Tag Archives: New Zealand

22. New Zealand

What Went Right?  The Kiwis were not going to be taken out of their game plan. They stayed compact, disciplined and very well organized both in possession and in defense, and they never wavered no matter what the score or what their opponents did. Made effective use of long passes and got into the final third and kept teams nervous with their long shots on goal. Made their living on defensive mistakes and mental errors. One of the five or six best defenses in the tournament, their defense was aggressive and physical and never lost its shape. Made their opponents work for every single inch of ground. Nobody was able to get into their penalty area with ease or any regularity, so opposition attacks amounted to long-range shots. Gave up a lot of possession but that was by design; they wanted their opponents to come forward in numbers and feel a false sense of defensive security before hitting them on the break. Were surprisingly good at set pieces and 50-50 balls, and were really great at defending against them.

What Went Wrong?  They just didn’t have the attacking chops. Their attack was predicated entirely on defensive mistakes and mental errors. If they had had just a modicum of a sustained attack they probably could have stolen a win somewhere and gotten to the next round.

Who Stepped Up To The Plate?  I’d take their backline of Winston Reid, Ryan Nelson, Tommy Smith and Ivan Vicelich any day of the week and twice on Sunday. Simon Elliott and Tony Lochhead were stellar interrupting the opposition attack in the midfield. Leo Bertos and Rory Fallon were just suffocating on the flanks. Shane Smeltz actually showed some finishing chops roaming behind the target man Chris Killen. The front four had to spend most of their time defending but they did a good job of patiently waiting for the opposition to make a mistake, and they pounced well.

Who Didn’t Show Up?  Nobody, really. Everybody pretty much executed what amounted to a very limited game plan. Clearly the idea was to survive and wait for an opposition mistake.

How Was The Coaching?  I’m going to give it an A. Ricki Herbert was a center defender the last time New Zealand made it to the World Cup in 1982. Gee, what gave it away?! His only experience coaching being local, he was smart enough to realize his side didn’t have any star-quality players and weren’t going to beat anybody attacking them. So he employed the most tactically rigid and suffocating system in this tournament and made sure his players never EVER wavered from it, extolling the total team concept. It wasn’t pretty but it did get results.

Did They Finish Where They Were Expected?  Well, the Kiwis didn’t get to the next round, but they did finish undefeated and actually earned their chance at progression, as opposed to some sides that just backed into it. If you sat through that game with Paraguay you got plenty of sleep. That said, most of us thought they wouldn’t get a point. Not only did they get three points but they left this tournament undefeated, a feat unto itself, and got themselves into a position to actually advance without backing into it or relying on help from anybody else, exceeding all expectations. Having to qualify from an Oceanic region that consists of football powerhouses Fiji, Samoa, New Caledonia, and Tahiti (sarcasm intended), most people thought New Zealand really didn’t belong here. The Kiwis proved otherwise. MADD, MADD, MADD, MADD, MADD PROPS!!! This is what the World Cup is all about.

Now What?  Keep this coach and keep that tactical discipline, but think about getting forward with a little more of a sustained attack. You might just get that one goal you need deliberately next time.

South Africa 2010 Match Observations: Group F

Some random observations after the third group fixtures:

Paraguay 0-0 New Zealand: Paraguay was the aggressor early, but New Zealand pulled everyone back on defense, forcing long shots only. Paraguay dominated possession in the first half, but the Kiwis’ discipline on defense frustrated them and neither goalie was tested. The All Whites opened up somewhat in the second half, but still played very conservatively. Paraguay earned the first corner of the game 15 minutes into the second half, but the crowded penalty area prevented several shots from getting through. New Zealand brought on a defender for a forward and then a midfielder for another forward in the second half. Apparently the Kiwis are more concerned with preserving a tie instead of going for the win that would advance them. Unable to get through passes, La Albirroja tried to get some long balls into the box but could not connect on those either. The Kiwi defense really took the Paraguayans out of their game. The draw still netted Paraguay the top seed out of the group. New Zealand, the lowest ranked team in the World Cup, failed to advance as expected, but should be proud to have finished with three points and ahead of the defending champs in group play.

Slovakia 3-2 Italy: As with earlier group fixtures, the Italian offense was stale and unable to penetrate the box early on. Slovakia, which had played leadenly in its prior game, came out with much greater intensity against the Italians. The Italians lacked any kind of coherence and gave away the ball far too often. Daniele De Rossi played an extremely poor pass in front of his own box that was easily intercepted by Juraj Kucka, who then struck a through ball to Robert Vittek and he beat the goalie with a well hit shot to the left post. The Italian defensive reputation has taken a real hit in the group fixtures and their lackluster play calls Marcello Lippi’s decision to field the oldest squad in the Cup into question. They nearly gave up another goal in first half stoppage time on an excellent volley by Kucka from 35 yards out that was barely wide. The Azzurri came out with a little more energy in the second half, but were still slow and inaccurate on their passes. Andrea Pirlo, the star of the 2006 World Cup winning Italy team, came on a sub early in the second half, his first action since a calf injury just prior to the tournament. The Slovaks pulled back into a more defensive posture, but found some counterattacks as they out-hustled Italy all over the field. Midway through the second, the Italians got their first real opportunity when Fabio Quagliarella fired a half-volley from the corner of the goal box that was blocked by a defender’s knee at the goal line. It was very hard to tell if the ball crossed the line before hitting the knee and no goal was given. Minutes later, the Italian defense again failed on a poor clearance of a cross that got pushed right back to Vittek near the right post and his quick turn and shot to the near post caught the goalie off-balance for Slovakia’s second goal. The Azzurri finally broke through when a blocked shot deflected to Antonio Di Natale who easily put it into the open goal. The goal finally woke up the Italians. After not testing the Slovakian goalie all game, they began peppering him in the last 10 minutes. Another Italian goal got called back for an offside. Their defense failed to react quickly on a long throw-in to the box, however, and Kamil Kopunek simply raced past the defenders and lifted a chip over the on-rushing goalie for Slovakia’s third goal. Italy struck right back though when Quagliarella lifted a beautiful chip from 20 yards out over the goalie. It was too little too late and unbelievably, Italy’s loss sent them home, just like fellow 2006 finalist France. Both teams played poorly in their first two fixtures, but Slovakia earned its invitation to the second round because they played a full 90 minutes when it counted and the Italians did not.

-amwoods13

South Africa 2010 Match Observations: Group F

Some random observations after the second group fixtures:

Slovakia 0-2 Paraguay: Early on, Slovakia looked tentative while Paraguay controlled possession, a much better attack than they showed in their first fixture. La Albirroja’s offense employs much of the Brazilian style of short quick passes and through balls, they just don’t execute it as well. However, Lucas Barrios expertly slipped a through ball to Enrique Vera speeding into open space in the box with a point blank shot that he did not miss. Slovakia played with no urgency in the first half and did not test the Paraguayan defense though they shed some of their tentativeness after allowing the goal. In the second half, Slovakia managed a few flurries of offense, but only one shot on goal and very few shots overall. Paraguay maintained pressure throughout, even after substituting another defender for a forward and barely missed several more goals before Christian Riveros slammed home a second goal while in the middle of three defenders, none of whom looked like they wanted to challenge him. Not much was expected of the Slovaks and they lived down to those expectations this day. While not technically eliminated yet, Italy should put them out of their misery in their final fixture. Paraguay is now in position to and should win Group F.

Italy 1-1 New Zealand: As with the Paraguay game, Italy’s normally reliable defense was vulnerable again on set pieces when the All Whites got Shane Smeltz behind the defense in the penalty area for a quick score. Looked like offside initially, but the side judge got the call right as the ball did not glance off the head of one of Smeltz’s teammates as it initially appeared. The Italians flopped all over the place and appeared to be trying to draw yellow cards on New Zealand. That is really shameful play against an opponent they should be crushing and it unfortunately paid off when Daniele De Rossi went down in the box and drew a penalty kick. There was some slight holding going on, but the great bit of acting drew a penalty kick. Vincenzo Iaquinta converted it easily. New Zealand were very aggressive before their goal, but were content to sit back on defense after. The Azzurri  peppered lots of shots from outside the penalty area, likely in reaction to their inability to penetrate the box. In the second half, the All Whites went into the prevent defense with everyone falling back on defense. They looked like they were content to play for the draw. Marcello Lippi brought in a third striker, Giampaulo Pazzini, for a midfielder, no doubt hoping his speed would create some better opportunities, but this was in vain. With Italy’s inability to get good shots, one wonders if Lippi regrets his decision to leave Luca Toni and Francesco Totti (who offered to come out of retirement) off the squad. The Italian defense broke down and allowed a near goal by Chris Wood, who simply beat a defender off the dribble and took an unimpeded shot that just missed outside the far post. Unbelievable result with the Kiwis coming away with the draw. Major kudos to their defensive effort, which denied the Azzurri any good opportunities in the box. The Italians had 23 shots, but very few from close range. Every key stat went in the Italians favor…shots, shots on goal, corners, and possession, but the only stat that counts is the final score. The Azzurri will no doubt be pilloried in the press back home for this result. Italy will still likely advance with a win or tie against Slovakia. The All Whites came into this Cup without ever having scored a point and now have two points on the back to back ties. They could advance with a win over Paraguay or possibly a tie if the Italians cannot muster a better game against the Slovaks. The fact that they are in a position to possibly advance after two fixtures was unthinkable when the Cup began.

-amwoods13