midfielder
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The article below is from the NZ Herald (NZ biggest newspaper) and from one of their chief RU journalist.
He talks about how the Nix's management have let the crowd have the chance to jeer and shout...
At Aussie I hate the way the ground announcer has to speak right up to and sometimes past the kick off...
At BT this is also starting to happen as the last adds and the ground announcer i think feeling no sound time is dead time...
The hope this article by Chris Rattue is read by our management and FFA... interesting to read how good the Nix are at creating a good feel...
He talks about how the Nix's management have let the crowd have the chance to jeer and shout...
At Aussie I hate the way the ground announcer has to speak right up to and sometimes past the kick off...
At BT this is also starting to happen as the last adds and the ground announcer i think feeling no sound time is dead time...
The hope this article by Chris Rattue is read by our management and FFA... interesting to read how good the Nix are at creating a good feel...
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/soccer-football/news/article.cfm?c_id=86&objectid=10628039&pnum=0
Playoff excitement is music to the ears
By Chris Rattue
Wellington Phoenix fans have been thrilled by their team's successful run this season. Photo / Getty Images
Soccer is suddenly top of the pops - and without a song.
The stunning, exhilarating A-League playoff match in Wellington on Sunday - when the Phoenix beat Perth via a penalty shootout - was as good as sport has been in this country for many a year.
Not since the days when Richard Hadlee was in his prime and one-day cricket on the rise have we witnessed such spontaneous jubilation and a crescendo of noise out of a New Zealand stadium to match the soccer scenes from Wellington this year.
Sunday's wildly enjoyable playoff game was - to be brutally honest - decidedly A-League in standard, but the crowd lifted it way beyond that.
The whole Phoenix organisation deserves a mighty congratulation for the success of this season. Ricki Herbert has pieced together an excellent and entertaining side that has won the hearts of a willing audience.
What a pleasure, to enjoy a real sporting atmosphere, and not one ruined by the sort of musical interludes that have demeaned rugby and cricket.
Yes, there were a few bars of music on Sunday but only as the players prepared for the penalty shootout. This was not down to the Phoenix either, because playoff matches are run by Football Federation Australia (FFA).
Usually, there is some music at the Wellington stadium as the crowd filters into the ground, but that's about all folks.
The crowd is allowed to rule, as it also did so magnificently when the All Whites beat Bahrain to qualify for the World Cup finals.
Swamping sport with pop songs sends out a message all right - that your event can't stand on its own two legs.
Crowds should be left to create their own, genuine, atmosphere - both good and bad. If the game is rubbish, or your team stinks, then a decent round of booing is well in order if the crowd feels so inclined.
As Wellingtonians have shown, sport should be a blank canvas on which you can paint your own atmosphere.
Gaps in the play are there to discuss the game, or make new friends, or scream and yell as you please, and not to have yet another yawn, yawn, yawn Jordan Luck ditty shoved down the ear drums.
Phoenix officials told me the club deliberately canned the music to let the crowd reaction thrive. The Phoenix have been heartily rewarded, including with a stretch of 18 games without defeat at home.
The players have told club boss Tony Pignata that while there may be only 9000 people in the stands sometimes, the number feels more like 20,000.
Yes, soccer's continuity means there are fewer gaps to fill compared to other sports. But we used to revel in rugby and cricket without a faceless DJ implying that we weren't capable of enjoying a sport for the sport's sake.
Roll on the Phoenix, without the rock.
* The FFA must step up the campaign to secure the Phoenix's future in the A-League. Believe it or not, the new darlings of the competition have a licence only until the end of next season, and a threat still hangs over the club's head.
Leading Australian soccer pundit Michael Cockerill yesterday signalled just how much events have turned. Whereas once New Zealand soccer needed help from across the Tasman, the A-League now needs the vibrant Phoenix club and the outstanding Wellington crowds, he wrote.
Only 4000 people turned up to watch Newcastle beat the Gold Coast in a playoff; there were nearly 25,000 at Westpac Stadium on Sunday.
Not only is this a good look for the A-League, which competes in a very tough market, but Football Federation Australia will be doing cartwheels because it takes the risk and profit from playoff games.
The Phoenix estimate that the FFA would have made $770,000 from Sunday's game, and the next semifinal against Newcastle on March 7 is headed for a sellout and will be worth even more.
Australia is in the Asian federation, having quit Oceania. The powerful Asian conference leader Mohammed Bin Hammam wants the Phoenix thrown out of the A-League because New Zealand is in the Oceania region.
Furthermore, should the Phoenix survive he wants them to operate under the standard A-League quota system of five overseas players, with New Zealanders in the Phoenix regarded as overseas players (the Asian Champions League quota is three overseas players - something the Phoenix would happily abide by).
World soccer works hard to promote the game in every country, developing professional leagues while avoiding the creation of soccer ghettos.
These are noble aims and the rules work in most situations.
So Hammam's position is not unreasonable under normal circumstances. But there is no hope of a professional league ever being sustained in New Zealand. And Oceania is so isolated and weak that it makes sense for the region to tap into the strength of Australian and Asian soccer.
The game is battling on quite well as shown by Auckland City doing remarkably well at this year's World Club Championships, although the Phoenix club is starting to cast a long shadow.
The crucial point, however, is that the Phoenix are succeeding beyond many of our wildest dreams. Soccer-mad Kiwi kids have a very tangible professional future to aim for. The world game is finally back on the rise in New Zealand, and to destroy the Phoenix would be to send the game back to the dark ages. To keep waving an axe over the club's head is ridiculous.
Commonsense, you feel, will prevail. Fifa leader Sepp Blatter is in the Phoenix's corner.
But the time has come for resolution. The Phoenix are desperate for security in the form of Asia's approval and the standard 10-year A-League licence. The club needs this, so it can continue to build a squad, satisfy sponsors and keep the game charging forward in this country.