Meaning the jets players calves and ankles are safe for another week.Quote:
Newcastle-bred Adelaide defender Nigel Boogaard will miss the game with a minor hamstring strain.
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Meaning the jets players calves and ankles are safe for another week.Quote:
Newcastle-bred Adelaide defender Nigel Boogaard will miss the game with a minor hamstring strain.
Here we go... GVE pre-emptively setting up his excuses for missing the finals this season.Quote:
We definitely have an emphasis on giving young players experience, the sort that will stand them and us in good stead down the line...
Report of game by herald, seriously James do you have any idea of football.....Quote:
Jets draw nil-all with Adelaide
James Gardiner
Newcastle Jets 0 Adelaide United 0
THE Newcastle Jets recorded their first clean sheet in 10 months but it was not enough to secure a much-needed upset win over A-League high flyers Adelaide United at Hunter Stadium.
The home side overcame the loss of marquee striker Emile Heskey to a quadriceps injury at half time to dominate the clash.
"It was not a monkey off our back it was a gorilla," said Jets coach Gary van Egmond.
"It was hanging over us. It is a good feeling to be rid of it.
"It's great for the players to get some real confidence from keeping that clean sheet and creating a number of chances."
However, they were unable to come up with a winner, with Ryan Griffiths, Adam Taggart and James Virgili all denied by Reds keeper Eugene Galekovic.
At the other end, Adelaide danger men Dario Vidosic, Bruce Djite and Iain Ramsay were left frustrated by a resolute Jets defence.
It was the first time Sam Gallaway, Taylor Regan, Connor Chapman and Craig Goodwin had played as a back four.
The average age of the defenders was nearly 21 and they had played a combined 69 games between them.
But apart from a couple of half chances early, the Reds were unable to break them down.
Adelaide were the last team the Jets held to nil, in a 1-0 victory at Hunter Stadium in round 23 last season.
The draw ended a two-game losing streak for the Jets and moved them to 17 points.
Adelaide remain second on 29 points.
The crowd of 10,721 was the lowest of the season but they were treated to an open, entertaining clash despite the lack of goals.Desperate to end a 18-game gap since the last clean sheet, Jets coach van Egmond overhauled the backline again. Taylor Regan was promoted for his third start of the campaign alongside Connor Chapman in the centre of defence.
Craig Goodwin dropped from midfield to cover for Scott Neville, who succumbed to a hamstring strain.
James Brown also started in the other change from the 2-1 loss to Melbourne Heart.
Antony Golec replaced Nigel Boogaard (hamstring) in the only alteration from the Adelaide outfit which pumped Sydney FC 3-0.
The visitors came out flying.
Vidosic forced a reflex save from Mark Birighitti in the fifth minute and Bruce Djite blasted into the side netting a minute later.
With the temperature nudging 30 degrees earlier in the day, the teams had a scheduled drinks break at the mid-point of the half.
At that stage, Adelaide had 56 per cent of possession, led the corner count 4-0 and had six attempts on goal to the Jets one.
Whatever was in the water, it worked for the Jets.
"The first 20 minutes we were a bit too strung out and pressed a little too high at times," said van Egmond.
"Then all of a sudden we started to understand what the structure needed to be."
Adelaide coach John Kosmina noticed a change too.
"We were dominant before that. About the 30th minute for some reason it was like the curtain came down," he said.
Ryan Griffiths, who switched flanks with James Virgili, had a shot finger-tipped over the bar by Eugene Galekovic on the half hour.
From there it was all the Jets.
Virgili cut the Reds to shreds down the left, combining with Emile Heskey and Brown.
All that was missing was a goal.
Griffiths hit a half-volley which was blocked by Galekovic. The rebound fell to Brown but he could not get enough on his reboud and it was cleared off the line.
Griffiths couldn't climb high enough to get his head to Ruben Zadkovich's cross with Galekovic caught in no-mans land and Brown skied another shot over the bar in stoppage time.
Jets marquee Emile Heskey didn't return after the break due to a quadriceps injury and was replaced by Adam Taggart.
"He has a grade one strain in his quad. We will assess that when he is cool and see what the medicos say," van Egmond said after the game.
Heskey is the Jets leading goalscorer with seven and is second to Ruben Zadkovich in minutes played.
But the change did little to stem momentum.
See your ad hereGriffiths had a shot tipped around the right left post and then sent a header over the bar.
Taggart forced another desperate save from Galekovic in the 57th minute.
With one former premier league star on the sideline, van Egmond introduced another in Michael Bridges with 28 minutes remaining.
The veteran playmaker provided some deft touches but not a goal in his biggest contribution of the season.
The crowd of 10,721 was the lowest of the season but they were treated to an open, entertaining clash despite the lack of goals.
He may be stretching it a little bit but it was better than a lot of the dross we've been served up so far. There were elements to the game that I would actually class as entertainment.
The runs that Goodwin and Virgilli made were exciting and the footwork that Bridges demonstrated was also worth watching. Reegan put in some good cross field passes as well.
I think the last 5 minutes of the first half and most of the second half showed that we can actually play a bit of football when we don't have someone in the attacking midfield slowing everything down. We need someone in there who can play the ball quickly, take players on and offer something different to the defensive midfielders. Bernardo or Bridges seem the obvious choices and until Bernardo rips the youth league apart I'd be happy to see Bridges fill the role.
Hopefully that game sets a foundation for the rest of the season.
I was at a party so i couldn't attend, but ended up at the bar watching the whole game on TV. It was quite an entertaining match from that perspective.
I only saw the first 20 mins at the Beaches before being dragged off to the wedding reception.. So I'm still waiting on a replay to be put up.. *cough cough* :gent:
Fox Sports saying Zadkovich injured in training today. Getting scans soon.
It was in the Rocky Visconte article, closing lines.
Quote:
Meanwhile Newcastle have been rocked by a knee injury to Ruben Zadkovich, with the club saying the in-form midfielder will see a doctor today to ascertain its seriousness.
Zadkovich sustained the injury at training
Jobe in, Zad out?
Roar have signed a current Socceroo. However, it's one of the two people most whinge about.
Jade North has signed with them for three and a half years.
Sauce: http://www.footballaustralia.com.au/...Socceroo/57625
Zads is so keen to re-sign with the Jets that he's injured himself to impress Jets management.
You can't get more newy than that.
wtf...we training on a minefield or sumfin
Some good news, some bad news....
Quote:
Originally Posted by Terror
So Corey Brown hasn't signed with the jets? Sounds someone let that out a little prematurely.
What this kid tear us a new ass hole.
Would be interesting to see how some Asian coaches would go trying to adapt to our league and standard of players but also the use of a salary cap.Quote:
Should your club hire an Asian coach?
Tuesday, 8 January 2013 7:33 AM
On New Year’s Day, the Central Coast Mariners learned that Kashiwa Reysol would join them in an already tough AFC Champions League group after winning Japan’s famous Emperor’s Cup.
The team from northern Chiba beat relegated Gamba Osaka 1-0 in front of a packed house at Tokyo’s National Stadium courtesy of a solitary goal from defender Hirofumi Watanabe.
One interested spectator was surely Akira Nishino – a man who for four years coached Kashiwa Reysol before turning his attention towards transforming Gamba Osaka into one of the most successful clubs in Asia.
Nishino was at the helm when Gamba thumped Adelaide United in the 2008 ACL final but decided to step down as coach in Osaka at the start of 2012 after a decade in charge.
He was undoubtedly Gamba’s most successful coach, leading the Osakans to their first and only J. League title in 2005 and a runners-up place five years later, as well as two Emperor’s Cups along with that coveted Asian title.
And he did it playing some of the most attractive football ever seen in Japan, with Nishino’s sides renowned for consistently outscoring their opponents thanks to their free-flowing attacking football.
Indeed, when the subject of who should coach the Japanese national team came up, Nishino’s name was always one of the first mentioned in Japan’s vociferous sports press.
Gamba clearly struggled without their long-time mentor and finished the 2012 campaign in 17th place, dropping into the second division for the first time in their history as a result.
It was also a disappointing year for Nishino.
Appointed coach of Gamba’s neighbours Vissel Kobe midway through the season, the 57-year-old was unceremoniously sacked with four games still to play as Kobe fought desperately to avoid relegation.
They failed to do so, but it was a rare blot on Nishino’s otherwise spotless managerial copybook.
And it begs the question that if an A-League club can sign a player of Shinji Ono’s calibre as its marquee, why not sign a marquee Japanese coach like Nishino as well?
He clearly has the credentials, speaks a reasonable level of English and would no doubt relish the challenge of pitting his wits against Australia’s best coaches.
All it would take is a little thinking outside the box for an Australian club to suddenly have one of the most knowledgeable coaches in Asia calling the shots.
Ironically it’s the much-maligned Takeshi Okada leading the way when it comes to export Japanese coaches.
The bespectacled tactician came in for fierce criticism after Japan limped through qualification to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, only for Okada to steer the Samurai Blue to a shock second round appearance.
And just like Nishino’s famed Gamba side, Okada had his Japanese team playing slick passing football built around a side of fleet-footed attacking talent.
Okada is now in charge at Chinese Super League outfit Hangzhou Greentown, who finished the last Chinese campaign in a mid-table position.
The pressure is on Okada to get Hangzhou challenging for an ACL place this season as he’s at the vanguard of Japanese coaches testing their skills overseas.
And if the quality of Western Sydney Wanderers star Ono is any indication, there’s plenty the A-League can learn from the Japanese game.
It could do worse than try to learn it from Akira Nishino, who will no doubt keep a close eye on one of his former clubs Kashiwa when they take on the Mariners in Group H of the 2013 ACL.
With a little bit of forward thinking, one day Nishino could keep a close eye on the A-League as well.
http://www.footballaustralia.com.au/...an-coach/57509
Rogic to Celtic.
CCM say trial only.
Australian says an offer has been made for a transfer.
marrone (my fave rb of the comp) to shanghai. just missed out on playing with griff.