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A-League's growing pains

Roar Guru
5th July, 2009
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2995 Reads

Following the recent official confirmation of the Melbourne Heart as the 11th A-League license and before the start of A-League V5.0, the FFA will announce next month the winner of the 12th and final A-League license for season 2010-2011.

The FFA had considered 6 bids for the 12th A-League license – one from Tasmania, one from Canberra, one from Wollongong/NSW South Coast and 3 from Sydney’s west.

There were so many good bids for the eleventh and twelfth A-League license, according to the FFA, that they are now looking to expand to 14 teams. Whether that will be the following year in 2011/2012 or not remains to be confirmed.

A year ago I would have thought the second A-League team for Melbourne and for Sydney were a good investment prospect in the two biggest sports and television markets in the country and each city would greatly benefit from a true hometown football derby.

But after what’s been happening around the world in the last year or so, you would start to have doubts about their financial viability.

Melbourne football fans are also not too impressed by the Heart’s chairman and major financial backer Peter Sidwell, who describes himself as a businessman and not a football supporter.

His vision for the Heart is that “ . . . [football] will never replace Aussie rules [in Melbourne], but we will run a very good second in the future.”

Whether he’s right or wrong remains to be seen, but with an attitude like that – running a good second to your main competition – he’s not giving the football community much confidence in his football club management skills and a real desire for the football club to succeed.

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The 9th and 10th A-League licenses have already been awarded to Gold Coast United and North Queensland Fury and pre-season crowds have not been that impressive.

That’s not to say they won’t do well in the season proper, especially the cashed up and very professionally run Gold Coast, but Archie Fraser and the new franchises still have a lot of work to do to get the new A-League clubs entrenched in their neighbourhoods.

Compared to the now defunct National Soccer League (NSL) competition, the A-League has been a success for Australian football and the FFA.

However, most A-League clubs are still struggling financially and not yet recouping their initial outlay.

The FFA is also demanding a minimum of $6M in start up capital, so a new A-League license doesn’t come cheaply. Bidding for an A-League franchise in the current economic climate does come with some risk.

Three bids for a west Sydney A-League franchise is encouraging, but are they based on sound economic and marketing research?

One of Australia’s richest sports administrations is struggling to be able to get a viable AFL team running in western Sydney and yet here we have 3 rival bids to put up $6M for the west Sydney A-League license and in a climate of economic downturn, falling A-League attendances and no guarantees they will ever recoup that outlay.

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Tim Cahill, Lucas Neill and Mark Schwarzer have supported different Sydney and Wollongong/NSW South Coast bids, but have pledged their support for the winning Sydney bid, whichever one that is.

Lucas has already established the Lucas Neill Foundation to support the professional development of junior football players from Sydney’s northern beaches area, where he grew up.

After the next FIFA World Cup in South Africa, he has also offered to play for nothing in his first year for the second Sydney A-League team, in exchange for a financial stake in the new club, if they are successful in getting that A-League license.

The front running bid for the west Sydney license is headed up by Chairman Ian Rowden a former young Socceroo and now a successful businessman. He recently lost his place on the Sydney FC board after the club was taken over by Russian billionaire David Traktovenko.

Rowden was immediately snapped up by one of the west Sydney bids’ chief financial backers Joe Meissner and the bid organiser Berti Mariani. Berti is a good friend of Ian Rowden and they played together for the young Socceroos and in the NSL.

As well as playing for the Socceroos and having played and coached in the NSL, Berti is a businessman and entertainment promoter of some note himself.

If you’ve lived in Sydney and have gone to see live bands in concert like the Radiators, Midnight Oil, The Angels, The Church, MiSex and others, Berti would have been the promoter of the show.

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Berti then moved on to other forms of entertainment promotion and has brought us some of the biggest football matches seen in this country over the past decade.

Meissner, Rowden and Mariani are very confident that their west Sydney bid will be announced by Ben Buckley next month as the successful 12th A-League license winner.

Only time will tell if that proves to be a worthy prize or if the west Sydney A-League club will be another classic case of misguided A-League optimism.

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