Category Archives: Zone 235

Welcome to Aussiezone 235!

Dear reader,

Welcome back for another edition of MZ Australian Zones. We’re doing our first end of season reviews in a long time so bear with us as we take an extra day or two to get things moving again.

As well as our regular contributions from myself and chucky06 covering all things A-League, Div 1, AIHL, all grades of National Cups, and National Teams, we’ve also got a couple of volunteer U18 pieces from rubiton111 in this edition.

Again, leaving this call out for anyone who’d like to contribute to our wonderful Zone, please just shoot me a message in my guestbook with anything you’d like to write. We welcome all of these contributions across the realm of MZ Australia.

Enjoy the read!
Damo11

https://gph.is/g/EJJQ9oE

 

A-League Season 69 — End of season review

A-League- Season 69 Rounds 18-22
Round 18:
This round was set to be season-defining for the top teams but didn’t quite live up to it those predictions. The top 3 teams all had draws keeping the top of the table looking the same in the chase for glory. The league was well and truly still in the balance at this stage.

Round 18 – 10-03-2019 09:30

Bindi FC 2 – 8 Brisbane Roar
Ayreon 2 – 3 SYDclub
Flying Hellfish 3 – 3 Glasston
Abbotsford FC 5 – 0 Chelsea Dream
Crimson Eagles FC 0 – 0 Jimmy Pizza
Close family 4 – 0 Welford

Round 19:
A huge 3-0 upset from relegation positioned team Close Family over titles favourites Jimmy Pizza really threw their title defence into disarray. This played directly into Crimson Eagles hands edging them closer to a second A-League title with the title now in their sights. 

Round 19 – 13-03-2019 13:30

SYDclub 1 – 8 Flying Hellfish
Glasston 2 – 3 Abbotsford FC
Chelsea Dream 1 – 4 Crimson Eagles FC
Jimmy Pizza 0 – 3 Close family
Welford 0 – 2 Bindi FC
Brisbane Roar 2 – 4 Ayreon
Round 20:
Jimmy Pizza’s side was again disappointing, having only managed a draw with Bindi FC. Flying Hellfish took all three point from his game reminding Crimson Eagles he will be there to take advantage of any slip up’s. Crimson Eagles were on their A-game though easily disposing of Chelsea Dream 4-1. Without a huge surprise or two, it was looking likely Crimson was going to be taking home the title.

Ayreon 4 – 1 Welford
Bindi FC 1 – 1 Jimmy Pizza
Close family 1 – 3 Chelsea Dream
Crimson Eagles FC 5 – 0 Glasston
Abbotsford FC 3 – 0 SYDclub
Flying Hellfish 3 – 2 Brisbane Roar
Round 21:
Jimmy Pizza finally got back into winning ways but it was all too late with Crimson again securing victory. The title was wrapped up with the last round being insignificant on the top teams. The bottom few teams still had a lot to play for with SYDclub and Brisbane Roar still looking to secure their place in the top flight.

Round 21 – 20-03-2019 15:00

Welford 2 – 9 Flying Hellfish
Brisbane Roar 1 – 3 Abbotsford FC
SYDclub 0 – 6 Crimson Eagles FC
Glasston 4 – 2 Close family
Chelsea Dream 3 – 6 Bindi FC
Jimmy Pizza 7 – 0 Ayreon
Round 22:
Jimmy Pizza had a win over rivals Hellfish to get one back for the National Cup and to finish in 2nd place with Hellfish 3rd respectively. Abbotsford FC again were again a model of consistency finishing in 4th. Bindi FC and Glasston both had solid season finishing the season in 5th and 6th. SYDclub managed to hang on to 7th position securing another season in the A-League. Brisbane Roar finished 8th and Chelsea Dream 9th both now having to fight it out in the Play-OffPromotions to play A-League football next season. Close Family, Ayreon and Welford finished 10th, 11th and 12th all will need to fight their way back up through division 1 next season all being directly relegated.

Crimson Eagles FC took home the A-League title having only lost one match all season. They were the most consistent team all season scoring a whopping 25 more goals than closest rivals with the leagues second best defence. Congratulations Crimson Eagles FC on their second A-League title after a 38 season drought!

Round 22 – 24-03-2019 10:45

Flying Hellfish 0 – 1 Jimmy Pizza
Abbotsford FC 5 – 1 Welford
Crimson Eagles FC 8 – 2 Brisbane Roar
Close family 2 – 3 SYDclub
Bindi FC 3 – 2 Glasston
Ayreon 1 – 2 Chelsea Dream

The U21 Socceroos – Season 69 Confederations Cup – Round of 16 + Quarter Finals

by damo11

U21 Confederations Cup 2019

Australia – The Road to Victory

Filling in for grinner again this week (we want you back!), the Aussie U21 squad met expectations and then a little more by bowing out in the Quarter Finals of the U21 Confederations Cup.

Again, with no insight to the Aussie U21 Socceroos whatsoever, I can categorically say that after the group stages, it was always going to be tough for the country to compete against the big wigs.

A great Round of 16 matchup against MZ Country saw the side win 2-0 in what was a largely one-sided contest. The 4-4-2 formation worked well to provide 17 scoring shots on target, while retaining much of the possession. An early and a late goal to Neville Burmeister did the trick as the Aussies went to the Quarter Finals.

The Quarter Finals saw the Aussies face off against the Brazillians, in what was always going to be a tough matchup. Outclassed by a much larger country, there was little room for any continuity as they peppered in a 0-5 win thanks to 23 shots on target  to 5.

Pearce Hines went from 10th to 12th in the Golden Boot leaderboard after failing to score in the final two matches, however, Neville Burmeister would be equal 15th, had the tables allowed to show all equal scorers on 5 goals.

In the end the Brazillians went on to the final but fell short. To come up against the best along the way is no easy feat and the Aussies should be proud of their efforts.

The future is still bright for U21 Aussies as 20-year-olds Steve Panetta, Eliot Aroege, Brayden Orvad, Andrew Mckay, Aaron Argoud, Martyon Everett and Carmichael Bungaard are all eligible for U21 World Cup Qualifiers next season.

Love the article? Why not leave damo11 some love in this user’s guestbook and thank them for valuable review here in The Aussie Zone.

Division 1 Season 69 — End of season review

A follow up to the mid-season review, the race for promotion has gotten even more exciting across the three Division 1 competitions.
DIV 1.1
It all came down the final round as the BES MUDI BANDITS decided to once again choke up and make their manager seat on the final game of the season. The Obscurials were hot on their heals with just the two points behind in the end, as the Bandits threw away a 2-0 game against Green Sheep in Round 21 to ensure there were no easy wins left. The only saving grace for the premiers was a 2-2 draw in the same round to the runner up as they now face Playoffs alongside Darwin Saville FC. Gunyah and Green Sheep can consider themselves unlucky not to be involved in the playoffs but should feature around the mark next season.
Bandits key striker Howie Hogan nailed the Golden Boot with 78 goals for the season, however, Amerigo Rossini from The Obscurials more than deserved the award in runner up thanks to 64 goals from just 11 matches.
DIV 1.2
Harry kept his Cool throughout the final stages of the season, even extending that 8-point buffer out to 10 points by the final round, but had a mishap in round 18 against Duffield United, losing 2-1. Catanzaro FC and Mount Pleasant held on with wins in the final round to take them to the playoffs, as Stone Eagles were forced to draw with the unlikely Selbourne (who managed only the one point in five rounds), giving them no chance of promotion after the result.
The Cool’s Wilson Santana snapped up Golden Boot easily with 63 goals from just 14 games – 17 goals ahead of the next best.
DIV 1.3
Collingwood kept their winning streak going into the final six matches to take the crown. Only Safety Squad proved a threat in the end as Warburn F.C fell away with losses in the last two rounds to cost them a spot in the playoffs on goal difference. The good news story is that Elite FC got the chocolates over them in Round 21 with a 1-2 victory that took them to third place by the last round. At the other end, Redbacks FC climbed out of automatic relegation and into playoffs with three wins from their final five games.
Collingwood’s Gualterio Avellaneda notched the Golden Boot with 70 majors, just 7 ahead of Rodney Lord from Safety Squad.
Six Div1 clubs now look to playoffs for a chance to get to the A-League, while another six try to cement their places inside Div1 for Season 70. You can follow all of those matches in the Div 1 Playoffs tab this offseason.

AIHL Season 51 — End of season review

by damo11

We follow up on last report of the mid-season review and look at Rounds 18-22  of the AIHL.

In the end it mattered little as The Jugular Vein capped off their perfect season to remain undefeated and win yet another AIHL title. Averaging about a 6-.5 scoreline a match, there was little competition for the 5-time premier as their consecutive streak of league wins shows no signs of slowing down.

Adding to that, the Top Scorer award was capped off with the top three all boasting Browne Tresise, Arneil Busst and Cod Reisz at 21, and 20 points apiece.

The challenge now lays with clubs such as Finlandia HC, Harry Cold, Polar Bear Club, Ice Aussies Pucks, and Dunedin Thunderbirds HC to change up their squads and show some fight to challenge for the title in the near-future.

Round 18 – 10-03-2019 11:15

Auckland Anvils 6 – 3 Pollywaffle
Harry Cold 5 – 0 Telita
Caboonbah 5 – 0 Black Mamba HC
Finlandia HC 2 – 0 Ice Aussies Pucks
Dunedin Thunderbirds HC 2 – 0 Kangaroo Crusaders
The Jugular Vein 8 – 0 Polar Bear Club

Round 19 – 13-03-2019 12:30

Telita 0 – 5 Caboonbah
Black Mamba HC 0 – 3 Finlandia HC
Ice Aussies Pucks 0 – 4 Dunedin Thunderbirds HC
Kangaroo Crusaders 1 – 12 The Jugular Vein
Polar Bear Club 1 – 0 Auckland Anvils
Pollywaffle 0 – 15 Harry Cold

Round 20 – 17-03-2019 18:30

Harry Cold 5 – 0 Polar Bear Club
Auckland Anvils 4 – 0 Kangaroo Crusaders
The Jugular Vein 9 – 0 Ice Aussies Pucks
Dunedin Thunderbirds HC 2 – 1 Black Mamba HC
Finlandia HC 5 – 0 Telita
Caboonbah 6 – 1 Pollywaffle

Round 21 – 20-03-2019 17:45

Polar Bear Club 3 – 1 Caboonbah
Pollywaffle 0 – 14 Finlandia HC
Telita 0 – 5 Dunedin Thunderbirds HC
Black Mamba HC 1 – 6 The Jugular Vein
Ice Aussies Pucks 1 – 3 Auckland Anvils
Kangaroo Crusaders 5 – 0 Harry Cold

Round 22 – 24-03-2019 16:00

Caboonbah 5 – 0 Kangaroo Crusaders
Finlandia HC 5 – 0 Polar Bear Club
Dunedin Thunderbirds HC 8 – 0 Pollywaffle
The Jugular Vein 5 – 0 Telita
Auckland Anvils 4 – 1 Black Mamba HC
Harry Cold 5 – 0 Ice Aussies Pucks

Love the article? Why not leave damo11 some love in this user’s guestbook and thank them for valuable review here in The Aussie Zone.

Seniors National Cup Season 69 – The Final

THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL CUP CORNER

Senior National Cup Final

​Jimmy Pizza V Flying Hellfish

On paper this game was set to be really exciting with not much between both teams all season in the A-League. The game didn’t disappoint and was extremely action packed. The game got off to a Flying start with two early goals to Hellfish. Pizza didn’t wait long to hit back twice to level the score at 2-2. An unfortunate red card to Jimmy Pizza’s David Watts in the 33rd minute made things incredibly tough for Pizza. Flying Hellfish started to get the upper hand with the extra man and eventually came home over the top taking the Cup from their rivals Jimmy Pizza.

Under 23 National Cup Season 69 – The Final

THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL CUP CORNER

U23 National Cup Final

The Obscurials V Green Sheep 

The Obscurials, also looking to defend their U23 National Cup title got off to a great start going up one goal early in the match. Green Sheep’s Arnold Baven equalised soon after before The Obscurials really asserted their dominance going into the half time break leading 4-1. The second half was a more balanced affair, with each team scoring one goal a piece. The Obscurials had 18 shots on target to Sheep’s 8. Green Sheep were gallant in defeat but shouldn’t be disappointed losing to The Obscurials who have recently won the U23 Defenders Cup, proving to be one of the games top U23 teams. 

Under 18 National Cup Season 69 – The Final

U18 National Cup  Final
Rubition F.C V Green Sheep

Rubition, the current under 18 National Cup holder got off to a great start going two up in the early stages of the match. Green Sheep managed to claw one goal back until Rubition really showed his class putting the game to bed late in the second half. Rubition managed double the amount of shots on target of 15 to Green Sheep’s 7. A deserved winner and congratulations on achieving back to back U18 National Cup wins for Rubition.

MZ FLASHBACKS — Part 1: How to manage your Hockey team

by damo11

Remember back in the day when there were screens like that? I’m talking 2003 here when a few of us first started playing MZ. Yes, we feel like fossils, but that’s what the theme is here for MZ Flashbacks. What we do is regurgitate content that you may have forgotten, sometimes relevant, sometimes effective in today’s game. Other times it’s just interesting to see where the game has gone.

In saying that, this article below is from Zone 222 with a guide on How to manage your Hockey team (part one).

That’s enough from me, so enjoy the nostalgia that comes with the read!

Continue reading MZ FLASHBACKS — Part 1: How to manage your Hockey team

U18 – How to build a striker

The advice given on how to make an U-18 player and a solid team, is my opinion only. Only my personal experiences and my in-depth research of other U-18 managers opinions counts.

Nothing can be called actual fact, information gathered comes from 20 odd sources.  I chose from the players who had won multiple U-18 National cups and those who played in the highest leagues.

Most of my research is now 4 seasons old and coincides with me winning the first of my last 3  National U18 cups. This season I feel Amputees should have won, however, the main reason was I trained Intel a lot last season, to test if it was applicable (It is not).

Your first valued Question:

“Why should I listen to you? You lose U-18 games all the time!”

You.

“Because once you have the information I share, the shocking realisation that I gathered this from others, who shared with others becomes real.

You can become top shelf and only then you will make it past most group stages. Then you will run into someone who knows what you now know.”

Rubiton111.

Tooting own horn (Sorry)

You can check my upcoming U-18 Matches.

National Cup (Lucky winner)

Spring Cup (Topped Group) Playoff Stage starting

Confederations Cup (2nd Group) Playoff Stage starting

Season Cup (Topping Group)

Defenders Cup (Topping Group)

World League Div 5 (Was Div 2 forgot to buy a ticket grrrr)

League (Div 1 Currently 5th)

Follow my series on the Zone. This will be you.

This Zone edition I will take a look at your striker.

This is for the central striker #96 (Not the advanced forward and deep-lying forward I play behind mine).

If none of your new youth each season suit hit the exchange youth till you find one with a head-start on the balls discussed below.

Building these guys starts at 16.

This formation is the short passing formation I recommend if your choice is wing play, good luck but this series will not discuss wings, only how to counter wings, in the rear case you face it at this level.

I 100% guarantee you this. Use the same U-18 players in both teams and test tactic using your current formation V this formation. Mine will win. Then think of 300 more formations and test them. Mine will win. I did not make this formation, someone smarter than I did.

Fact! If Amputees used this formation V me this season he wins the semi-final 3-0.

Amputees. Please use this formation V my team and let us know the result. My 18’s are set in Challenge as where in Semi. Would be an interesting report from you in the next edition, please.

 

Speed: This is crucial. Ideal is 7 balls but 6 is acceptable.

Stamina: Over 4 balls is a complete waste of your training time, as it seems that Stamina is “turned down” for U18 games. If you watch enough U18 games you will notice late in the second half no one is slower. In saying that it does seem to affect players with less than 4 balls. So 4 Balls is a must for your Striker.

Intel:  If you did not already know Intel trains at around halve the speed of everything else. If you did not already know this, simply go into your training camp and see the progress lines of any player currently training Intel at camp. The Intel line will be well below the other 2 lines. Before this season I was concerned that if all players have 3-4 Intel, they might be better. I was hoping that even though it is slow to train, the end result would be an overall improvement, this is not the case. My advice is to simply do not train this effect. If at some future date your player is a 23yo Star on the rise, then train it, as the speed of training Intel, is increased as the player receives experience balls 🙂

Passing: What your striker has when you get him is the same as what he has at age 19, better things to train on this guy.

Shooting: While it would be nice to have a 10 ball striker, unfortunately, speed, stamina, BC, are all required and you only have a few seasons to make him. Early in his 18yo season, it is OK to have 5 shooting on him, by the time the National cup comes along he will be close to 6 or on the way to 7. 6 Balls is a must, however, and 7 balls is the maximum you should aim for. Time is short.

Heading: Very important if he is a future senior striker, but for now, I advise that you ignore this till he is 19.

Ball Control: Something has to give as we can’t train all the balls we would like. Max him at 4 Balls and move on. It is the very last thing I add to my Striker, after Speed 6 Stamina 4 Shoot 5. Only later do I revisit  Shooting after I have 4 BC, then I revisit Speed.

That’s all you should be concerned with for your striker. Partials are OK to pick up, however remember even picking up 3 partials, can cost u a speed ball early on.

I look forward to losing the next U18 National cup, means someone will be listening 🙂

                                               MY CURRENT STRIKER

Was an exchange, got his partial on heading and passing, would have 7 speed if not for training Intel, currently training shooting for sale value if he does not max … then off to his final camp and sale ring.

You will note he has only 6 speed and almost 8 shooting. This happened in camp due to the fact I trained Intel rather than speed in camp. He should have 7 speed. The 3 green flags are his default youth training. It is rear I use that in camp, rather I chose from the list or use training exchange.

Always good to get one with default speed stamina and tackling at age 16.

Speed, Stamina, Shooting, also.

FOOTNOTE!

Note I do not send my 18yo’s to camp until after the Defenders Cup, Spring Cup, Confederation Cup and Season 7 Cup have kicked me out, even then only if un-maxed.

If you send an 18yo to camp day 1 of the new season, you are then a danger of missing the top 2 in National Cup group.

Day 1 this season was January 8

Day 1 of National cup was January 29

Leaving you 10 days without your 18yo’s

That’s the first 5 rounds gone!

What if you’re chasing 2 players who follow this article over the next 7 Zones?

You could be trying to chase down someone on 8-10 points in first and second place, with an equal team… Gulp.

P.S. The National Cup starts on day 21 every season.

P.P.S. Day 82 of the current season is time to send any 17yo to camp, so you have them at 18yo on day one of National Cup next season.