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Australian Football Stuff - not worthy of a thread

Forum Phoenix

Well-Known Member
Nice JP. Love Mooy. Great team player and makes us dangerous at any set piece. I think our biggest issues moving forward under Ange is striker. I see plenty of promise in all other positions.
 

Holy

Well-Known Member
Good article on 442 website about Man City scouts keeping a good eye on Mooy. Possibly playing in EPL in not too distant future.

Will try post article a bit later
 

Wombat

Well-Known Member
I cant see him getting a start for City. I can see him playing in EPL but for someone like Palace or Leeds if they go up.
 

Capn Gus Bloodbeard

Well-Known Member
Drive-bys getting charged for assault over.....well, of course, a car park
http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...tion-near-sydney-airport-20170125-gtyr0q.html

A Western Sydney Wanderers player has been charged with assault and two other players are under police investigation after an altercation near Sydney Airport earlier this month.

The 25-year-old player was charged with common assault on Wednesday after an argument about a car parking space on January 5.

It is understood more charges could follow, with other charges being processed.

Police sources told Fairfax Media the incident took place in a quiet street near the airport.

It's alleged a heated argument about the parking spot in the early afternoon quickly turned into a physical confrontation.

The matter was referred to St George Police, who decided to charge at least one player following an investigation.

On Wednesday night, a NSW Police spokeswoman confirmed a charge was laid over the incident.

"About 1pm on Thursday, January 5, a verbal altercation occurred between a 25-year-old man and a 49-year-old man on Duncan Street, Arncliffe, resulting in the younger man punching the older man in the chest," the spokeswoman said.

"The 25-year-old man attended St George Police Station about 2pm today and was charged with common assault."

He was granted conditional bail and will appear at Sutherland Local Court on February 28.

Fairfax Media has sought comment from Western Sydney Wanderers.

Football Federation Australia is aware of the charges
 

Big Al

Well-Known Member
Drive-bys getting charged for assault over.....well, of course, a car park
http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...tion-near-sydney-airport-20170125-gtyr0q.html

A Western Sydney Wanderers player has been charged with assault and two other players are under police investigation after an altercation near Sydney Airport earlier this month.

The 25-year-old player was charged with common assault on Wednesday after an argument about a car parking space on January 5.

It is understood more charges could follow, with other charges being processed.

Police sources told Fairfax Media the incident took place in a quiet street near the airport.

It's alleged a heated argument about the parking spot in the early afternoon quickly turned into a physical confrontation.

The matter was referred to St George Police, who decided to charge at least one player following an investigation.

On Wednesday night, a NSW Police spokeswoman confirmed a charge was laid over the incident.

"About 1pm on Thursday, January 5, a verbal altercation occurred between a 25-year-old man and a 49-year-old man on Duncan Street, Arncliffe, resulting in the younger man punching the older man in the chest," the spokeswoman said.

"The 25-year-old man attended St George Police Station about 2pm today and was charged with common assault."

He was granted conditional bail and will appear at Sutherland Local Court on February 28.

Fairfax Media has sought comment from Western Sydney Wanderers.

Football Federation Australia is aware of the charges
It's Baccas, FoxSport named him in their article
 

JoyfulPenguin

Well-Known Member
Manchester City reportedly received a 6 million pound offer for Aaron Mooy from a Championship side. He'll always be a special player for me, the last ever Heart player...
 

Pirate Pete

Well-Known Member
Dane Ingham has made history, as far as I can tell. The first player to choose to play for New Zealand rather than Australia. As the debate swirls about whether the youth system is nearing collapse, what should we read into this?

Ingham is 17, born and raised in northern NSW by a Kiwi mum, and it's only in the last few months that he's broken into the Brisbane Roar first team. John Aloisi's decision to give him a handful of appearances is exactly what Ange Postecoglou has been imploring A-League coaches to do. Give youth a chance.


In doing so, however, Aloisi showcased a rising talent, and the end result is Australia has lost him to the Kiwis. What makes Ingham's case different to, say, Andrew Durante, Shane Smeltz and Glen Moss – all Australian passport-holders now playing for the All Whites – is that Australia wanted to keep him. Players who feel they have a chance of wearing green and gold don't swap it for white. Archie Thompson – born in the Waikato – is a case in point.

Not Ingham, though. Just last month he was in a camp with the Australian under-20s in Canberra. This week he heads to Fiji having been called up by the senior NZ team. All Whites coach Anthony Hudson reckons he's a big chance of making his debut in the problematic right back position in Lautoka. Maybe that's where the moral of the story lies.


Football Federation Australia staff coaches Ufuk Talay and Josep Gombau tried hard to convince Ingham not to switch. But they couldn't offer him what the All Whites can. An escalator. In 2015, New Zealand hosted the World Youth (U20) Cup. Nine of those players have since been capped by the senior team. Two more youngsters, Luke Rogerson and Henry Cameron, have also debuted. All are 20 years old or younger. That's 11 teenagers capped by NZ in the last two years.

Australia? From the same age group, just one. Alex Gersbach. Last week Postecoglou raised eyebrows by selecting 18-year-old Riley McGree. The reaction from one A-League coach? "He's not ready." Maybe not, but it's a cultural issue which has dogged the game for too long. Players are supposed to work their way through the system, from under-17s to under-20s to under-23s, step-by-step. Only then are they deemed ready for the Socceroos. Poppycock.

Ingham's decision may well be as much personal (older brother Jai has also been called into the All Whites) as professional. But it's a red flag all the same. Somewhere deep in the DNA of Australian football is the mistaken belief we're a first world football country. We might get there one day, but we're not there yet. So we patronise. Giving kids a senior cap is what the small countries – like NZ – do.

Never mind the All Whites, like the Socceroos, are heading to this year's FIFA Confederations Cup. Never mind Hudson has players like Winston Reid and Chris Wood who are doing better than any overseas-based Australians. Never mind Postecoglou would probably kill to have Marco Rojas in his squad. Here, you don't hand out senior shirts – even in the A-League – to kids if you're fair dinkum. You leave that up to the minnows like NZ.

1489884425334.jpg

All Whites: Dane Ingham has chosen to represent New Zealand over Australia. Photo: Chris Hyde
That's got to change. It's something Postecoglou wants to change. There may be a legitimate discussion about whether the Dutch-based doctrine the FFA signed up to a decade ago is producing the right type of footballer. On that score it will be interesting to see how Daniel Arzani – the Melbourne City midfielder held up as the pin-up boy of their methods by the Dutch interlopers – progresses.

But talent can only flourish with opportunity. That's the bottleneck. It's in the A-League, and it's still in the national set-up. It's another reason why establishing a national second division, to be workshopped in Melbourne on Monday night, is so crucial. A 10-team A-League is suffocating the pathway. Another tier of professionalism will let it breathe again.


1489884425334.jpg

Bolter: Riley McGree was the shock selection for the Socceroos. Photo: Getty Images
In the meantime, we should all be cheering for McGree. A few weeks ago, in the Asian Champions League, he swept past Japan's most-capped player, Yasuhito Endo, as if he wasn't there. In McGree's mind, he probably wasn't. Just another player to beat with a swerve, a touch, and a burst of acceleration. That's what needs to be encouraged. That's what you get with youngsters. No fear.
 

Pirate Pete

Well-Known Member
http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...n-rugby-union-has-failed-20170415-gvlogn.html

Just reading this in the SMH. What struck me was the participation rates.
At the end of last year, the federal government's Ausplay survey put club-based participation in football at 1,086,986, or an incredible 18.8 per cent of all participation in the country. For decades, participation numbers of all sports – including football – have been manipulated to suit an argument. This survey has a strong claim for independence, and impartiality. Which is why rival codes such as AFL (625,627) and rugby league (247,883) were unhappy. Rugby? It didn't even make the list.

Rugby league roughly a quarter of football.
 

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