PASS and move - that was the Liverpool groove back in 1996 and now it is a style of soccer that Panorama FC coach Brent Huie wants to see his side employ in Bathurst District Football Association's women's premier league.
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It is one he hopes will take them to back-to-back premierships.
Last season Panorama finally wrestled the champions mantle off CSU - a club that had won four consecutive titles - and the and self-belief it instilled in Huie's squad has been clear to see.
Panorama began the 2019 season with a 15-1 win over Macquarie - the biggest winning margin in the club's history - and have since won on the road against Mudgee (6-1), Millthorpe (8-2) and Cowra (6-1).
It has been a start which has pleased Huie, who said the brand of soccer he wants from his players is "Pass and move, that's the Liverpool groove."
"Backing our talent and going out there and having fun, that's the main thing," he said.
"We have been going pretty well, but I think these next two weeks will be our big test, we have CSU and then Eglinton the week after.
"I would have loved a clean sheet at some point, it's a little bit disappointing not to have one four games in, but I guess I'm really just picking there."
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In their most recent match on Sunday against Cowra, an outfit which has stepped up from second grade to premier league this season, Panorama had a less than ideal start.
They conceded after just 32 seconds.
The defending premiers also initially found it difficult to break down Cowra's formation, but, as quality sides tend to do, they kept their composure and adjusted.
By the break it was 4-1 and they found the mark twice more before the final whistle.
Madi Gallegoes finished with four goals while Emily Cochrane and Sarah Browning found the mark too.
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"We hadn't been behind all season, so it was a different thing for them, but they didn't really drop their heads. I think they just had confidence in their own abilities, they knew if they played the football they were capable of they were going to win the game," Huie said.
"Cowra were playing a 4-3-3 and they had a very narrow bank of three in the middle, so there was no space for our midfielders.
"But once they worked that out, that there needed to be one-in, one-out, there was so much space to get around them and they didn't have much pace at the back. We just kept hitting them like that."