ACL

Western Sydney Wanderers defender Daniel Mullen is seeking redemption inĀ the AFC Champions League final against Saudi Arabiaā€™s AlĀ Hilal having missed out the first time an Australian sideĀ reached the continental showpiece six years ago.

Mullen was fast-trackedĀ into the Adelaide United side for the knockout stages of theĀ 2008 AFC Champions League despite having only been signed upĀ to the professional ranks ahead of the 2008/09 A-LeagueĀ season.

But after the teenagerĀ featured in three of the four games as Adelaide beatĀ Japanā€™s Kashima Antlers and Uzbekistanā€™s Bunyodkor,Ā Mullen was called up to the Australia squad for the 2008 AFCĀ U-19 Championship and subsequently missed theĀ 5-0 aggregate defeat by Japanā€™s Gamba Osaka in the final.

ā€œFor me it is aĀ second chance to play in a final having been there beforeĀ with Adelaide United, but I wasn’t able to play a partĀ in the final as I was away with the U-20 national team,ā€Ā said Mullen who, along with his Western Sydney team-mates,Ā will entertain Al Hilal in the first leg of this yearā€™sĀ final at Parramatta Stadium on Saturday.

“So for me, it is exciting and hopefullyĀ time for some redemption as well. Ā As a team, we are just trying to goĀ about things in the normal way we do in terms of preparationĀ and training, and not play the game before itĀ comes.ā€

Having watched bothĀ legs of the 2008 final from a hotel room in Saudi Arabia asĀ Mullen helped Australia reach the semi-finals of thatĀ yearā€™s AFC U-19 Championship, the full-back is set toĀ feature against Al Hilal having established himselfĀ as a key player for Western Sydney under coach TonyĀ Popovic.

Questions marks doĀ though remain over who will join Mullen in a defence whichĀ has not conceded a goal at Parramatta Stadium in their lastĀ five continental outings, with Australia internationalĀ Ā Matthew Spiranovic pushing for a returnĀ to the side having undergone ankle surgery following theĀ 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Spiranovic, who playedĀ all three games for Australia in Brazil, missed WesternĀ Sydneyā€™s knockout stage wins over Guangzhou and FC Seoul,Ā with off-season acquisition Brendan Hamill partneringĀ captain Nikolai Topor-Stanley in central defence.

Brendon Santalab isĀ another doubt after suffering a hamstring strain in theĀ closing stages of last weekendā€™s 3-2 defeat by Sydney FC,Ā while fellow forward Tomi Juric is short of match fitnessĀ due to a groin strain.Ā 

ā€œTo be honest, we areĀ at the fittest we have been since pre-season started and weĀ have got pretty much everyone coming back from injury andĀ players coming in, so the coaches will have a large group ofĀ players to select from and everyoneĀ  is eager to play in such a massive game,ā€ added Mullen,Ā who has made nine appearances for Western Sydney en route toĀ the final.

ā€œIt is a once in aĀ lifetime opportunity.ā€

Western Sydney wonĀ their group ahead of Japanā€™s Kawasaki Frontale before theĀ back-to-back A-League Grand Finalists earned their place inĀ the final by beating J.League champions Sanfrecce Hiroshima,Ā 2013 AFC Champions League winners GuangzhouĀ  Evergrande from China and last seasonā€™s runners-up FCĀ Ā Seoul from Korea Republic.

But Popovicā€™s sideĀ head into the first leg of the final against Al Hilal havingĀ lost their opening two games of the new A-League season,Ā with the latest suffered after letting slip a 2-0 leadĀ against Sydney FC last Saturday.

ā€œWe know we are hereĀ on merit as we are the two best teams in Asia and we haveĀ proven that in the group stage and knockout stage and weĀ have come up against some quality opposition and outplayedĀ them at times and got the results thatĀ we needed,ā€ said Mullen, who turns 25 the day after theĀ first leg.

ā€œWe can put theĀ A-League in the back of our minds and our full focus is onĀ the final this week.ā€

Two-time Asian ClubĀ Championship winners Al Hilal, though, represent a totallyĀ new challenge for Western Sydney with Popovicā€™s sideĀ having only played teams from the East of the continental upĀ to now.

ā€œIt is good to haveĀ the first game at home because we have got such a good fanĀ base and supporters, and at times they can be theĀ 12th man that we need to get an edge on teams,ā€Ā said Mullen, who will travel to Riyadh with hisĀ team-mates for the second leg of the final on 1 November.

ā€œTo have the firstĀ game here is important as we can hopefully get off to a goodĀ start to set a tone for the second game.ā€

CAPTIONĀ ā€“ DefenderĀ Daniel Mullen has made nine appearances for Western SydneyĀ Wanderers en route to the 2014 AFC Champions League finalĀ against Saudi Arabiaā€™s Al Hilal.

- Advertisement -