Friday, August 26, 2011

Why Harry Kewell & Lucas Neill wont make the plane to Brazil 2014



There is no question that football fans in Australia are passionate, and I am expecting this article to insight nothing less in the football fans of this country.
But whether they like it or not, mark my words, Harry Kewell and Lucas Neill will not be on the plane to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
Harry Kewell is an easy one. He limped his way to the 2006 World Cup, and crawled on his hands and knees to last year’s tournament in South Africa. He has done a tremendous job to fight back from adversity, and showed his class beyond measure at this year’s Asian Cup, but as a betting man I cannot see Kewell’s body holding up for another three years until Brazil 2014.
Much has been made of his return to the A-League this week, which is tremendous news for the game in this country, but to be fair he wasn’t exactly swimming in options. Outside of clubs in the A-League, the only other clubs bidding for his services were from the Middle East, which is the destination of Lucas Neill, and is more of a retirement home where players go to cash in, in the final years of their career.
For an example of this look no further than Fabio Cannavaro, who joined the league after the 2010 World Cup, aged 38. George Weah, was another who finished his career at Neill’s current club, Al Jazira, aged 36.
It’s not exactly a high quality league where Neill will encounter some of the top names in world football.
The biggest issue though is age. Lucas Neill will be 36 come the 2014 World Cup, Harry Kewell will be 35. The Socceroos had one of the oldest squads at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and it is in need of some much needed renewal ahead of the next campaign.
To be honest, I feel Socceroos boss, Holger Osieck has handled this well, blooding a fresh crop of young talent and trying plenty of new faces, who unlike his predecessor Pim Verbeek, Osieck has actually backed their talent and thrown them into pressure situations and reaped the rewards. The emergence of Matt McKay and strong impressions of the likes of Robbie Kruse are an example.
I was a bit concerned though to learn this week that Mark Bresciano and Vince Grella had been linked to Socceroo returns. This is not the direction the Socceroos need to go.
I see the likes of Robbie Kruse, Matthew Leckie, Tommy Oar, Nikita Rukavysta, Brent McGrath, Dylan Tombides and James Trosi as preferred options to Kewell in the next couple of years.
Whilst for Neill, it is time for Matthew Spiranovic, Mark Milligan, Rhys Williams and Luke De Vere to be given a chance.  You could even include the likes of Matt Jurman in the mix, who has shown some promise, and who I expect to improve now he is under a manager who has faith in him at the Brisbane Roar.
I would be more inclined to take Sasa Ognenovski , who is an ageing defender himself, than Neill, given Ognenovski’s superior physical presence.
Lucas Neill has been in a steady state of decline for a couple of years now. He is often caught out of position and found wanting for pace, and you will get no greater evidence of that  then his performance against Germany, in the 4-0 drubbing in South Africa.
Sure everyone can have an off night, but Neill’s form continued with some disappointing performances earlier this year. His performance against Poland in a friendly will make good viewing for anyone that doesn’t agree with my view.
Lucas Neill is a defender who built a career in the English Premier League, in which football is played at high intensity and is of a higher physical nature than other more “technical” leagues around the world. But as his pace has lessened, he has become more and more exposed and a potential liability.
For all players that are getting on in years there comes a fork in the road where they must re-invent themselves.
The best example of this is Ryan Giggs, who for so long was known for his blistering speed down the wings, and constantly gave the opposition nightmares when running at defenders.  Giggs was in fact a player; Harry Kewell was compared to in his glory days at Leeds United.
As Giggs got older, the pace was no longer there and he was forced to re-invent himself. Giggs transformed himself into a more central player, who is now known more for his quality distribution than for his silky runs at opposition defenders. Credit must go to Giggs for seeing the light and making the transformation, doing so has prolonged his career. The fact that Giggs is still a feature now in a championship winning Manchester United side is testament to that.
But I cannot see how Harry Kewell can do something similar to Giggs. He is not known for his ability to link up with players, and has only ever played in a wide role or in leading the line.
A former teammate of Lucas Neill, Phil Neville, is another like Giggs who reinvented himself and prolonged his career. At United, Neville was somewhat of a much maligned defender who could cover a variety of positions. Sensing, his pace dwindling and options becoming limited at United, Neville sought a transfer to Everton and a new lease of life for his career.
Neville transformed himself into a bustling holding midfielder, known for his great energy and leadership, and someone who has become a solid distributor up the pitch and who can also chip in for a goal or two.
The problem for Neill though is that I cannot see a way that he can reinvent his game. His distribution is a weak point of his game, and Australia has some depth in the holding midfield role with the likes of  Mile Jedinak, Jason Culina and Carl Valeri.

Lucas Neill and Harry Kewell have been great servants to the game of football in this country, and much of the success that the Socceroos have achieved in recent years is due to those two men.
But sentiment and compassion have no place in professional sport and sometimes hard decisions need to be made. Holger Osieck has an important balancing act in ushering in the next generation of Socceroos whilst ensuring Australia’s qualification for the 2014 World Cup.
Experience is an important factor in that, and is vital to any squad, but the Socceroos will be looking to the likes of Tim Cahill and possibly even Mark Schwarzer for that come time for Brazil.
A lot can happen in three years and nothing in football is guaranteed.
But in my eyes the only way, Harry Kewell and Lucas Neill will be in Brazil in 2014, is behind a microphone or leading a tour group.



Brian Ebersole talks UFC 133




Adam Santarossa talks to Brian Ebersole ahead of his fight at UFC 133 this weekend-

Brian how has preparation been? You’ve been moved up to the main card, how are things looking ahead of UFC 133 this weekend?
Yes I’m pretty happy about that, I mean it makes my managers job easier attracting some sponsorship, but in the end its still 15 minutes in the cage, it doesn’t matter where I am.
You’re taking on Denis Hallman, what do you know about him and what are you preparing for?
He has had about 80 fights, he is a really good grappler and wrestler, and he doesn’t really like to get hit.
Looking at his record he has had 50 wins, 13 losses, he has had some impressive victories, including most recently over Karo Parisyan. What is your game plan going into this fight?
I just need to upset his game plan. I know he will want to grapple, but I don’t know how he wants to go about it. I have to frustrate him, and hit him in the mouth, every now and then, and keep him on the back foot
Now, you’re an American, but you moved to Australia a number of years ago, and you have been pretty active on the Australian scene and you have been involved with coaching and training in Australia. From your perspective, what changes have happened in the Australian scene now the sport is growing so rapidly?
I think the big difference now is that gyms are starting to take their training more serious, so that what is going to raise the level. Promotions can offer all sorts of different structures, tournaments, big fights and titles, but that’s not really what’s most important. It’s about the training. So, in the gyms as kids get better and better, you’re going to see better people fight, and it doesn’t really matter on what show. Hopefully the promotion thing will start to take off, were you’re going to entice kids to compete in a more strategic way, instead of going out there just to do it. We need kids to look at it as a way out, and plan their careers a little bit by saying “hey in three years, I want to be making money doing this” or “I want this to be my job” or using it to get to the UFC.
A lot of people you talk to on the Australian MMA scene, they can’t wait to get to the States. You have based yourself in Australia. Is it detrimental to a young career being in Australia?
The kids saying they can’t wait to get to the States are those not taking the best advantages of the resources they have in Australia anyway. So with that attitude what’s the point of going over to America and wasting all your money?
I guess my situation is a little different. It wasn’t until I got to Australia that I could really train 2-3 times per day. In Melbourne I have really good training facilities and training partners, and in the States you have so many guys, but you can only train with one guy at a time on the mat. But as long as I’m getting what I need over here in Australia, then I’m quite happy. I have a couple of black belts that have stepped up and given me some of their time and I have a great striking coach so I’m getting some really great work in here in Melbourne.
The biggest thing you’re known for is the arrow you shave in your chest hair, letting your opponents know where your chin is. How did this come about?
I fought a kick boxer, who was coming from overseas, and I watched him wrestle in a jiu-jitsu tournament on YouTube and he didn’t look very comfortable, so before the fight I shaved an arrow and told him he had to hit me in the chin to beat me. It kind of stayed from there and I have done it in most of my fights since.
You’re known now, for doing these crazy things. Do you have anything else up your sleeve?
I have a fan contest at middleeasy.com, so my next masterpiece on the chest hair is going to be determined by the fans, and I am a bit nervous for that because the website is handling all entries so I have no idea exactly what ideas are coming in and I think they get the final say as well.
Finally how do you see this fight going, and what are your future plans in the UFC?
I just hope to keep getting easy fights, and then renegotiate my contract. That’s my plan.