Flying Kiwis – July 19
Marko Stamenic – FC København (Danish Superliga)
MS: “I'm really happy to be back in Copenhagen and back with the team. It's great for me to be back again and I feel comfortable and ready. I'm really looking forward to it. I definitely took a step or two in the right direction at HB Køge. I have become a more mature player, and it was also very important for me to play 90 minutes every week at a high level. I achieved that, and I'm sure I can use everything I've learned in the last year here at FCK.”
That was Marko Stamenic speaking in the days leading up to FCK’s opening game of the new campaign. Definitely not sounding like a bloke who is going to be sent back out on loan again. For one thing they’ve officially given him his number 35 jersey back. Then his case got an even stronger endorsement with subsequent news that the Danish Superliga would be expanding matchday squads from 18 players to 20 players – meaning nine substitutes, with five allowed to enter the game. The club’s coach, Jess Thorup, specifically said: “it gives us more opportunities to keep more guys in play and feel that they are a bigger part of the team.”
All good signs. Hence why this was no big surprise – check that subs bench for a cheeky blue flag...
FCK vs Horsens, the defending champs at home. Yet the defending champs nearly found themselves trailing after eight mins as a flick on header gave Casper Tengstedt some room for Horsens. He chopped through one tackle and then drilled one into the net via a partial hand from the goalie... however VAR took it off them as a fellow striker had run offside and obstructed the keeper’s view.
Copenhagen’s response was to play like a Champions League calibre team and overwhelmingly dominate the possession stats... yet their shooting was sloppy as big moments went begging and there were a few hints of further chaos at the back. Needed a clearance off the line after 23 mins to keep it at zeroes. Frustratingly it was their own messiness that was digging those holes.
Those dramas appeared to be in the past as FCK forged a slick underlap and cut-back move in the 40th min which Hákon Arnar Haraldsson slammed in for the apparent lead but the VAR also ruled that one out for the same reasons as Horsen’s: an offside player interfering with the GK. This one a much more generous definition of the word ‘interfering’. Quite a harsh call. Nonetheless it was 0-0 at the break, FCK also spurning several other chances (including a glancing header in stoppage time) and something probably needed to change for the home side.
Something did...
This wasn’t a debut as Stamenic did previously start and play 70 minutes of a league game against Randers back in November 2020. But he spent all of last term out on loan thus this was his first match since. Just a cheeky 601 days between appearances. About a week shy of 20 months. Stammers replaced Rasmus Falk at the base of midfield with instructions to play that role more defensively so as to allow the rest of the midfield to push further on. Very much a 4-1-4-1 formation in the second half.
CDM though he might have been, two mins into the half Stamenic found himself on the ball within shooting range, turning infield to work a bit of space and then trying his luck with a pop at goal. Struck it with plenty of power but also lifted it into the stands in the process. Rate the confidence, at least. Other than that his job was to shield the backline, cover for marauding fullbacks, and make sure the ball kept flowing as they recycled it. A simple, uncomplicated job and one that he did smoothly.
That is, except for the time he tripped over trying to catch up with a runner down his right side of defence and ended up giving the bloke a bit of an accidental shove as he fell. Definite foul although a yellow card was a bit rough. Stammers sure thought so coz his reaction was golden.
FCK conceded very soon after that yellow card. Bit too passive at the back, missing out on a few opportunities to shut things down earlier, and Lubambo Musonda thumped in a fine shot from just inside the box to make it 1-0 on 61’. Horsens only just got promoted as the champs of Division 1 (having been relegated one year earlier) so in an alternate reality this could have been Callum McCowatt and Elijah Just with FC Helsingør instead, ah well. Now Horsens were leading the defending champs in week one.
The rest of the game was very annoying for FCK. Heaps of ball but they struggled to break down a deep Horsens defensive line. Lots of men in the penalty area meant their more intricate stuff was blocked off and their wide crosses were repelled. Free kicks and corner kicks didn’t get it done. In the end the champs had to wander off having suffered a 1-0 upset defeat. Unable to take their chances in the first half, unable to muster enough of them in the second. But Marko Stamenic looked comfortable so hopefully this is the start of a breakthrough season for the fella.
FC Midtjylland also dropped points with a 1-1 draw and they were runners-up last season so the damage isn’t too bad. Also FCK only drew their opening two matches in 2021-22 so if they win game two then they’ll actually be ahead of where they were back then. Granted they then won six in a row straight afterwards.
Up Next: Monday at 4am away to AaB (NZT)
Joe Bell – Brøndby IF (Danish Superliga)
A new Danish Superliga season also means a return for Joe Bell at Brøndby, who despite the way their season collapsed late on last time really haven’t done very much at all in the transfer market. They did sign Croatian striker Marko Divkovic which certainly fills a need... but the only other major addition so far has been Sebastian Sebulonsen, a 22yo Norwegian right back brought in from none other than Viking FK.
They’d already signed Henrik Heggheim from VFK a year ago plus obviously Joe Bell came in during the January window so that’s three consecutive windows in which Brøndby have signed a dude from Viking. Getting towards feeder club areas. To be fair the window is open until the end of August so plenty more may yet happen.
Brøndby’s new season began with a homer against AGF. Sebulonsen started but Divkovic was on the bench... and so was Joe Bell. Annoying but consistent as Josip Radošević had already nudged Bellinho out of that central defensive midfield role for the last couple games of the previous campaign. So it goes.
For most of the first hour, AGF hardly fired a shot. Brøndby were bossing things and all that was left to do was score a goal to reflect it. But a goal proved surprisingly elusive and once we reached that sixty minute mark even their dominance had collapsed in a hurry as AGF’s deep wide crosses increasingly began to find red jerseys. It was only the safe hands of Brøndby’s keeper that kept them level in a much more even affair.
Brøndby continued to spark heaps of their own stuff but poor finishing was killing them. Divkovic came on and one of his first touches was to drag a great opportunity wide from about ten yards. Simon Hedlund had earlier lifted a wonderful opening way over the top. Then Mathias Kvistgaarden got nudged off the ball in the area and was still fuming about not getting a penalty when he was subbed off in the 77th minute... for Joe Bell. Finally entering the contest and sliding into the right CM spot in a midfield diamond.
The first thing Bell did was roll onto a difficult pass under pressure from two AGF players to win a free kick in his own half. How else are you gonna stop him, aye?
That free kick was taken short to Bell drifting wide on the right. Bell sent it back infield then collected it back again and pushed a pass forward towards Hedlund who dropped a shoulder and dummied the ball, which eventually ended up with Anis Ben Slimani on the edge of the area. Slimani faked a shot. Then he fired a real one. It caught the inside leg of a defender and the deflection took it past the goalie. Joe Bell was subbed on after 77 mins. Brøndby took the lead after 79 minutes. Coincidence? Surely not.
BIF then found themselves under a decent spell of trouble but AGF didn’t have the firepower to capitalise. Bell nearly set up another great chance but his striker didn’t continue his run. No panic. Brøndby held on for the 1-0 win. The only one of last season’s top six to win in week one, weirdly enough.
Can’t get carried away though because it’s Europa Conference League qualifying time on Friday and Pogon Szczecin of Poland are on the cards. Two games in four games coming up so Bell’s highly likely to start at least one of them.
Up Next: Away to Pogon Szczecin in ECL second round qualifying on Friday at 4.30am. Home to Nordsjælland on Monday at 2am back in the Superliga (NZT)
Nando Pijnaker & Max Mata – Sligo Rovers (League of Ireland Premier Division)
They won the first leg thanks to a Max Mata goal... but Sligo Rovers still had plenty of work to do to progress past Bala Town of Wales and into the Europa Conference League second round of qualifiers. 2-1 is always a perilous lead, particularly without the advantage of the away goals rule any longer. Max Mata was named to start. Nando Pijnaker was suspended after his first leg red card. Away we go.
It was a very quiet game to begin with. The first twenty mins offered the sum of nothing much as both teams settled into the contest, a few hard tackles the best the fans had to be excited about. It was Bala Town who attempted the first shot in anger with a low ranger that was parried wide. Soon Sligo Rovers started to win a few corner kicks and basically all of them looked dangerous. Max Mata had a shout for a penalty as well but the ref ruled that the bloke had won the ball, which he probably did.
Despite the occasion (or perhaps because of it) this was a vague and sloppy Rovers performance from the outset with touches going astray and crosses well off the mark. After 34 mins that translated into the backline too as they missed a couple chances to clear and then lost track of the Bala lads in the box when a ball was chipped in low from the by-line... and turned in by David Edward. A 2-1 aggregate lead became 2-2 and this tie was anyone’s once again.
Rovers did go close with a shot over the top from a free kick but as they hit the sheds for HT they’d still not really tested the opposition goalie. That began to change in the second - definitely must’ve got a rark-up from the gaffer because the energy immediately took a rise. Mata laid off a nice touch for an overlap. He also punted a snapshot into the stands. Then again, Lassana Mendes could have punished them further at the other end having found a pocket from a low square cross only to stab his shot straight at Ed McGinty, who held it well. McGinty later made a genuinely incredible 1v1 save later on, Sligo caught on the break straight after Mata had threatened to get his head on a corner ninety yards away.
Mata was subbed with a bit over twenty to go. No goals for him this time around. He’d been involved in a few heavy challenges along the way and was flattened in an aerial challenge just before he went off. Nothing changed afterwards. It took another miracle McGinty save in stoppage time simply to get the home team into extra time and the best chance of extras fell to Bala as they were first denied by McGinty, then hit the crossbar with a follow-up header, leading to a follow-up to the follow-up which was volleyed onto the bar again.
Absolutely unreal how the Welsh club never scored a second but they didn’t which meant that Sligo Rovers had largely undeservedly made it through to a penalty shootout. And you know how Rovers keeper Ed McGinty was already the best player on the pitch? Well he saved two spotties as Sligo buried all four that they took and despite the 1-0 loss on the night and the 2-2 aggregate draw they went through 4-3 on pens and will face Motherwell of Scotland in the next round. Remarkable scenes.
This was a poor showing from Sligo Rovers, who only had two shots on target all match. It was only the similarly poor finishing of their opponents that let them off the hook... that and the 2-1 away leg win in which Max Mata scored the second. Gotta breathe a big sigh of relief at how that all went down. Still, Sligo Rovers have won a European tie for only the second time in their history. Plus they’ll get Nando Pijnaker back for the next round. Exciting times.
Unfortunately it appears that Ed McGinty is now bound for Oxford Town in England’s League One. A bid has reportedly been accepted and he was left out of their LOI match on the weekend against University College Dublin. Which was not a good game at all. UCD are battling relegation but Sligo were clearly still emotionally hungover from the Bala Town game and looking forward to the Motherwell match-up. Nando Pijnaker got ninety minutes in one of five changes from the European game. Max Mata started and lasted 80 mins.
Sligo had more than enough chances to score. Mata was one of many who had shots saved while Aidan Keena hit the crossbar early on. They then conceded a couple of soft goals, one in each half, and that’s how you lose a game like that. 2-0 to UCD who had only won once from 22 previous league fixtures. Oops.
Up Next: Friday at 6.45am in the ECL second round first leg away to versus Motherwell (NZT)
Anna Leat – Aston Villa (English Super League)
The rumours were legit. Two months ago it was claimed that Aston Villa were keen on the services of Anna Leat and now here we are and she’s signed on a two-year contract. Leat left West Ham at the conclusion of last season after four WSL appearances plus another five in the various cup comps (not the four in all competitions that was mentioned in Villa’s signing announcement), only spending one season there before joining somewhat of a mass exodus from the Hammers. Several players and also kiwi manager Olli Harder all exiting via the gift shop at the same time.
That’s relevant info because it suggests that she didn’t leave for the sake of opportunities. Leat was in a decent pocket as the backup goalie to Australian GK Mackenzie Arnold... which worked out even better when Arnold left for a few weeks to compete at the Asian Cup with the Matildas, giving Leat a consistent run of starts. And she was pretty impressive too, keeping five clean sheets in those nine matches and flexing some excellent distribution skills as well.
West Ham finished sixth last term for their best ever WSL campaign. Aston Villa were only ninth but it’s unlikely that the Hammers are gonna back that up given what’s happened since so ultimately this is a parallel move for Leat. Even in terms of her own situation as the Villans still have Hannah Hampton in goal, who started the majority of games last term, likely meaning that Leat will be a backup again.
Hampton is the same age as Leat (21yo) but has already been capped a couple times by England and is currently part of their Euro 2022 squad. It may be that Leat backs herself to overtake Hampton, it may be that she does the backing up thing herself for at least another season. All pretty similar to how things were at West Ham but in a more stable environment.
She’ll definitely be no less than a backup because on the same day as Leat’s signing was announced, last season’s backup keeper – 23yo Sian Rogers – was confirmed to be heading to Championship side Charlton on a season-long loan. Rogers played seven times for Villa in all comps in 2021-22 which isn’t far off what Leat bagged with West Ham.
Leat’s comments there do seem to focus on development and gaining experience rather than necessarily starting heaps of games and qualifying for Europe or anything. Leat’s still so young as a goalie and so far ahead of schedule that there’s nothing to worry about there. All about growth at this stage and the rest will follow. Sweet as.
This also means that all three of the kiwis who featured in the WSL last season will be back for the upcoming term: Ria Percival with Tottenham, CJ Bott with Leicester City, and Anna Leat switching from West Ham to Aston Villa. Still plenty of time to add to that trio too.
Up Next: New season doesn’t kick off until the weekend of 10-11 September, still two months away
Marco Rojas – Colo-Colo (Chilean Primera División)
Here we go! The Colo-Colo move has been confirmed by all parties and Marco Rojas is about to play Primera División footy. He signs an 18-month contract and it would appear he’s been given the 10 jersey too. Pretty buzzy days.
He was presumably in attendance for the club’s latest effort, a 2-1 win away to Audax Italiano. Would have been a good one to witness too as there was all sorts of drama. Colo-Colo ran the show but were struggling to score when Juan Martin Lucero popped up with a backpost header on 71’ that was initially ruled out for offside but then the VAR took a peek and it was awarded after all. They conceded an equaliser before long which appeared to have them on the brink of dropping important points... then old mate VAR got involved again. Spotted a late foul in the penalty area. Gabriel Costa scored from the spot. It was the tenth minute of stoppage time once he finally put it in the back of the net, after the video check and all the various yarns. But a 2-1 win was good business. Keeps them three points clear at the top of the table.
In very possibly related news, Colo-Colo just sold young star forward Pablo Solari to River Plate back in his homeland of Argentina. Solari had been featuring prominently as a right winger in their 4-2-3-1 so, you know, looks like a Marco Rojas shaped hole ready to be filled in.
Up Next: Colo-Colo vs Huachipato on Sunday at 9.30am (NZT)
Michael Boxall – Minnesota United (American Major League Soccer)
What a man, what a player.
Man of the match in an odd sort of midweek game. Both teams a touch below full flowing capacity though Boxy was an exception to that rule as a firm presence against some recurring Sporting Kansas City attacks, especially early on. Although after awhile the Loons began to cause some havoc of their own and it was they who scored first via a very hilarious goal. Low cross into the area. Keeper dove out and missed it. Defender hacked it away. But defender hacked it into the back of the keeper and it rebounded into the net. Lol.
Unfortunately Minnesota couldn’t put away a second while they were at it and before long SKC began to take control of this seesaw match once more. Johnny Russell buried an equaliser on 63’ after battling through a tackle to get his shot away. Minny instantly responded but that goal was offside, didn’t count. Not too many other chances for either team. 1-1 the final score.
Minnesota United played again a few days later. This time at home to Wayne Rooney’s DC United (although he hasn’t taken charge yet). This was an even better defensive performance because DCU basically had nothing. Zero shots on target all match, only five in total. Meanwhile Minny ran the show scoring in the 13th minute via Emanuel Reynoso with a nochalant outside of the boot finish. Reynoso alone could have already had a hat-trick by half-time. Eventually he did score a second in the 50th minute, more quick feet involved there, and that was all that Minnesota needed. A cruise of a 2-0 win. Up to fourth in the Western Conference.
Up Next: On Thursday midday there’s a friendly game against touring Everton... then it’s away to Houston Dash at 12.30pm Sunday in the MLS (NZT)
Bill Tuiloma – Portland Timbers (American Major League Soccer)
Bill Tuiloma was on the bench again as Portland took on the Vancouver Whitecaps. Pretty dumb. That’s two games in a row he’s been a sub following the red card that he got before that (leading to a further game of suspension – so he hasn’t started in any of the last three).
But he did still get to play a decent role, subbed on after 72 minutes with his team in a 1-0 hole. Curiously it was the left-back that Tuiloma came on for (as part of a double change) though not in a straight swap. Instead he slid into the left edge of a back three in a very attacking formation that also allowed him the room to step up and carry the ball into midfield when the option was on.
Tui didn’t bag a goal or assist but his team did win a penalty while he was out there which Felipe Mora converted after 82 mins. More being the other bloke who was subbed on with Tuiloma. 1-1 the final score as Portland extend to a six game undefeated streak.
Up Next: Sunday at 2.30pm against San Jose Earthquakes (NZT)
Logan Rogerson & Ollie Whyte - FC Haka (Finnish Veikkausliiga)
Every week, honestly. If it’s not Logan Rogerson with the heroics then it’s Ollie Whyte with the heroics and if it’s one of them then there’s a good chance it’ll be both of them. This week Rogerson started against Inter Turku whilst Ollie Whyte came off the bench at half-time. Both of them would leave indelible footprints on this match.
Funky old game. Haka got things started when Lee Erwin curled in directly from a free kick just outside the area after 22 mins but the lead only lasted five mins before Petteri Forsell walloped an even better strike in off the crossbar from open play. Haka went close a couple of times over the rest of the first half, Logan Rogerson even attempted a scissor kick, but then a push in the back defending a free kick gave Inter a penalty late on 41’ which Forsell stepped up to take... and struck it alright but a brilliant low diving save denied him. Never mind, Forsell would get his revenge in the 53rd min when he unleashed one from miles out with the goalie should have saved but somehow instead pushed it in off the post.
That left Haka chasing the game from a deficit. So you know what happened? Logan Rogerson set up Salomo Ojala for a 76th minute equaliser and then that free kick from Ollie Whyte in the third minute of stoppage time was good enough for a very late winner provided by Lee Erwin again. From a free kick won by Logan Rogerson, naturally.
Rogerson got a full game, Whyte half of one. Both served up assists. The quality form continues for both as a 3-2 win for FC Haka takes them up to fifth on the ladder – going beyond Inter Turku in the process. They’re five games unbeaten in the Veikkausliiga.
Up Next: VPS vs Haka on Sunday at 2am (NZT)
Francis De Vries – IFK Värnamo (Swedish Allsvenskan)
Bad news: since last week’s rumours, it’s been confirmed that Francis De Vries will miss the rest of the season after scans revealed a torn ACL injury. Did the damage during a training session and he himself has confirmed to Swedish media that he won’t be back in 2022. Awful for FDV given what great form he was in, settling in beautifully to the top division in Sweden.
Värnamo are going to have their work cut out to stay in the Allsvenskan and losing FDV only makes that harder. The three games he’s missed so far have been three of their worst, with 3-0 and 5-0 losses bookending a 1-1 draw against a rival relegation team whom they’d hoped to defeat. IFKV have moved to sign another left back in Albin Lohikangas, a 23yo brought in from Gefle. The impression seems to be that he’s there to hold the fort for De Vries who remains the preferred option but you never know how these things go while you’re out long term. Plus FDV is also off contract at the end of this year.
Up Next: Recovery
Alex Greive - St Mirren (Scottish Premiership)
Back to expected programming in game two of the League Cup group stage. Alex Greive was amongst the starters as the Saints strolled to a 2-0 win away at lower tier Cowdenbeath. No goals for AG though he was lurking in the vicinity as new striker signing Jonah Ayunga scored both – one from a cutback cross (19’) and the other from a corner kick (23’). Greive did smash one off the crossbar on the spin in the second half. Very unlucky not to have rippled that net. AG played 75 mins before he was subbed off.
Looked like a different formation that the Buddies were working with here too, one which pushed Greive out onto the left wing but in turn really looked to utilise his pace and energy on the counter attack. Should be a good combination if St Mirren continue to commit to this way of playing. They did have some sketchy moments at the back but the win was relatively comfortable given that they never really seemed to get out of second gear. So that makes up for the unexpected loss last week.
Up Next: Double League Cup gameweek, first away to Airdrieonians on Weds at 6.45am then home to Edinburgh City on Sun at 2am (NZT)
Michael Woud – Kyoto Sanga (Japanese J-League)
Love a bit of Emperor’s Cup footy. This competition has been Michael Woud’s time to shine, playing in each of the last three rounds including the latest match-up, midway through last week, away to Togichi.
Hell of a game too. Kyoto Sanga scored in the sixth minute via Yuta Toyokawa as he bounced through one tackle and then squeezed his shot beyond the goalie. Woud then made a great close-out save twenty mins later however the equaliser did come on 36’ as Ko Miyazaki headed down a cross from out wide. 1-1 and despite being drawn against a J2-League club this one was balanced on a pinpoint with a place in the quarters on the line.
Woud made another good stop parrying away a hard effort aimed at the roof of his net early second half. Keeping his team in the match to where they were able to pounce right at the end. Third minute of stoppage time. More than once keeping the play alive through their hustle and finally drilling a low cross along the six yard box where Origbaajo Ismaila was there to touch it home. Big drama right at the end. Get in there. Michael Woud still hasn’t appeared in a J-League match (with 12 unused subs apps) but he’ll have an Emperor’s Cup quarter-final on the cards in a few more weeks.
Up Next: Forget about the J-League, the next Emperor’s Cup tie is a quarter-final against either Tokyo Verdy or Jubilo Iwata at 10pm on Weds 7 August (NZT)
Matthew Garbett – Torino (Italian Serie A)
Marko Stamenic’s preseason portents ended up leading to first team status (at least for the opening match of the season) so now we’ve gotta turn those energies towards Matty Garbett, who unlike Stammers has yet to feature for the first team at Torino – although he did get onto the bench twice late last term.
Garbett recently signed a new contract which had some confusing aspects to it however seemed to signal his graduation from the Primavera (U19) team to senior football. Likely out on loan first but we’ll see how that goes. He’s at least got the short term to stake his case as he joins Torino in preseason... and he got onto the park at the first time of asking. Subbed on in a 3-1 friendly defeat against Eintracht Frankfurt at around about the 78 minute mark.
He replaced Simone Edera on the right side of a front three. Had a few nice touches, particularly some of his first time passing. Plenty of movement and some strong pressing. Drifting around, getting involved. It was only a dozen or so minutes of a cameo but positive visions there with several more friendlies to get through before their first Coppa Italia match in early August.
Note that the fella’s wearing a different jersey number. It was 18 that he was assigned when he sat on the bench those two Serie A games. It’s 36 that he wore in this match. Krisztofer Horváth had the 18 jersey, a 20yo Hungarian attacking midfielder who scored Torino’s only goal in this match.
Up Next: Friendly footy, keeping at it
Chris Wood - Newcastle United (English Premier League)
Here’s Chris Wood getting an assist in some basic Newcastle preseason activities...
And here’s Chris Wood bagging third place in some non-basic preseason go-karting activities...
Despite all the chat about Chris Wood being a stopgap option when he first signed – and even if he was then he did his job brilliantly given Newcastle’s sudden reversal in form when he arrived from relegation worriers to mid-table freedom – we’re yet to see a big money striker arrive at the club to replace him. There is obviously still Callum Wilson who is ahead of Wood in the pecking order but there’s every chance those two could operate really successfully as a duo.
Frenchman Hugo Ekitike was strongly linked with Newcastle in January and they’ve since had a bid accepted by Reims... but Ekitike instead chose to move to PSG despite them putting in a smaller bid. Still several weeks left to go though right now it’s Wilson and Wood still leading the way. Newcastle’s signings this window have all been defensive so far: Sven Botman (CB), Nick Pope (GK – Wood’s old Burnley bud), and Matt Targett (LB – whose loan was made permanent).
Callum Wilson missed the majority of last season due to injury. Still finished top scorer at the club but his absences are not uncommon and even in preseason they’ve been limiting his involvement when things get too heavy. Chris Wood is still gonna get plenty of opportunities this term. Especially if they don’t sign anyone else in his position.
Eddie Howe: “No one has ever doubted Callum’s ability. He is an outstanding striker, and he showed that coming back from a long injury and performing well at the end of the season. I would love him to have an injury-free campaign. Chris Wood did very well for the team last year and he is still with us and has trained very well. We have others who can fill that role so we are not one dimensional. (Allan) Saint-Maximin has played there, Joelinton too. And also we have the transfer market still as an active thing for us.”
Up Next: Plenty more friendlies, though the first Premier League game of the season is August 7 at home to Nottingham Forest (NZT)
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