A Tale of Two teams: Australia, Italy and the World Cup
Australia chose a rather round about, and dangerous way, of getting to the finals of the FIFA World Cup. Qualifying by
playing a South or Central American opponent has its pitfalls, the most memorable being Argentina at the Allianz Stadium
in 1993. On that occasion, the valiant Australians went down, if only just, losing the return leg in Buenos Aires after
drawing in Sydney.
The Honduran side could not boast players of the ilk of Argentina, but they did have the element of anonymity and
surprise. Their coach, Jorge Luis Pinto, was in a conservative frame of mind, attempting to asphyxiate play in the
middle of the park. The hostilities at San Pedro Sula would also have benefited.
As matters transpired, the Australians managed to hold their own in the first away leg. With Honduras failing to squeeze
anything into the Australian net at home, it was left to the Socceroos to do the rest in Australia, scoring three times,
twice from penalties.
Luck was finally on the side of a team scolded and berated for stretches of the campaign. Their previous encounter with
an unfancied Syria drew barbs of criticism. But after 22 games played over 29 months, Australia had booked its place in
the 2018 World Cup in Russia, a point that took time to settle among the seventy thousand in attendance.
Seeing the Australians qualify belied a gruelling struggle and a campaign of hostility against the
Australian coach, Ange Postecoglou. Last month, a swirling question mark hovered over his future. Was his head on the
chopping block? Had he, in fact, put it there himself? “My focus,” he felt compelled to say in rather fatalistic
fashion, “is these two games. If we don’t get through these two games, there’s no decision to make. That’s the one
certainty.”
Australian fortune could be contrasted with violent sharpness of the fate of Italy. To not see the Azzurri reach the World Cup or the first time since 1958 was seismic, even unsettling. Not that Australian fans would have
minded. Many still remember the encounter in round 16 of the 2006 World Cup, when Australia’s Lucas Neill tripped
Italy’s Fabio Grosso in the Fritz Walter Stadium in Kaiserslautern. The resulting penalty was the only goal scored in
the match. Italy would go on to win their fourth World Cup.
As Grosso would subsequently say, “In this instance when Neill slid in, maybe I accentuated it a little bit. However,
you must remember it was the last minute of an extremely difficult game and everyone was tired.” Australian fans were
less forgiving about the showmanship: Grosso, so went the line, had cheated.
Before the spectators of the San Siro in Milan, Sweden managed to hold the Italians to a scoreless draw, winning by an
aggregate of one goal over both legs. The Swedish side had effectively done what so many Italian sides have done before:
defend their way to victory.
La Gazetta dello Sport went so far as to term the failure “the apocalypse”. “We will not be with you and you will not be with us. Italy will
not participate in the World Cup. There will be inevitable consequences.”
The most immediate consequence was the fate of Italy’s coach, Gian Piero Ventura, who seemed fairly phlegmatic about the
axeman. “Until the playoff we were progressing as foreseen, then we’ve been unlucky not to score against them. I
apologize to the Italians. Only for the result, not for the effort we put in every game.”
It was certainly an effort that prompted questions. At home, the Italians could only muster a one all draw against
Macedonia. In UEFA World Cup qualifying Group G, it finished five points behind group winners Spain, pitting them
against the Swedes.
Ventura did not have long to wait for his fate. “During a meeting called by FIGC president Carlo Tevecchio,” came a
statement on Wednesday from the FIGC, “the failure to qualify for the 2018 World Cup in Russia was discussed.”
Rather brutally, the note goes on to mention the “first order of business” with finality: “from today onwards, Gian
Piero Ventura is no longer coach of the national team.” Ventura’s initial reluctance to resign, rather than face the
sack, seemed to have been prompted by false hope, if not a total lack of awareness.
Oddly enough, his counterpart in Australia will not necessarily be faring much better. Postecoglou has never felt
supported in his role in Australian football, and has his eye on an international football club. Australian football, he
feels, has yet to discover self-respect.
Sweden’s Janne Andersson, in contrast, will be merrily preparing for their campaign in Russia. For football boffins of a
slightly superstitious bent, the occasion of Sweden’s most successful World Cup was the very same tournament Italy
failed to qualify for: 1958.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge and lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne