Australia to ‘spoil the party’ after Turkey’s captain takes pot shot at Socceroos
Hakan Calhanoglu said he expects Turkey to dominate the group match because his team are “more talented”.
Australia arrived in Vancouver on Saturday (AEST), a little more than 24 hours before its opening-round match with Turkey, the 22nd-ranked nation, which is making its first appearance at the tournament in 24 years. It is expected that at least 10,000 Socceroos fans will be inside the 54,000-capacity BC Stadium for the Group D clash.
And Turkey captain Hakan Çalhanoglu has helped further ignite Sunday’s clash, telling reporters after training that he predicts his side will dominate the Socceroos because they have “more qualities and a more talented team”.
Popovic did not buy directly into the remarks, but said he believes it was a sentiment shared by the other teams in Group D – the US and Paraguay – and it was up to the Socceroos to prove them wrong.
“All we can do is try and spoil the party; that’s our challenge tomorrow, and that’s what we have to do.”
Popovic gave nothing away on how he intends to do that. On team selection, all he offered was that he was in the fortunate position that all 26 members of his squad were available. He also dismissed any fitness concerns around forward Mohamed Touré, saying the Norwich City striker had been absent from training earlier in the week because of a “runny nose”.
Touré later trained in front of the media following the press conference in a late session on the eve of the game.
Despite missing the past five World Cups, Turkey will start as favourites. Their starting XI will probably include two of the brightest young stars at the tournament: 21-year-olds Kenan Yildiz, who plays club football with Juventus, and Real Madrid’s Arda Güler. Popovic, however, was reluctant to single out any particular threat in the opposition.
“We know they are strong; we’ve analysed them, but we also have to think of ourselves and think about how we can cause them problems and show Australian football at the World Cup,” Popovic said.
“That’s our aim tomorrow, to be extremely competitive, to show that we are a strong nation, and that we deserve to be respected. We understand that not many people are expecting much from us outside of our own people, our own media, our own team, our own staff, but we’re accustomed to that.”
Earlier this month, former United States international Alexi Lalas said Australia would struggle “against better quality competition and the elites of the world”. The clear difference being pundits weren’t lining up against the Australian team 24 hours later.
“Of course, our coach analysed them with us together,” Calhanoglu told media in Vancouver. “We know that they’re a physical team, that they’re good at
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