Photo: South Hobart's Sam Berezansky shoots. Kingborough's American goalkeeper Kenneth Perkinson deflected the ball wide for a corner. Berezansky also shot narrowly wide on another occasion. [PlessPix]
(NPL Tasmania, South Hobart Oval, Sunday, 19 May 2019)
(NPL Tasmania, South Hobart Oval, Sunday, 19 May 2019)
South Hobart 4 (Hamlett 9, Morton 345,
Lakoseljac 39, Van Doorne 48)
Kingborough
Lions United 2
(Allan 57, Cowen 85)
HT: 3-0 Att:
120 Ref: M Piesse
South Hobart: K Brown
- Gorrie, Bowman, Thomas,
Herweynen - Morton, Feral, Larby - Van
Doorne, Hamlett, Lakoseljac (Subs: Berezansky, Hallam, Ludford, Tooze, Wright)
Kingborough
Lions United: Perkinson
- Smithies-Sharples, Cuthbertson,
Schuth, Zammit - Steele, Downes, Gutierrez Jr, Douce -
Cowen, Allan (Subs: Bostock, Davis, Muir, Sammut, Stalker)
Photo: A LAN Chile Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner flight over Hobart at 38,000 feet [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart;s Kasper Hallam maintains a cool head as he controls the ball while surrounded by three Kingborough players [PlessPix]
Photo: A LAN Chile Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner flight over Hobart at 38,000 feet [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart;s Kasper Hallam maintains a cool head as he controls the ball while surrounded by three Kingborough players [PlessPix]
The
vapour trail over South Hobart Oval before kick-off was not part of South
Hobart coach Ken Morton’s 72nd birthday celebrations.
It
was created by a LAN Chile Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner on its way from Melbourne to
Santiago. It was just a regular flight, and
I doubt that a jet that size would be manoeuvrable enough to write ‘Happy
Birthday’ in the sky.
It
was then down to business on the pitch, which is where Morton was able to
celebrate a 4-2 win which took his side to second place (on goal-difference) on
the NPL Tasmania standings. It was his 106th win in 137 NPL games as a coach.
The
first half was all South Hobart. For the
opening half-hour, play was mostly confined to Kingborough’s half of the field. It was an 11 v 10 game in one half of the
pitch, which would make an excellent training routine.
Photo: South Hobart's Sam Tooze shields the ball from Kingborough's Nick Cuthbertson [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart's Sam Tooze shields the ball from Kingborough's Nick Cuthbertson [PlessPix]
South
Hobart took an early lead when, in the 9th minute, Bradley
Lakoseljac crossed the ball low from the left and Ben Hamlett nipped in to fire
past Kenneth Perkinson.
Nick
Morton made it 2-0 in the 34th minute when he rifled home Adam
Gorrie’s cross from the left.
Lakoseljec
headed home powerfully from Iskander Van Doorne’s left-wing cross in the 39th
minute to make it 3-0 for the home side at the interval.
When
Van Doorne bent a superb low shot just inside the left-hand post 4 minutes
after the resumption to make it 4-0, Kingborough’s goose seemed cooked.
Photo: Kingborough's Keenan Douce (left) pressures former team-mate and now South Hobart defender Tobias Herweynen [PlessPix]
Photo: Kingborough's Keenan Douce (left) pressures former team-mate and now South Hobart defender Tobias Herweynen [PlessPix]
But,
South Hobart again showed their defensive frailty as the Lions hit back with
two simple and easy goals before the end.
It
could have been closer, too. They also
hit the woodwork, while only a last-ditch tackle by Jack Bowman denied Horatio
Gutierrez Jr a goal after he’d done the hard work and actually rounded keeper
Kieran Brown.
Brayton
Allan pulled the first goal back in the 57th minute following a
corner, which yet again demonstrated South Hobart’s vulnerability at
set-pieces.
It
was a little bit tense when Kingborough’s American import Cameron Steele set up Danny Cowen, who made it 4-2 with 5 minutes remaining, but one has to wonder what goalkeeper Kieran Brown was thinking when he gave the ball to Steele.
South
Hobart stood firm, however, and collected the three points and moved to with 5
points of leaders Devonport City.
Photo: Kingborough's Joel Schuth tackles South Hobart's Iskander Van Doorne [PlessPix]
Photo: Kingborough's Joel Schuth tackles South Hobart's Iskander Van Doorne [PlessPix]
South Hobart
coach, Ken Morton, said:
“A
little bit disappointed [in the second half], but credit to them. They gambled a bit and pressed higher up the
field and maybe that’s the time when you don’t play out and go a bit longer and
turn them around and then they’ve got to drop again.
“Maybe
a little bit disappointed in the way we managed the second half, but a 4-2 win
is a good result for us, especially with the young side we had out.
“I
take a lot from the first half. I
thought we played some super football and moved the ball around well. There was a lot of interchange passing moves and,
certainly down the right flank, it was a treat to watch.
“We’ll
take a lot of positives from the game.”
Photo: South Hobart's Ben Hamlett tries to get away from Kingorough's Joel Schuth [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart's Ben Hamlett tries to get away from Kingorough's Joel Schuth [PlessPix]
Kingborough
Lions United’s interim coach, Cameron Ellis, said:
“First
half, very disappointed, and the boys knew that. We had a chat in the rooms at half-time and
the structure we set up was not what we had in the first half and, clearly,
everything we did in the second half was exactly what we’d asked for.
“If
I take a positive from the game, it was probably the result of the second
half. We created more chances and hit
the post. Horatio [Gutierrez Jr] rounded
the keeper and it was a fantastic last-ditch tackled from Bowman at the end
[that prevented a goal]. That would have
made it 4-3.
“But,
the boys will learn from what they did wrong in the first half. The positive I see is that standard that we
set in the second half.”
Photo: South Hobart's Nick Morton squeezes past Kingborough's Chris Downes and Noah Smithies-Sharples [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart's Nick Morton lies injured after a tackle from behind by Chris Downes [PlessPix]
Photo: Qantas flight 63, Sydney to Johannesburg in South Africa, passing over Hobart at 30,000 feet. It's a Boeing 747-438 (ER), registration VH-OEH. Not many people realise that numerous international flights pass over Hobart. [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart's Nick Morton squeezes past Kingborough's Chris Downes and Noah Smithies-Sharples [PlessPix]
Photo: South Hobart's Nick Morton lies injured after a tackle from behind by Chris Downes [PlessPix]
Photo: Qantas flight 63, Sydney to Johannesburg in South Africa, passing over Hobart at 30,000 feet. It's a Boeing 747-438 (ER), registration VH-OEH. Not many people realise that numerous international flights pass over Hobart. [PlessPix]
5 comments:
Don’t forget South put on three youngsters in the second half which would affect the performance
of any side .
No team will win anything by having 10 behind the ball for much of the game.
Boring to watch and the worst thing is that if and when they win the ball
they look up and everyone is level with you or behind. How can you structure forward
moves when everyone is behind you.
Horrible to watch.
The prosecution rests. Same 2 teams to once again win it all in 2019. Will this ever change?
Anon 10:58, if you look at any league around the world, it's the same. EPL for example, any bottom 14 verses any top 6, 10 behind the ball and try and hit on counter. It's modern football.
Leicester won a premiership doing just that, they had 9 behind the ball with Vardy the lone man up front. Boring but effective.
Reply to May 20, 2019 at 11:25 AM
Agreed. Kingo going down 4-2 at D'Arcy St, and winning the second half, is a solid result for where their squad is currently at. How they got it doesn't matter.
Anon 11.25 . I agree with you however they don’t have anyone
as effective as a Vardy or anywhere near as effective as a Vardy.
So why would you try ? May also work if your defence is water tight
and efficient like Leicester was. Comparing apples with oranges,
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