The return of the forgotten player: Jonas Salley
By dasilva, 23 Feb 2009 dasilva is a Roar Guru
Somehow things went all wrong for Jonas Salley. He was in excellent form in the beginning of the season and had a stranglehold on the defensive midfielder position.
He then took the Australian citizenship test and passed it with flying colours and was free to represent Adelaide United as a local player for the Asian Champions League.
Or so he thought.
Adelaide United and FFA, whom Adelaide United took their advice from were unaware of a recent FIFA rule change where Jonas Salley had to be living in Australia for five years to be eligible as a local player for any continental or international competition despite the fact that he is an Australian citizen.
He had to sit and watch as Adelaide made their historic run to the ACL Grand Final. Even worse, he had to sit and watch Adelaide United in the A-League matches as well.
It’s one of the greatest mysteries of Adelaide supporters why Jonas Salley suddenly found himself on the outer.
This mystery intensified as the team started tiring and struggling to keep up with the tough schedule of playing both the ACL and the A-League at the same time. That could be partly explained in that Vidmar was trying to keep team cohesion during the ACL period by playing the first team regularly.
However, when the ACL finished and Adelaide had to play a few catch-up matches – and with Vidmar publicly explaining that fatigue was the reason for poor performance - the fresh Jonas Salley was still on the outer and then later it was announced that the club would release him when his contract expired.
His omission was starting to make some sense when Vidmar started lashing out about club politics during that infamous press conference. After clearing the air with the board, Costanzo, Diego and Salley returned to training with the first team.
Surprisingly, only Salley out of that trio made a return to the first XI and what a return it was.
In my opinion he was the man of the match, playing inspirational football. He worked tirelessly, dominated the midfield, won many tackles, grab many interceptions, showed good distribution, good technique and even surprised with some flair as he attempted a bit of dribbling and a back-heel pass. He was primarily responsible, with the help of Paul Reid, in controlling the first half and you could almost divide the match into two periods; the period with Salley and the period without him.
He was then inexplicably subbed off (oh, not politics again) in the 78th minute to a well-deserved standing ovation for his performance. It was no surprise that Queensland Roar had their best chances of the match after Salley was gone.
After a performance like that I hope Adelaide reconsider their decision to let him go. Whether it was Vidmar’s fault for not picking him, the club’s fault in interfering with football matters or Salley’s fault for handling the ACL omission poorly and not behaving as professional as he should, surely with a performance like this he earn the right to stay at the club. However, if he does still leave after the Grand Final, I and other fans will remember him fondly for this match.
Thanks for the memory Jonas.
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Ryan Steele said | February 23rd 2009 @ 8:39am | Report comment
It wasn’t inexplicable at all. He’s been having trouble with his hamstring, and it was extremely tight come the time he was taken off the field. Had he not been taken off, it would have lead to a severe injury.
Having said that, he had a marvelous game, and many of Adelaide’s praises are directed towards him for his efforts.
Tom said | February 23rd 2009 @ 8:57am | Report comment
Almost certain to start next week. Expect him to kick some chunks out of Hernandez early.
dasilva said | February 23rd 2009 @ 9:02am | Report comment
Ryan
Yeah I found out after I’ve already submitted my article. Aurelio later said his hamstring was about to get off the bone. Sorry viddie.
I initially thought it was a strange substitute when I was watching it live, afterward after I went home I was reading a few match reports and analysis of the preliminary final and none of them mention the reason behind the substitute and one of them also said that it was inexplicable substitute as well.
jimbo said | February 23rd 2009 @ 11:40am | Report comment
Barbiero was the other missing piece of the pissant puzzle.
He should’ve started against MV.
Will be interesting to see with Cassio returning who will start in AU’s midfield and who marks El Zorro and what sort of a game we’ll see with a tighter AU and looser MV midfield.
Kazama said | February 23rd 2009 @ 11:51am | Report comment
Barbiero played very well on Saturday however he is inconsistent. He was terrible in the first leg against Melbourne, in particular his passing and shooting was very ordinary. This is why he still hasn’t been signed for next season. He will have to bring his A game to the Dome if he is picked. He could be the match winner, but also the weak link.
Adam Pearce said | March 9th 2009 @ 4:34am | Report comment
A birdie told me that Mr.Salley had a penchant for getting pissed regularly and had rather poor discipline according to the club stemming from that he wasnt going stupid like our friends in the AFL or the NRL but he would drink the night before matches et al apparently.The fact he or any of his fellow pissheads in the A-league havent being stupid and started fights in pubs and kept there drinking out of the spotlight has meant that this could be sorted behind closed doors like it should be and not turned into a f**king three ring circus by sports media desperate for a mid-week story.
Enough with the gossip a machine of a player did all the hard things and was the consummate grafter and by all accounts a good bloke and it will be sad to see him go.
Farewell Jonas and thanks for the memories especially when you twatted i think it was steve pantelidis or KFC Hernandez in a pre-season match in Tassie against the tards.