Socceroos coach Tony Popovic has praised skipper Maty Ryan for the way he handled his demotion from the national team as he closes in on a move to French club RC Lens that could see him playing regularly again.
Ryan took a punt on himself by signing for Italian club AS Roma this season without the guarantee of regular game time. It has backfired badly, with the 32-year-old featuring only once for the Giallorossi.
He paid a further price for his lack of game minutes when Popovic opted for Aston Villa back-up Joe Gauci as his goalkeeper in his first three matches as Australia coach.
Ryan ultimately returned as Australia’s No.1 for their last outing – a dramatic 2-2 draw in Bahrain in November – but his hopes of retaining the gloves for their next World Cup qualifiers in March will be boosted by an impending transfer to the seventh-placed team in France’s Ligue 1. Once there, he would be expected to become their starting custodian.
While Popovic said on Monday he had not given an edict that said players had to be playing regular minutes at club level to be selected for the Socceroos, he only had good things to say about how the ex-Brighton, Arsenal and Real Sociedad man had responded to losing his spot.
“A captain is a leader on and off the park. That’s what a captain is,” Popovic said.
“You learn a lot about the person when they’re not selected for the game.
“In the end, our goal is to qualify the Socceroos for the World Cup. Everyone needs to fight for their position. That includes Maty. He’s accepted that. He’s been very good around the place while he wasn’t playing. I told him that he will have a chance at some point.
“He has to work hard. If he wants to be in the Socceroos, all he can do is control his part: that’s training well, being the leader, being the captain on and off the field. Then it’s down to my choice and my selection.
“I didn’t expect anything different than what I’ve seen from a seasoned professional that’s had a great career – 96 caps, I believe. You don’t get to that without being a top player and a top professional. The way he’s conducted himself is no surprise to me.”
Gauci, meanwhile, is reportedly set for a loan move away from Aston Villa for the remainder of the season – and if he also becomes a No.1 goalkeeper elsewhere, that will give Popovic at least three good options in the position, along with Paul Izzo at Danish club Randers.
As for the season-ending injury suffered by defensive leader Harry Souttar, Popovic was a little more frank, albeit still somewhat optimistic.
He described the 26-year-old, who has starred for Sheffield United this season in their bid for automatic promotion to the English Premier League, as an almost irreplaceable player.
Souttar has played in the centre of a back three, and with Parma young gun Alessandro Circati recovering from an ACL injury, it leaves the Socceroos short on defensive options – although Popovic suggested that Ipswich Town’s Cameron Burgess and Sydney FC’s Hayden Matthews, who is set for an imminent transfer to English second-tier side Portsmouth, as possible candidates. The deal for 20-year-old Matthews will net the A-League side up to $2.36 million, according to reports.
“Like for like, you don’t replace a Harry, because I feel his attributes are a bit unique to what we have at the moment,” he said.
“We don’t have many players, or any players, like Harry. We need to find a player that gives us that stability and the middle of that back three that can do what Harry was doing.
“We’re a little bit open-minded in who that could be or how that looks. We feel that maybe there’s another Jason Geria out there … it looked like he’d been playing for the Socceroos for years.”
The four-month gap between World Cup qualifiers has given Popovic his first real chance to breathe since being parachuted into the job in late September, replacing Graham Arnold after he ended his six-year reign as Socceroos boss.
“We’ve got all the staff here at the moment for this week, where we’re doing a lot of reviews in terms of the football side, and hoping just not to get any phone calls on new injuries,” he said. “That’s something that I’m learning: that you don’t want to see the physio on the line often.”
Unfortunately, it has been far more often than he would have preferred.
Besides Souttar and Circati, there are several others who will be facing a race against time to be fit for the crucial qualifier in Sydney against Indonesia on March 20 and the trip to China five days later.
Striker Kusini Yengi has been sidelined at Portsmouth since picking up a knee injury on Socceroos duty, while one of his main competitors for that position, Motherwell’s Apostolos Stamatelopoulos, is struggling with a recurring calf injury.
Then there’s Connor Metcalfe, one of the few Aussies featuring regularly in one of Europe’s top five leagues for FC St. Pauli in Germany – or at least he was until October when he went down with a groin injury.
“That’s an ongoing one, unfortunately, with his groin … that just seems to be hanging around a little bit too long,” Popovic said.
“We’ve actually had some of our people over there with him as well, working with the club to see if there’s any way that we can assist in his rehabilitation. He’s been running also the last couple of weeks, tells us he’s feeling a lot better, but he hasn’t played for a few months now, so it’ll be a tight one for him to be available in March.”