Marquee
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Marquee
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Olympic and Lower Hutt met on a bitterly cold Sunday in a match both sides needed to win to keep pace with leaders Wests.  Raf de Gregorio was still unavailable for Olympic, George Barbarouses replacing him in the centre of midfield.  Lower Hutt were able to call on a full squad in attempting to bounce back from their shock loss to Marist in the Chatham Cup, Michael Madden starting on the bench.  Lower Hutt�s attacking trio of Roy of the Costa Rica Clark, Adam Church and Luis Corrales immediately put pressure on Olympic�s back four with tremendous movement and pace.  Corrales showed intentions early shooting well from a tight angle after accelerating into the box and Andrew Toomath in the Olympic goal made a tremendous double save off the initial chance and Steve Gulley�s follow up.  However, parity didn�t last long as Miguel Baladaras caught the Olympic defence napping, heading home unmarked from Gulley�s cross.  The action continued at frenetic pace, Clark flashed a shot from distance wide and Church hit the post with just the keeper to beat after a lovely reverse pass from Corrales.  Although the home side looked shell-shocked, they did manage to fashion a rare chance on half an hour.  George Barbarouses made space with a lovely turn in the middle of the park and released Jimmy Hadaikis wide on the right, and although his cross was partially blocked, the ball fell kindly for Anthony Neonakis who blazed over.  Both sides were out to attack and the action continued at both ends.  Olympic struggled noticeably to compete at set pieces fielding a smallish lineup and could have fallen further behind, Clark heading a free kick over and Dayne Raynor hitting the bar with a looping header.  Barry Lewis did manage to get a free header away from a corner, but put it straight at keeper James McPeake.  McPeake was in action again soon after, palming away a tremendous low free kick from Mikey Halikias and the half drew to a close with Lewis crossing himself after his sprawling goal line clearance scooped over the bar.

 

The second period matched the first for intensity and the action began immediately with  Baladaras arrowing in another header which drew a fantastic save from Toomath.  Olympic�s task was made more difficult with half an hour to go, Barry Lewis earned an early bath in the new Newtown dressing rooms after leading with an elbow on Baladaras.  Not long after referee Jim Murphy inspired a week of banter on Yellow Fever, awarding a penalty after Corrales was fouled.  The Olympic players and spectators were clearly incensed by what they saw as a dive and it did appear that the South American made the most of the challenge having lost control of the ball in the box.  Roy Clark�s penalty struck the bar but bounced down and in to make the score two nil.  Lower Hutt were happy to sit deep and the result was settled when Shaun Easthope joined Lewis in the sheds after a nasty studs up tackle on Clark, whose reaction was one part Drogba, two parts Christiano Ronaldo.  Substitute Admir Balicevac had a chance to complete the victory but struck the bar from inside the box and Sam Blackburn failed to finish with time and space late on.  This performance showed why Hutt were seen as title contenders before the season began, but inconsistency has dogged them so far.  They created a slew of chances and dominated from start to finish.

 

Wests extended their lead at the top of the table on Saturday, beating a gutsy Wellington United 3-0 at Endeavour Park.  United produced a battling display to keep themselves in the hunt for points against a Western Suburbs side who are beginning to have the look of champions.  It took an hour but Alex Chiet broke the deadlock heading home from a corner.  Rupert Ryan scored his 5thfor the season, and Wests� second, ten minutes later after good work from David Johnson on the left flank and Darren Cheriton made it three late on as his fashionable cross-cum-shot found its way into the top corner.  Will Smith and Nick Tarrant were prominent for the visitors while Mike Smith and Adam Birch were steady as ever for the home side.  Remarkably, Wests have still only conceded 4 goals this year and haven�t been beaten since round 1.

 

Stop Out earned their first win of the season and leapfrogged Palmerston North Marist into 8th spot on the table in an ugly but effective performance.  It was a game that reflected the two teams lowly position and was a genuine scrap lacking in quality or entertainment value.  Wayne Rooker had a chance to put the home side ahead from the penalty spot in the second half but missed.  However, Ben Kistell didn�t make the same mistake and converted his opportunity ten minutes later for an important win.

 

In matches away from Wellington, Miramar were held to a draw by Napier City Rovers on Sunday and drop four points back from Wests.  Both sides had opportunities to win the match and would feel disappointed not to come away with the win but chances went begging at both ends.  Napier dominated the first half and Greg Henslee followed up his own shot to bundle home from close range and put Napier ahead.  Sacha Nathu made several other first half saves to keep Miramar in the contest.  The second half was a different story, Miramar coming at Napier determined to force a result.  The goal came with fifteen minutes to go, a loose ball stabbed home by Tim Butterfield from a corner.  Miramar were unable to get the winning goal and were again cursing missed chances.  Butterfield had a strong game in the heart of the Miramar midfield.

 

Finally, Team Taranaki remain rooted to the foot of the table after losing to Gisborne City 4-0 in Gisborne.  One nil at half time, the amber and blacks succumbed in the second half to be left still chasing their first win of the season.  Robert Gill scored twice to take his season goal tally to 11, Ryan O�Neill and the returning Noah Hickey completed the victory.

 

Wellington teams now occupy six of the top eight positions on the table which will again raise the debate around the worth of the Central League for 2008, especially as the NZFC will now run until May.

 

 

james dean2007-06-11 13:43:55
First Team Squad
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Thats awsome man, appreciate it cousin. Like the way you mentioned the week of banter, reminds me, let me go start it...
Legend
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nice report - can you do one in txt language as well
Early retirement
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Starting XI
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Of course the Central League is important,  teams like Napier and Gisborne has great pedigree and should not be excluded just because a few big city clubs are afraid to travel to play them.  Remember those teams have to travel every second week.  Perhaps it would be better to get rid of some of the big city clubs and bring in some more regional teams. 
Starting XI
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Still angry that someone would even suggest getting rid of the Central League just because at present the Wellington teams are dominant.  The idea is such a backward step I cant even believe that someone with intelligence would even suggest it.  Look at the other way,  2 of the bottom 4 clubs are from Wellington,  perhaps we should get rid of them and bring in 2 more regional teams.  The sooner the league has auto promotion or at least the opportunity to get promoted the sooner the better.  What incentive is there for the clubs if they can not get promoted or at least go into the play offs to have a chance.
Legend
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charliec wrote:
Of course the Central League is important,  teams like Napier and Gisborne has great pedigree and should not be excluded just because a few big city clubs are afraid to travel to play them.  Remember those teams have to travel every second week.  Perhaps it would be better to get rid of some of the big city clubs and bring in some more regional teams. 
 
Your logic as all over the show. A central lge devoid of NZFC players is a waste of money. Also, the league is fast becoming a Wellington league anyway.
Starting XI
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Next season Tarakani out, Petone in. Three non-Wgtn teams. Gizzy are Fallons lot from al over the place thanks to NZ's Abramovich, Napier deserve their place, Palmy NM will just avoid the drop spot (only cause Taranaki are so woeful). Why waste money travelling when the teams in Cap Prem are more than competitive against the current Central League teams.
Marquee
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I've got no problem with the Central League as a concept but if Wellington clubs can get better competition in Wellington why waste the time and expense of travelling far and wide?  The trip to Gisborne probably costs $2000-$3000 alone so why bother?  That is money going out of football.  Taranaki and Red Sox have been total wastes of space and yet you have Petone/Wharfies/Wairarapa in Central Prem who would whip them and probably give Palmy Marist a good run as well.  Maybe regional teams are the answer but this is a club competition and relies on the traditions associated with that for its appeal.
 
And suggesting dropping Wellington teams is ridiculous.  The best team from outside Wellington last year was Taranaki and look at them now.  I know they beat Petone in the playoffs but anyone who watches football knows that wouldn't happen now and that they'll be kicking themselves over that one...
Starting XI
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james dean wrote:
I've got no problem with the Central League as a concept but if Wellington clubs can get better competition in Wellington why waste the time and expense of travelling far and wide?  The trip to Gisborne probably costs $2000-$3000 alone so why bother?  That is money going out of football.  Taranaki and Red Sox have been total wastes of space and yet you have Petone/Wharfies/Wairarapa in Central Prem who would whip them and probably give Palmy Marist a good run as well.  Maybe regional teams are the answer but this is a club competition and relies on the traditions associated with that for its appeal.
 
And suggesting dropping Wellington teams is ridiculous.  The best team from outside Wellington last year was Taranaki and look at them now.  I know they beat Petone in the playoffs but anyone who watches football knows that wouldn't happen now and that they'll be kicking themselves over that one...
 
Well dont travel and lose the 3 points, you missed the point earlier when I said Gisborne have to travel every second week.
charliec2007-06-11 13:57:11
WeeNix
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Ye very good report!!!
"The Olympic players and spectators were clearly incensed by what they saw as a dive and it did appear that the South American made the most of the challenge having lost control of the ball in the box.:
 
Whats new refs r bullsht. Terrible in this league! They need to watch some colina games. Or Poll. Both great.
Legend
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surely you can put up a better argument than that Charliec (or at least AN argument). Try looking at it from a Wellington team point of view
Early retirement
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pavlos8 wrote:
...Or Poll. Both great.


Hoe many yellows equal a red ?
Trialist
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I think that there are several teams outside wellington that can be competitive, it is hard on teams like Taranaki as they have to travel away every other week.....
Its no forgone conclusion that Petone will go up, they still have to beat the winner of Fed 4 (my moneys on PN North End) and then beat the last placed team in Central league, ask any central league team, and its not easy going up to New Plymouth to play at Yarrows
Phoenix Academy
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chuckles wrote:
.... ask any central league team, and its not easy going up to New Plymouth to play at Yarrows


Unless your teams name is Western Suburbs....
Trialist
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As much as I'm in favour of the CL and the good old road trips bonding with the lads on the way home after a game, why not bring something similar to that of the old Super 8.

 
Wellington could have a wellington based league, Gissy etc play in a central based league, Auckland in theirs then the top two from each league play off at the end of the season to find the overall winner.
I know the whole NZFC would screw this a bit but would be quite good for the young players to gaugue themselves against other players in their equivalent league
Trialist
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Looking at Central League from a financial perspective . The money that teams have to spend would be better spent  by those clubs on youth development and facilities . We should look at just having a Wellington League like The Gaffer suggested . Their comes a point when spending $3,000 - $5,000 grand to visit a  place like Gisbourne for 1 game cannot be justified by a club to other playing members and supporters of that  club .
Starting XI
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I played Central League Div 2 a number of years ago for Gisborne other club (Thistle) and we had to travel every second week, by bus most often.  We didnt win the competition but certainly came in the top half,  we won more games away then we lost.  Im sure the teams that do make the trip to Gisborne and Napier and get a result feel more satisfied then traveling to the other side of town.  I also played football in Wellington and sometimes orgainising the travel from one side of the city to the other was more confusing/frustrating than traveling from Gisborne.
Starting XI
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Coming from Gizzy I'm sure you'll find traffic lights and round-a-bouts very difficult to deal with. How did you manage? Plus the big road with two or three lanes each way. That must have been scary. Toffeeman2007-06-14 08:37:16
WeeNix
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Being invloved in club finance for the first time this year (for a Wgtn CL club) I have to question why CL exists. We did the trip to Gizzy this year for about 3K which would have been nice to spend on something else eg coaching or strip.  If there was some prize money to aim for then my attitude maybe would be different. The other argument against CL is that over time Phoenix and TW will eventually siphon off the best players and contract them on condition they don't play winter footie. If the best players aren't available then a local premier league with a reserve grade like there was about 4 years ago would suffice. Then CL costs could go into coaching so that any decent players that emerge can be groomed to TW standard and maybe in time Phoenix. Just my thoughts anyway.
Phoenix Academy
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rightstr wrote:
Being invloved in club finance for the first time this year (for a Wgtn CL club) I have to question why CL exists. We did the trip to Gizzy this year for about 3K which would have been nice to spend on something else eg coaching or strip.  If there was some prize money to aim for then my attitude maybe would be different. The other argument against CL is that over time Phoenix and TW will eventually siphon off the best players and contract them on condition they don't play winter footie. If the best players aren't available then a local premier league with a reserve grade like there was about 4 years ago would suffice. Then CL costs could go into coaching so that any decent players that emerge can be groomed to TW standard and maybe in time Phoenix. Just my thoughts anyway.
 
Are you adocating all Wgtn clubs just concentrate on Jnrs and lower grade players as the NZFC will take all good under 19 as well.
WeeNix
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not at all in fact 1st and 2nd teams would still get the best coaching resources available from clubs. I would hope that would mean a very competitive premier league for senior players who don't make TW.

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