David Votoupal
Well-Known Member
How many feel that there is a greater urgency in the need for a coaching revolution in this country, and especially in the A-League? The reason being that too little new blood in coaching, too little outside influence, is causing something of a stagnation in this competition.
We have to ask ourselves how the standard of the league can possibly improve without an improvement on the coaching and tactical side of things, and how it's affecting player development- especially when so many of these players are touted as future Socceroos and candidates for a move abroad, where technical standards and tactical awareness are invariably higher- even in the lower leagues of Europe, and I'm sure the best managers there would wipe the floor clean tactically.
The solution is not to discard local coaches altogether, but import at least moderately well-known foreign coaches with proven records to show everyone in the league how it's done. This is exactly how Japan got its act together when the J-League began in the early 90s- and some very high profile coaches, including one who now managers in the Premiership, passed through the ranks and left an undeniable influence on many aspects of the Japanese game- and now we see Japanese coaches like Akira Nishino who have won the ACL with Gamba, clearly bearing the stamp of that influence. It's time we broaden our horizons and do the same here.
I can tout people who'd be most welcome on our shores to do the same things that foreign coaches had done in Japan. Surely it's not out of reach? How can progress be possible then if we were to stubbornly ignore such opportunities.
We have to ask ourselves how the standard of the league can possibly improve without an improvement on the coaching and tactical side of things, and how it's affecting player development- especially when so many of these players are touted as future Socceroos and candidates for a move abroad, where technical standards and tactical awareness are invariably higher- even in the lower leagues of Europe, and I'm sure the best managers there would wipe the floor clean tactically.
The solution is not to discard local coaches altogether, but import at least moderately well-known foreign coaches with proven records to show everyone in the league how it's done. This is exactly how Japan got its act together when the J-League began in the early 90s- and some very high profile coaches, including one who now managers in the Premiership, passed through the ranks and left an undeniable influence on many aspects of the Japanese game- and now we see Japanese coaches like Akira Nishino who have won the ACL with Gamba, clearly bearing the stamp of that influence. It's time we broaden our horizons and do the same here.
I can tout people who'd be most welcome on our shores to do the same things that foreign coaches had done in Japan. Surely it's not out of reach? How can progress be possible then if we were to stubbornly ignore such opportunities.