The champions are bottom of the ALM but Aloisi says Western can turn their season around

Western United are caught firmly in a horror championship hangover but head coach John Aloisi is confident they can turn their title defence around in the Isuzu UTE A-League.

The defending A-League Men champions sit winless and bottom of the table after shipping 14 goals in five rounds following Sunday’s 4-2 defeat at home to Adelaide United -Western only conceded once at this stage last season.

Western have repeatedly struggled to convert early chances, while last season’s impressive defence has fallen apart.

Leo Lacroix is out of form while Tomoki Imai (shoulder) and Nikolai Topor-Stanley (suspension) are out.

Midfielders Tongo Doumbia and Adisu Bayew, and striker Aleksandar Prijovic are also unavailable.

“We have to make sure that we don’t drop our heads too much because there’s little things that we do have to get better at,” Aloisi told reporters post-game.

“We know that because we’re conceding too many goals and last season that was our strength and this season at the moment, it’s letting us down.

“It (our system) worked for us last year, so I’m sure that’ll work for us again.

“Once we get our five players that we’ve got out at the moment, then we’ll be a lot stronger and then if individuals aren’t playing at their best, it’s an easy decision to then not play them. 

“At the moment, hands are tied behind your back. If a player doesn’t play well, he might have to play next game.”

The second-year boss said he was prepared to deliver hard truths to his charges for the sake of improvement and his players understanding why results weren’t falling their way.

“I’m not there to be loved by the players. I have to be honest with the group and honest with what we’re trying to do at the club,” he said.

“So I’ve got no problem if a player dislikes me for whatever I say to him, but it’s up to the group to stay together. 

“I think the players will be upset if I just sugarcoated everything all the time because then they’re not realising or seeing where we’re going wrong. 

“So I don’t think that will upset the group too much – the group has to stay together. This is  a good opportunity for the group and the club to show how strong we are. 

“It’s easy when you win, it’s not easy when the results aren’t going your way. So this is a good opportunity for that and that’s the way we have to look at it.”

Western play Wellington Phoenix away on Sunday before the FIFA Men’s World Cup break.