Australia had a very active soccer scene long before the
advent of the ‘A-League’ in 2005 and before the Socceroos spectacularly
qualified for the 2006 World Cup. Domestic Australian soccer in the mid-1960s
at the elite level was dominated by semi-professional ethnic-based clubs and
they played in the various state league competitions around the country. While
there had been an Australian national soccer team competing in official
international matches as far back as the 1920s, there had not been a consistent
national team program beyond periodic meetings with mostly other British
Commonwealth countries such as New Zealand, South Africa and India. Against that
back drop, this is my journal (as a supporter and player) of an important
period from 1965 to 1977 – the era leading to Australia’s first World Cup
appearance in 1974 and the first Australian National League in 1977.
In 1965 I commenced playing competitive soccer for the
Ramsgate under 10 team in the St George area in Sydney. It was coincidentally
the first year that Australia attempted to qualify for the World Cup, the only task
being to defeat the ‘unknown’ North Korea in order to play in the finals to be
held in England in July 1966. The two matches were played in November 1965 in neutral
Phnom-Penh Cambodia, ending with Australia being comprehensively beaten 6-1 and
3-1. Johnny Warren was one of two vice captains in the squad and although not
selected in either game, he later commented that the Australian team had been
thrown in at the deep end and likened the situation to walking into an ambush. The
side contained some talented players such as captain Les Scheinflug, John
Watkiss, Roy Blitz, Pat Hughes, Stan Ackerley and Bill Rorke but there had been
a comprehensive lack of preparation along with inexperience. The Australian national
team spirit or culture had also yet to really evolve.
While the 1965 team had trained for a month in Cairns to
prepare under Yugoslav coach Tiko Jelisavcic from the Hakoah Eastern Suburbs
club, there had been no serious practice matches and indeed very few
international matches in the period after Australia was re-admitted to FIFA in 1963.
Australia had been excluded from FIFA in the late 1950s because the ethnic-supported
Australian Soccer Federation (ASF) had usurped the Australian Soccer
Association who had previously administered the game. Unfortunately the ASF was
so inexperienced that they didn’t schedule any warm up games in Asia prior to the
World Cup matches. The hot and humid conditions in Cambodia, together with the health
hazards posed by the local food and water, seriously affected the Australian team.
And the capacity crowd of 60,000 in the stadium was expected to be neutral but instead
vociferously supported North Korea. The Australian players in this era were
part timers with limited experience while the North Koreans were revealed in
the official match program to be highly disciplined fulltime professionals with
up to 70 international caps apiece who doubled as army personnel. The enormity
of the challenge only became obvious when it was too late.
Defender Stan Ackerley played for APIA & Australia |
Learning these hard lessons would help Australia
considerably in the years ahead although curiously, some Australian coaches in
the 21stt century have lamented our lack of experience in Asia. A
degree of consolation could be taken from North Korea’s subsequent performance
at the 1966 World Cup when the team shocked the world by defeating Italy 1-0
and led Portugal 3-0 in a quarterfinal before succumbing 3-5 thanks to four
goals from the mighty Eusebio.
North Korea at the 1966 World Cup in England |
At club level in NSW the Italian-sponsored APIA Leichardt
was a dominant force, winning the 1965 Grand Final with a 2-0 victory over St
George Budapest. The following 1966 season produced a bumper haul of trophies
for APIA including the Ampol Cup (v Hakoah 1-0), Federation Cup (v St George
3-2), Australia Cup (v Hakoah 2-0) and the Premiership. The club attracted a
large following, being blessed with an array of skilful and formidable players
such as Phil Bottalico, Johnny Giacometti, Ricardo Campana, Archie Blue, John Watkiss,
Pat Hughes, Stan Ackerley, Cliff Van Blerk and goalkeeper Bill Rorke. The 1966 Grand
Final appropriately brought together APIA and Hakoah Eastern Suburbs who were
the top two teams in the premiership that year. It was the first Grand Final
I’d attended and it was played in torrential rain at the Sydney Sports Ground,
the best soccer ground in Sydney in those days for both spectators and players.
One memorable incident occurred when APIA striker Giacometti took a free kick
from the edge of the penalty area and nonchalantly placed it over the defensive
wall into the top right hand corner past Hakoah goalkeeper Peter Fuzes. The
referee immediately found a problem and ordered the kick to be retaken with
Giacometti calmly putting the ball into the exactly the same place and this
time the goal stood! It was audacious skill worthy of the premiership’s top
scorer with 22 goals for the season. Hakoah were nevertheless not going to be
denied and they stole the show with a late disputed goal by Gerry Hood to
record a 2-1 win. The early sending off Ricardo Campana never helped APIA’s
cause. Johnny Giacometti went on to finish with a remarkable 103 goals in 104
matches for APIA in the 1963 to 1968 period.
Johnny Giacometti |
APIA Leichardt |
Soccer has evolved over the years and the style of the game
has changed but many would be surprised at entertainment value of the best
games of those times. Unfortunately very little film or video footage exists
from NSW club matches in the 1960s and 1970s. The ABC televised some of the
most important matches and some games were covered live, all in ‘glorious’
black & white with the smooth commentary of Martin Royal. The atmosphere at
the grounds could often be electric with the ethnic rivalries between the teams
adding substantial needle like a mini-World Cup, tempers occasionally bubbling
over but nothing like some rugby league commentators of the day would have had
you believe. The various sporting codes and media were very parochial and soccer
had to fight for whatever coverage it could obtain. Each NSW first division club
had a first grade, second grade and third grade team, providing a full day of
entertainment for only a few dollars admission. Whoever wanted to view the games
really had to be at the grounds because the internet, youtube, tablets and
mobile phones had yet to be invented.
Hi, I am interested in Australian soccer between 1959-1963. You seem to have a lot of records at your disposal. Could you please let me know if you have any photos or footage of Herbert Ninaus who played in Australia for Hakoah and Prague during those years? I am his daughter and would love to see anything you may have. Alternatively could you please advise who or where I could contact to find such footage? Thank you, Niki
ReplyDeleteHi Niki, Thanks for your questions and apologies for my late response. Your father’s name Herbert Ninaus is well known to me but unfortunately, I don’t have much information regarding the earlier period you mentioned. However, there’s a short video here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jl3YMPhetvs of the 1962 grand final that I’m sure you’ll find extremely interesting. I can also tell you about your father’s last season with Hakoah (Sydney) in 1966 which included winning the grand final 2-1 against APIA, a match that I attended as a youngster. He scored 11 goals in the premiership that year as well as 1 goal in the finals series, 5 goals in the pre-season Ampol Cup, 3 goals in the Federation Cup and 4 goals in the Australia Cup. In 1967 he played for Canterbury Marrickville, appearing in 14 matches and scoring 11 goals. He certainly had an impressive goal scoring record.
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