, and which are given low priority.

PM came so close to reaching the mythical 200 page views in one day mark. On the 13th, we received 197. Today, we're already on 130. Fingers crossed.

LATER ADDITION: Well thanks to all PM readers, particularly the new contingent from mvc.net. Thanks to you, PM have hit 234 page views in a day. Adelaide v Victory match report is coming, probably some time tomorrow afternoon. Again, we'll ask for your patience and understanding.

Perth 1-0 Adelaide: Match Analysis

This was an energetic and aggressive encounter. While the play itself was not particularly cerebral, there was a tactically intriguing feature. Perth, deployed in an orthodox 4-4-2, dominated possession against Adelaide, deployed in a nominal 4-3-3. Adelaide, of all the losing clubs in Round 1, most deserved to; they were unimaginative and insipid.

It's the new millennium

We'd like to announce that Pass and Move have just crossed the 2,000th page view point, which means PM has doubled the amount of hits in half the time it took to get to 1,000.


We'd also like to thank all those readers who have contributed vital feedback to PM, in the form of much appreciated comments, reactions under posts, and voting in our sidebar polls (we have quite a few so scroll down, and the 'most exciting match' polls will be used to determine which games receive a full Match Analysis and which ones are given lower priority, so vote if you want your club's matches analysed).

We'd also like to draw attention to the 'which club do you support poll' - so far Sydney FC is kicking ass and taking names, Adelaide and Perth are yet to get on the scoresheet, while Victory, with the largest fanbase in Australia, has only 1 vote, and as for the Premiership poll - predictably enough the Roar is loudest. Thank you for your participation, and please help spread the word about Pass and Move. You can find PM on Twitter or on The Roar Opinion Website, but your best bet is actually right here.

We're going to try to get a Match Analysis or at least a HT Impressions on the Round 1 Adelaide v Perth match, but no guarantees. Expect a Round 1 Review and a Round 2 Preview, but we all have other things to attend to, so we'll ask for our readers' patience and understanding.

PM would like to gauge interest in our readers towards contributing articles about their favoured clubs. If you're a rabid fan with a bone to pick, or just a casual observer with an interesting idea, come forth and we'll look at accommodating you. Articles about the match-day experience will be especially welcome.

Thursday 13 October 2011

Ohhhh, Holger we love you

On the eleventh of August 2010, Australian football followers had one phrase on their lips - "Who the f**k is Holger Osieck?". 14 months later, Humourous Holger is the toast of the football media, enjoying an extended honeymoon with the fans, and the Socceroos are playing some of the most fluent, fluid and attacking football ever produced by the Green and Gold. Australia is no longer totally reliant on the Golden Generation, and young talent is being brought into the squad. Pass and Move have quite a favourable opinion of the friendly German, and we thought it an appropriate time to examine the changes Holger has affected in his time in charge.

Wednesday 12 October 2011

Gold Coast 1-1 Wellington: Match Analysis

This was a match between two clubs with broadly similar systems; 4-2-3-1's, but vastly different interpretations. Gold Coast and Wellington had spells of dominance, with the biggest influence on ascension being the performance of the respective fullbacks; it's no coincidence Gold Coast's best spells during the game coincided with Traore overlapping and attacking Paston, while Wellington's advantageous passages of play coincided with Muscat advancing into midfield.

Addendum to Emerton as fullback

PM recently explored the notion that Brett Emerton, might be more productively deployed by Sydney at fullback than at wide midfield or on the wing. This is because fullback has become the most important position on the pitch, because in a 4-4-2 or 4-3-3, a fullback is without a direct opponent; they have time and space to advance. Advanced of the fullback, Emerton is closely marked by the opposition leftback, and obliged to provide close support for the lone striker, which prevents him from launching his superb crossing range.

It's a become a cliche to say that fullbacks are more wingers than defenders in modern football and there is some truth to this, as fullbacks are expected to provide width as the wide forwards cut-in. So why is there a public reluctance to give fullbacks their due credit?

Jonathan Wilson suggestes that it is due to the characterisation given to the term itself; 'fullback' has an overtly defensive connontation, and suggests the player must have a primarily defensive disposition. But Brazil, a country famous for its production line of attacking wing-backs (in a 3-4-3 or 3-5-2) in Roberto Carlos, Maicon and Dani Alves does not use the word 'fullback' to describe the position - the English translation is 'lateral' which conveys width or wide play over depth or defensive responsibility.

Australia 3-0 Oman: HT Impressions

Australia produced a fluid and fast-paced performance to clinch a win against Oman. Oman it must be said, did not collapse under pressure as the Malaysians did. Paul le Guen's side was able to generally keep its defensive shape, and launched sporadic counter-attacks, but the Socceroos were simply superior. Much credit has to go to Holger Osieck for his introduction of the most fluid football to be produced by the Green and Gold in some time. Some of the media have unfairly portrayed last night's XI as a 'second string' which is insulting to the players, and to the manager; the fact that he has successfully moulded a side no longer dependent on Tim Cahill, Mark Schwarzer, Brett Emerton and Harry Kewell is a massive acheivement, considering that none of the Young Guard play in the English Premier League, which for so long, had a strong contingent from the Antipodes. 

Tuesday 11 October 2011

Brisbane Roar 1-0 Central Coast Mariners: Match Analysis

Brisbane produced an exciting display of attacking football, based around rapid passing, positional interchange and incisive movement. Although the Mariners weren't exactly dominated, Brisbane saw the majority of possession and scoring chances. Matt Ryan and temporary skipper Zwaanswijk turned in stubborn performances to deny the hosts a number of seemingly definite goals.

Monday 10 October 2011

Australia's Progress under Osieck

Tomorrow evening, Australia will play Oman in the 3rd match of Round 3 of Qualifying for Brazil 2014. This encounter might be the first competitive match since Australia became expectant of regular participation in the World Cup that the manager will be without at least one of Socceroos stalwarts Harry Kewell, Tim Cahill, Mark Schwarzer and Brett Emerton; only Lucas Neill remains, and it is a testament to his ability and leadership that he really is the only one of the 'Fab 5' that is literally indispensable to the team.

Australia v Oman: Preview

Holger Osieck's men will take on Oman in a Round 3 AFC Qualifier on Tuesday night at ANZ Stadium. An 18-man squad has been called up by Holger, who recently thrashed Malaysia 5-0 in a friendly preparation match.

Newcastle 3-2 Heart: Match Analysis

This was an electric and energetic affair between two clubs who were devoted to committing players forward in the attack. Newcastle started the brightest, pressing Heart intensely to prevent their build-up play. Heart eventially grew into the contest as Newcastle's fitness faded, and although it was a fairly even game, on the balance of play, Heart did not deserve to lose; the three goals scored against them were the result of a superb Griffiths free kick from a silly foul by Germano, a mistaken pass by rookie defender Good, and a deflection off Marrone from a Byun shot that wrong-footed the keeper. Conversely, Heart's two goals were absolute marvels; rapid passing while running at pace, clever positional interchange and lethal finishing by Dugandzic.

Sunday 9 October 2011

Would Brett Emerton be more effective for Sydney as a fullback than as a winger?

Last night's City Derby between Melbourne Victory and Sydney FC was a fitting spectacle for the A-League debuts of Harry Kewell and Brett Emerton. While Kewell was effective playing as a trequartista, drifting from flank to flank in search of space and serving as the main conduit of the Navy Blues attack, Emerton's performance on the right wing was much more muted, and Brett did not feature as prominently during the game as his national team colleague.
Australia's 2nd most capped player
It wasn’t that Brett played particularly badly; it was just that Sydney never really strung together fluent attacking phases and Emerton’s performance suffered from the helter-skelter rhythm. This might be remedied by affording Emerton time to settle-in and build a rapport with his team-mates; but perhaps there is another, tactical reason Emerton was so subdued last night.

Victory 0-0 Sydney: Match Analysis

Tonight’s city derby was a scrappy and aggressive, end-to-end affair. Both sides eschewed any semblance of build-up play in favour of exchanging attacks down the flanks. Debutants Brett Emerton and Harry Kewell were obviously the focus pre-game, but after the 90 mins, it was Kewell who had acquitted himself better.
 

Saturday 8 October 2011

Round 1 Preview/Predictions

Predcited starting line-ups and scores
Note: Pantelis and Wilkinson are out injured, McKain is doubtful.

Commenting

I've only recently been alerted to issues over commenting on any posts on Pass and Move. I've altered the comment settings to hopefully remedy this issue.

If you wish to comment on a post;
View the post on a separate web page by either clicking on the heading or on 'read more'.
Scroll down to the bottom to the bottom of the post, and click on 'Post a Comment'.
A pop-up window will appear. Type your comment in the text-entry box. Select whether to leave the comment through a profile, by leaving a name and URL or anonymously.
Refresh the page to see your comment below the article in question.

I'm sorry if this has caused frustration or problems; hopefully now you can contribute to the discussion, or call me an idiot.

A-League 2011-12 Season Predictions

Now that Pass and Move have conducted an examination of every A-League club, it's time to submit our tips for the coming season. The A-League is a notoriously difficult competition to predict, due to the salary cap. Before Brisbane ran away with the title, closely purused by Central Coast and Adelaide, most pundits were predicting those Top 3 to be battling to avoid the wooden spoon. Anyway, it's PM's turn to put ourselves out there and look like idiots.

Melbourne Victory 2011-12 Season Preview

Melbourne Victory; for so long, that name inspired trepidation and admiration throughout the A-League. Winning two Championship/Premiership Doubles, regular Finals appearances, the largest fanbase in Australia and huge financial clout will do that for you. Victory were dominant, rampant and unstoppable. Then something changed; Brisbane arrived and dragged the A-League into the modern era with a dynamic philosophy of possession based football. And for the first time, Victory were found wanting. Foundation manager Ernie Merrick was sensationally sacked. Foundation captain Kevin Muscat exited the game ignominiously. Mehmet Durakovic was installed to succeed Merrick and presided over an underwhelming Asian Champions League campaign.

Sydney FC 2011-12 Season Preview

How the mighty have fallen. Fresh from a debut season where he guided Sydney to an impressive Championship/Premiership Double, in 2010-11 Lavicka was unable to reproduce the disciplined performances which garnered so much success for the Sky Blues. Sydney's championship hangover can be directly retraced to poor recruitment and the depature of key players; Steve Corica retired, Aloisi, Colosimo and Bolton transferred to Heart while Kisel returned to Prague. These five players constituted the spine of Lavicka's Double winning team, and none were adequately replaced.

Perth Glory 2011-12 Season Preview

Where to begin. Perth must hate the A-League; optimistic pre-seasons coupled with limp performances have become the norm for the club on the shores of the Indian Ocean. Perth's A-League track record is a far cry from their name sake, not to mention their previous dominance in the old NSL. This season, once again the Glory begin anew. A whole new squad for radically different times in Australian football. Can Ferguson finally secure finals football for Perth?

Friday 7 October 2011

Australia 4-0 Malaysia HT Impressions

Simply woeful. What else can be said? Malaysia could not pass, they could not tackle; they couldn't even get close to the Australian players. Malaysia managed the frankly near-impossible task of standing firmly off the Socceroos, while running around like headless chooks - no mean feat indeed. Some defenders seemed to be under the impression they were using an offside trap, while the others were too busy ball-watching to care.

Wellington Phoenix 2011-12 Season Preview

Wellington are another club to have undergone an off-season meltdown (in contrast to Newcastle, this occurred in the boardroom, not the dugout). Foundation owner Terry Serpios was compelled to sell his stake in the club to a consortium of local businessmen. Unfortunately, this happened too late to enable manager Ricki Herbert to embark on any meaningful recruitment campaign. The Nix reached the minimum complement of players just days ago, and it's going to take some time before the new signings gel.

Newcastle United 2011-12 Season Preview

Well what else could possibly go wrong. Even before the shocking events of the past week; namely the surprise sacking of manager Branko Culina and the attempted termination of the marquee contract for his son, star midfielder Jason Culina - Newcastle have been pegged as battlers for the wooden spoon. This time, PM is inclined to agree with the mainstream media; it is very hard to see how Newcastle can battle its way into Finals contention. Were this a European league, Newcastle would be staring down the barrel of relegation. Is there even a sliver of light at the end of the tunnel?

Thursday 6 October 2011

Pass and Move on The Roar website

For those readers who don't know, Pass and Move have an account with The Roar, which is a sports opinion website. Due to restrictions on formatting and pictures, PM is not able to submit match reports, but we do occassionally send in opinion pieces to drum up some publicity.

We Are Football: 2011-12 Campaign

Not bad FFA, not bad at all.


Tuesday 4 October 2011

Melbourne Heart 2011-12 Season Preview

2010 witnessed the birth of what could grow to become one of the fiercest rivalries in Australian sport, with the inception of Melbourne Heart to the A-League. The inaugural Melbourne Derby saw the unfancied Heart emerge triumphant against the more established Victory, and the baptism of fire of fierce young fullback, Aziz Behich. The latest meeting between the two clubs heralded an ignominious end to the illustrious career of Victory captain Kevin Muscat, with his horrifying mauling of electric Heart winger, Adrian Zahra.

One thousand served - internal review of PM

Pass and Move have been up and running for a month now. In that month, we've posted 41 articles about the Socceroos and the A-League, and now, we've passed the 1000th page view mark.


I'd like to thank all of our readers for their invaluable support. Hopefully you've all responded positively to what PM have had to say. Pass and Move's mandate has been, from the very beginning, to elevate the understanding and stimulate debate about the tactical side of football in Australia, and with the imminent launch of A-League Season 7, PM believe we are about to witness the highest standard of football ever seen in the Lucky Country.

Gold Coast United 2011-12 Season Preview

Storm clouds obscure the normally searing sunshine of Skilled Park. The established spine of the playing squad has been ripped out and scattered to the wind. One-year contract journeymen and a host of youth team players are the only replacements. And a seemingly uninterested Gold Coast community at odds with the eccentric billionaire owner keeps crowd numbers hovering around 2000 and home games saddled with the atmosphere of a tramp's funeral. Is there any hope left?

Monday 3 October 2011

Central Coast Mariners 2011-12 Season Preview

The perennial bridesmaids to the capital clubs brides, the Mariners have been Grand Final losers to Newcastle, Sydney and now Brisbane. Long cast as the plucky little club that could, nothing will suit Graham Arnold and his men more than to once again resume the title of scrappy underdogs, despite coming closest to defeating a rampant Brisbane.

Last season, Arnold was queried as to why he preferred to set his team out in a 4-4-2 diamond. His answer, that he choose a diamond midfield because Central Coast lacked wingers but had plenty of strikers and central midfielders, was perceptive, insightful and straightfoward.

Brisbane Roar 2011-12 Season Preview

Last season, Ange Postecoglou redefined Australian football. In doing so, he led Brisbane Roar to an impressive Premiership/Championship Double, while going 28-games unbeaten. At one point, the city of Brisbane had a record equal to European Cup holders Barcelona. You'd think, having reached the top, the only way for Brisbane to go would be down. Especially given the A-League's infamous Champions Curse.

Adelaide United 2011-12 Season Preview

A third of the way into last season, Rini Coolen was being hailed as one of the best managers to ever grace Australian shores. The team he inherited from Aurelio Vidmar was 10 games into what would become a record streak of 13 games unbeaten. The quintet of Lucas Pantelis, Travis Dodd, Matthew Leckie, Sergio van Dijk and of course the premiere trequartista, Marcos Flores, was tearing through opposition defences at will. To most commentators, it was a foregone conclusion that the Toilet Seat would finally go to Hindmarsh, after a half-decade absence of honours.

Of course, that didn't happen. Brisbane clicked into gear, and smashed that unbeaten record by doubling it. The 'title decider' between the Reds and the Roar became a 4-0 thrashing. Adelaide slipped into 3rd place as Central Coast overtook them as title challengers.

A-League Pre-Season Form Guide

FourFourTwo AU put together a useful guide to the club's results in offseason. These results should probably be taken with a grain of salt; obviously clubs were still making signings, players were still coming back from injury, and managers were giving some youngsters experience - so it's unlikely that clubs consistently sent out their strongest available line-up, or even played in their preferred style.

Nevertheless, there's still utility in seeing how many games clubs lost, how many goals were conceded, and who has scoring form going into the regular season. It should be noted how notoriously unrealiable pre-season results are as predicators of regular season success; in the 4 seasons in which the A-League held a Pre-Season Cup, only one of the Cup winners went on to become Premiers or Champions. Quick summary below.

Blog Rule

Pass and Move recommend interesting posts by other football bloggers to our Aussie audience.

The Swiss Ramble has posted a fascinating expose on the struggles and triumphs of Valencia, seemingly condemned to struggle year after year for only the bronze medal in La Liga, and to being circled by vultures every transfer window (imagine a club that used to be able to call on the services of David Villa, David Silva and Juan Mata - Valencia is the Spanish West Ham).