Front three were Lachlan Wales, Josh Bingham and Trent Buhagiar, with Powell at 10.Who started on the left side over Kekeris?
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Front three were Lachlan Wales, Josh Bingham and Trent Buhagiar, with Powell at 10.Who started on the left side over Kekeris?
Kekeris would have to be unlucky not to start from how he went in pre seasonFront three were Lachlan Wales, Josh Bingham and Trent Buhagiar, with Powell at 10.
What do you actually base that on other that an irrational dislike of Sully?So shafting Ben for Sully is going really well?
Clowns.
What do you actually base that on other that an irrational dislike of Sully?
Ben was a good coach and very popular but probably for a very good reason. The discipline within the team off the park last year was very disappointing and is one of the reasons that many of the players are not there this year and have moved on to NPL clubs. Note that none of the players released last year have been snapped up by other NYL teams.
On Sunday the team lost 0-1 to Sydney FC. There were four players from last year's NYL squad playing (Adam Pearce, Lachie Wales, Gianni Stenseness and Peter Kekeris). The last time we played Sydney FC (in January) with Ben in charge we lost 0-3. There were EIGHT players from the Sydney team on that occasion that played on Sunday.
Our biggest problem is being able to create chances and converting them when we do. Sully is trying to get the boys to play like the A League and the stats on our passing accuracy definitely back that up. We had 8 players on Sunday whose passing accuracy was over 85%, Sydney had 0 (except for Ben Koop who came on for two minutes and made 1 successful pass).
Also keep in mind the average age of the team is much lower this year and is geared towards to long term development. Last year 11 of the 18 man squad were born in 1996 or 1997. This year we have a more balanced spread of 97, 98, 99 and 2000 born players meaning there should be much less turnover each year.
Will the results be better? Maybe - maybe not, doesn't really matter.
Will we produce more better quality players - probably in the long term.
Is Ben a better coach than Sully? Depends on what criteria you want to use.
To call Okon a clown for replacing one with the other reflects more on the person making the comment than the one making the decision.
What do you actually base that on other that an irrational dislike of Sully?
Ben was a good coach and very popular but probably for a very good reason. The discipline within the team off the park last year was very disappointing and is one of the reasons that many of the players are not there this year and have moved on to NPL clubs. Note that none of the players released last year have been snapped up by other NYL teams.
On Sunday the team lost 0-1 to Sydney FC. There were four players from last year's NYL squad playing (Adam Pearce, Lachie Wales, Gianni Stenseness and Peter Kekeris). The last time we played Sydney FC (in January) with Ben in charge we lost 0-3. There were EIGHT players from the Sydney team on that occasion that played on Sunday.
Our biggest problem is being able to create chances and converting them when we do. Sully is trying to get the boys to play like the A League and the stats on our passing accuracy definitely back that up. We had 8 players on Sunday whose passing accuracy was over 85%, Sydney had 0 (except for Ben Koop who came on for two minutes and made 1 successful pass).
Also keep in mind the average age of the team is much lower this year and is geared towards to long term development. Last year 11 of the 18 man squad were born in 1996 or 1997. This year we have a more balanced spread of 97, 98, 99 and 2000 born players meaning there should be much less turnover each year.
Will the results be better? Maybe - maybe not, doesn't really matter.
Will we produce more better quality players - probably in the long term.
Is Ben a better coach than Sully? Depends on what criteria you want to use.
To call Okon a clown for replacing one with the other reflects more on the person making the comment than the one making the decision.
What do you actually base that on other that an irrational dislike of Sully?
Our biggest problem is being able to create chances and converting them when we do. Sully is trying to get the boys to play like the A League and the stats on our passing accuracy definitely back that up. We had 8 players on Sunday whose passing accuracy was over 85%, Sydney had 0 (except for Ben Koop who came on for two minutes and made 1 successful pass).
But they weren't really knocking on the door of the first team last year, and neither were any of the older youth league guys. That's not to say their development this season is down to a new coach, just that no one was ready to step in straight away last season, which suggests that the gap between academy and first team was too big. Wales is the furthest ahead at the moment, but that seems to have come from training with Okon and the first team.Wales has mostly been developed by Cahn, Kekeris also played for Cahn, Kuipers was in his team as well.
I wouldn't say the gap has gotten closer though, Ryan Peterson played nearly the same amount of time as Wales has, and Wales was only given his opportunity because of injuries and Trent being away. Trent Buhagiar made his jump to the first team under Ben Cahn and he is arguably our most successful academy player in a while. Adam Berry moved from being an academy player to a first team player under Cahn. Kekeris is only being given an opportunity because Pain is injured and Kuipers because of Josh Rose's suspension. Steve Whyte made match day squads and the bench, Recce Papadimtros made match day squads, as did Brian Jamba during the Walmsley era. Cahn developed plenty, there aren't many players ready to jump straight up from academies around the country especially when we are often third or fourth choice in NSW.But they weren't really knocking on the door of the first team last year, and neither were any of the older youth league guys. That's not to say their development this season is down to a new coach, just that no one was ready to step in straight away last season, which suggests that the gap between academy and first team was too big. Wales is the furthest ahead at the moment, but that seems to have come from training with Okon and the first team.
Surely the point of a youth team is to develop players for the first team. Without transfer fees and a pyramid structure like in England the only way the academy can pay for itself is by developing players for the first team in the hope that they'll either get a big transfer overseas or become a first team regular. As good as Cahn's results were there still seemed to be too big a gap between youth team and A-League, Peterson being the best example. I'm happy to be corrected by people who watch every youth match, but when the announcement was made about Cahn my assumption was that it was because players weren't developing in the way the club expected. You can be an excellent coach and get great results by building a team with a strong structure, but a first class youth coach needs to develop players as individuals and to fit into the first team's structures when required. The fact that Okon turned to Wales, Kekeris, and Kuipers for this month, rather than trying to grab a more experienced player on a short-term contract, suggests to me that he's happy with the development going on at youth level. It was also said back when Sully was appointed that the focus for the NYL season was going to be on performance and development rather than results, so I think it's much too early to judge the decision.