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Eastern Suburbs 3 v Papakura City 2

Eastern Suburbs won a hard fought battle against a physical Papakura side in a tense premier league match on Sunday. The Lilywhites were missing a number of players through NZ development squad duty and they also lost two of their key players during this match to injury, but they showed great character and resilience to grind out a win.

Conditions were perfect for football as warm sunshine shone down on a very well prepared Madills Farm number 1 pitch. Eastern Suburbs were the first to settle into their rhythm, playing some nice first touch football with crisp passes and good movement off the ball. This was rewarded after 12 minutes when the pressure on Papakura’s back line lead to a corner. This was well delivered into the danger area by Leah Mettam and, as both teams fought to get a head to the ball, it glanced off a Papakura defender, leaving the goalkeeper unable to reach it.

The own goal seemed to shock the visitors into action and from then on the first half was much more evenly contested as Papakura started to assert their physical style of play and began winning many of the midfield battles. Kate Carlton left the pitch with a leg injury mid way through the first half and suburbs were forced to defend deeper and deeper. Papakura created a number of chances including a superb strike from 25 yards out which was heading for the top right of the net until Corina Brown tipped it past the post with an excellent diving save. This was Browns first game back in goal since breaking her wrist in the first game of the season and she made it look like she had never been away, with some great diving stretches and some brave goal mouth scrambles.

The second half started in similar fashion to the first with Eastern Suburbs playing some nice football, creating some good chances but just lacking the final ball. Unfortunately, suburbs central defender and skipper, Rebekah von Dort was forced to leave the field with a leg injury within a few minutes but the rest of the team adjusted to this set back well and they all stepped up to match Papakuras’ physicality. 20 minutes after the break they were awarded a free kick in a dangerous position on the left. The free kick was whipped in by Jade Parris and met well by Molly Bryans to claim her first goal of the season for suburbs.

Eastern suburbs continued to press the opposition and in the 69th minute Jade Paris played a through ball for Hannah Pilley. The Papkura goalkeeper took the opportunity to rush out of her penalty area and attempt to clear but Pilley had continued her run and managed to block the keepers clearance, the ball ricocheting into the goal to put suburbs 3-0 up.

All credit to Papakura for not letting their heads go down at this stage. In fact they came out fighting and found a second wind. They again began to dominate the midfield and eventually found some space wide on the right. A firm cross from the right was finished nicely from close range by Chloe Marthe to give the visitors some hope with 15 minutes still to play. The momentum was with Papakura and they produced an almost identical move a few minutes later , this time the cross from the right wing forcing a own goal.

This lead to a very tense last 10 minutes with Papakura determined to get something out of the match and forcing some further saves from Brown and her defenders as suburbs scrambled to keep the ball out.
As the clock ran down to full time, suburbs had a chance to make it 4 from another well struck free kick by Jade Paris but the Papakura goal keeper made a great save.

Suburbs breathed a sigh of relief as the final whistle blew and they certainly knew they had been in a hard fought match.

These two teams will battle it out again next Saturday in the Kate Shepherd Cup. Judging by this match it should be an exciting contest.

Lilywhites Development and Pathways strategy key to great start in Championship

INTERVIEW | Championship player Jodel Liberty Shai is enjoying the #Lilywhites great start to the league campaign and confident the team can continue to thrive and develop throughout the season under the leadership of coach Jesus Bueno

Jodel said “The transformation from last season has been amazing and I put this down to the clubs #development and #pathways strategy. There are several girls from our Grade 16 Prems team and some fantastic players amongst them!”

“There is no doubt in my mind that the majority will push on to play Lotto NRFL Prems football and I suspect there are a few future Football Ferns as well.”
Talking about her own football journey Jodel said “I started playing football in England for Ossett Albion FC (now Ossett United FC) in 2006 and also represented my local County Football Association (West Riding County Football Association) for a couple of seasons, playing against other regional academy teams such as Leeds United, Newcastle United and Middlesbrough before moving to New Zealand in 2011.

Since arriving in Auckland Jodel added “I had the dream start and won the AFF Grade 14 Prems Division during my first season. I also played several representative games for Auckland Football Federation and in 2015 joined Papatoetoe AFC.”

After a solid season in the Reserves, Jodel seemed destined to make the step up to Prems before an ankle injury and subsequent operation kept her out for a year. “It was gut wrenching and I was devastated. To make it worse upon my return I really struggled with the impact training and matches had on my ankle. It probably took me another year or so to get over it both mentally and physically. In hindsight I probably returned too quickly, but was desperate to get back on the pitch and play again!”

“Having said that my time off the field turned out to be very constructive and during that period I attended the Auckland Football Federation Club Based Referee course, completed my New Zealand Football Level 2 Junior Coaching Award and coached on the AFF Holiday & Schools Programme. I found coaching a great experience, very rewarding and am keen to return, but probably not until my playing days are over and I can give it my full attention as juggling the two is tricky.

Joining Eastern Suburbs in the Championship felt like and turned out to be the perfect fit for me, it’s a great club with awesome coaches and great facilities.
Since my return and joining the #Lilywhites I certainly appreciate playing football more and don’t take it for granted. This has led to a slightly more relaxed approach to football, which I’m not sure is a good or bad thing, but it works for me and like millions of others I enjoy taking to the field each week and giving it my all!

Modest, mild-mannered, and masterful between the sticks: Meet Ernest Wong, ESAFC Number 1.

By Sam Jeffery

When you step into Madills Farm clubhouse, spiritual home of Eastern Suburbs AFC, it is impossible to miss the grand board on the wall which houses the names of all the Lilywhites players to have represented New Zealand at any level. One of the names emblazoned on said board is that of “E. Wong”. Wong represented his national team at the 2007 U17s World Cup and U19s Secondary Schools, and can now generally be found gracefully prowling and commanding the penalty areas of grounds up and down Auckland as the ESAFC number 1. For a man of 23 he has a perhaps surprisingly anecdote-laden career to date, and shared some of his experiences with me for this week’s ESAFC blog.

Having began playing in goal roughly 11th or 12th grade, and first joining Ellerslie, “Ernie” has enjoyed a steady stream of success which has seen him work his way up to undisputed Number 1 at the Eastern Suburbs, via worldly trips to Korea, the UK, Malaysia and Singapore.

Whilst goalkeepers are stereotypically recognized as being of a taller ilk, Wong is built slightly more diminutively, and bases his game on goalkeepers of similar physical stature.

“Huge Lloris or Iker Casillas – Schmeichel was the best ever, but I’d like to be like those two,” Ernie proclaims when questioned on his heroes and whom he aspires to be like. His fondness for the Frenchman Lloris also explains why Ernie sports the 25 on the back of his jersey, rather than the more traditional number 1.

Ernie1

2006 marked the beginning of a fairly meteoric rise – which actually coincides (obviously) with when Wong joined Eastern Suburbs – and culminated in a call up to New Zealand U17s training camps and some game time against Tahiti.

When the squads were announced for the 2007 U17s World Cup in Korea, Ernie was selected, though the details of the call-up elude him.

“It was a really good feeling. The squad was picked but I’m unsure how I was told though! I didn’t get any game time but it was brilliant to be around some of the players”.

Wong is alluding to a number of now-recognised players that play at the highest level.

“I remember Victor Moses scoring and doing back-flips and stuff, and Danny Welbeck. They both scored two actually. And I remember the Rafael twins. The best player was the Spanish dude Bojan [who went on to represent Barcelona and Roma]”.

One moment from the World Cup really sticks in Wong’s memory.

“Memorable moment is definitely the Brazilian players stealing Powerades from our fridge. I was probably the only one that saw them though!”

Fresh from keeping his mouth shut following the scandalous Samba thievery, Ernie returned to Auckland and in 2008 was soon jetting off to England for a collection of tour games arranged by former Auckland City player Paul Seaman (no relation to ponytailed goalkeeping maestro David). Games included West Brom, Colchester, Northampton Town, Charlton and Fulham and Ernie, despite being based in Luton – a town that makes Invercargill look like a glamorous holiday spot – speaks highly of his time in the UK.

“It was a really good experience and I felt a lot sharper when I came back to New Zealand. We were just playing proper games, not coaching clinics or anything. It was great.”

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World Cups and playing against professional English teams are one thing, I hear you cry, but what about the Eastern Suburbs!? In 2009 Wong broke into the Suburbs Reserves for the first time and actually went on to win Player of the Year, though forgot to attend prize-giving.

“I never got my trophy I don’t think”, Ernie chuckles; note to C. Ruffell – pull out the archives, dig into the vaults, let’s find this dust-ridden award.

Recognisable by now due to a ninja-like pony-tail Wong’s stock at Madills continued to rise through the 2010 season and he would soon become Premiers No. 1 the following year.  Barring a minor hiccup it is a position he has held ever since and having returned from yet another overseas adventure at the start of this year, Wong is in as good a form as ever.

“My coach had some contacts in Singapore”, Ernie explains about his early-2014 trip to Asia, “he’d said he could help me get some clubs to train with hopefully.”

Despite training with a club named Geylang International and another called Tampines Rovers, Ernie was convinced it was a dead-end as there was some understandable reluctance from the locals to just let a seemingly random player train.

“I was about to end it there and have the last week to holiday but another contact in Malaysia invited me to train with a team called Kelantan – who’d won the treble a couple of seasons before and the Cup that season.  I trained with them for a week and trained with the best 3 keepers in Malaysia.”

From being despondent in Singapore to getting tips from Malaysia’s number one, Ernie returned to Auckland with another international anecdote and has seen this season’s Eastern Suburbs side roar to the top of the table.

When questioned on the team’s chances, the conviction is clear.

“It’s the youngest team I’ve been involved in, and I’m certain we will win the league”.

Such a forthright declaration bodes well for the remainder of the season, and the Suburbs will hope Wong’s performances remain in “keeping” (pun intended) with his career to date; interesting, enjoyable and ultimately successful.