We need to listen to Fozz on the A-League crisis
By Adrian Musolino, 16 Apr 2010 Adrian Musolino is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- A-League, Ben Buckley, Craig Foster, FFA, football, John O’Neill, SBS, Zeljko Kalac

Sydney FC's Simon Colosimo tackles Gold Coast United's Jason Culina during round 23 of the A-League at the Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney, Jan. 17, 2009. AAP Image/Dean Lewins
In a time of crisis, critical analysis and informed opinion are required to delve into the issues that are causing that crisis. At this time of crisis, the A-League, FFA and football supporters need to listen to the likes of football pundit Craig Foster.
Few sporting pundits are as divisive as Foster, the result of his impassioned pleas for Australia to adopt a more aggressive football strategy and his controversial views on other football codes.
Fuelled by the flawed perception amongst the football community, particularly with diehard A-League fans, that there is some sort of bias against the league from SBS having lost its “home of football” title to Fox Sports, Foster is a popular target, particularly considering his forthright views on the league’s standard and quality, let alone the emotion in which they are presented.
These critics of Foster are, however, missing a key point and showing an overbearing protectionism of the A-League that is doing it no good whatsoever.
Rather, Foster is exactly what the A-League needs.
At this time of expansion and stagnation there needs to be serious analysis of the direction in which football is going, particularly at such a critical juncture with the A-League’s clubs’ financial sustainability in question and the World Cup bid reaching its culminating stages.
Informed opinion, no matter how forthright, is desperately needed in an environment which has so visibly stagnated, particularly in a country where football remains a niche sport, continues to suffer obvious growing pains and, most importantly, lacks a wide reaching mainstream football media educated enough to critic and question accurately, separate to the melodrama and bias of the Rebecca Wilsons of the world.
The game needs for voices such as Foster’s to speak up for the alternative is allowing the rulers of the game to take the sport in a wrong direction with no independent voice calling them out on the errors of their way.
(While we are at it, a nod to former Socceroo Zeljko Kalac and his forthright opinion on A-League coaches)
Foster’s latest offering on The World Game’s Shootout feature is a case in point.
He outlines the following points on the A-League’s development:
- Capital driven rather than market driven approach not working.
- No direction on clubs’ football development from the FFA. John O’Neill’s lack of football knowledge meant the A-League’s birth lacked football development, despite commercial success.
- Community support is a fundamental pillar of a football club and it’s lacking in the A-League due to lack of support.
- The FFA should have considered expanded into Melbourne and Sydney sooner, perhaps from inception, as it’s sustainable due to the market size.
- Stadium deals and sizes debilitate finances and atmosphere.
- Leadership vacuum at the FFA – Ben Buckley’s leadership isn’t strong enough in the current climate, lacking a strategy in expansion areas, weak response to rival codes and is making the same mistakes.
These aren’t fallacious points.
These are the realities of the situation faced by the game. These are the informed opinions of a highly respected former player, commentator and an executive for five years with the Australian Professional Footballers’ Association (APFA).
They should be highly sought after and valued, not derided based on a false perception.
Meanwhile, Foster’s position as football’s premier pundit is likely to be cemented when he releases his highly anticipated book.
Fozz on Football is set to be released in May, and will be heavily promoted during SBS’s World Cup coverage from June.
According to the publisher: “Foster will explain the game and how Australia can develop to become a serious threat to footballing nations.
“He will explore the national styles of various influential countries and how that translates into a game that people love.
“He will also look at how the game in Australia is played, the goalkeepers and strikers, the past and the present, and importantly how Australia can maximize its opportunities.”
It will undoubtedly be as controversial and divisive as his work on SBS, but with valuable opinions and lessons nevertheless.
And that is the key point that is lost by the critics of the Fozz.
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- Explore:
- A-League, Ben Buckley, Craig Foster, FFA, football, John O’Neill, SBS, Zeljko Kalac


April 16th 2010 @ 10:03am
Phil E Buster said | April 16th 2010 @ 10:03am | Report comment
Ridiculous puff piece on Foster. Are you getting royalites for Fosters book Adrian, or simply smarming for a position at SBS?
April 16th 2010 @ 10:19am
Towser said | April 16th 2010 @ 10:19am | Report comment
My thoughts are all opinions are worthy & needed. Even A drunk Zelco is better than no Zelco.
Because as far as I could see prior to Johnny Warrens death,his was the lone voice,most of the time in the wilderness.
Now that football has come out of the wilderness many voices,opinions are heard.
Means that football & its various constituents care & that cant be a bad thing.
April 16th 2010 @ 10:25am
md said | April 16th 2010 @ 10:25am | Report comment
To my knowledge, Foz has never administered anything bigger than his own bank account.
Whilst it’s great that he has ideas about how the league should be run, they are simply the ideas of an ex player who is in the privileged position of paid pundit. Let’s not make his expertise out to be any greater than it really is.
The sorts of people we should be listening too are (perhaps) Edwin Lugt who has run the Dutch second division, along with current and ex execs of the J league and MLS (being the only decent leagues that were started from scratch in modern times).
April 16th 2010 @ 11:52am
Midfielder said | April 16th 2010 @ 11:52am | Report comment
Cough Cough a copy of a couple of answers I have on NUFCMVFC thread… explains what I think…
The answer is difficult … how to connect to the greater football family … get them to watch and go to matches… a rather simple arguement put up by lets say the Fozzie folk is just play better HHHHMMMMmmm certainly a big part but hugly over the top to assume if we increase our technically standards all will fall before us… This group by constantly say they have the answer do IMO more harm than good they are often like zealouts in their belief…. and constantly put down the A-League.
Like all complex models there is no one answer… but a number of answers and a number of things need to come together… Without doubt increasing our technically ability across the all levels is important … but there has been much work and investment in this area now and over the pass few years it is now more a matter of time..
That we need to marketing skills, both in a general sense and a football sense… We need better access to key stadiums… more media… and supportive media rather than a media constantly pointing out faults with rare good stories… a plan for each club… and in time the A-League running it’s own show seperate from FFA … HMMMMM or maybe a kinda commission or whatever the AFL calls it..
What is needed to make all this happen is money… with 4 years to run on the current media deal it is difficult to see much happening IMO… untill we get some real money to the A-League teams and FFA have some real money to spend it is going to be difficult..
I don’t have the answers but I do not it is a broad range of things … but it is not …lets get football folk as the issues are very complex in a very competative sporting market … and very a very aggressive AFL.
I do know it is a big task and we have to find an Australian solution based around the way Australians watch sport.
…………………
Whatever we may think of JON & BB… they have brought a level of general acceptance to football never seen in Australia before… But the time has come the Walrus said to think of many things … and now is a good time to think of a few moe things.
The comments about football people not being in charge is only correct to a point .. if they engage good football people below them as MV have done it is not an issue… Con at Newcastle is very knowledgeable about football, very well connected to the NSL ways … and is a dope … not unlike Clive….
Each club needs a marketing plan that suits the market / area they play in.. these club plans should fit within a conceptual football plan that FFA could develop.. a simple example is for clubs, stadium security, stadium management, home end groups meet regularly to determine what is and what is not acceptable behaviour…
It makes sense to me for FFA to develop a broad based conceptual framework for the clubs to work and plan within..
But at the end of the day if a club has a dud in charge then it is a dud you get.. Look at Con very passionate, very knowledgeable, but with a value system that has him wanting to be involved in every single decision…
April 16th 2010 @ 1:01pm
Mister Football said | April 16th 2010 @ 1:01pm | Report comment
Fos stirring up some trouble without even having to pen anything – good to see!!
April 16th 2010 @ 1:10pm
jupiter53 said | April 16th 2010 @ 1:10pm | Report comment
Bag Fozz all you like but he is right about some things.
He is right that we need to get past the “English” influence on our game. There is no reason we can’t keep toughness, willingness to work hard etc because they are already part of our national style anyway.
What we can do is also take from other more successful football cultures.
Why on earth wouldn’t we want to model ourselves on Barcelona – so obviously the best team in the world – and a team where success is based on skill.
We are already playing 4-3-3 at youth level and that’s the basis of Barcelona’s style. We should be stealing from their youth academy program – if it’s good enough to develop players like Messi, Xavi, Iniesta, Pique etc then it’s good enough for us.
April 16th 2010 @ 9:00pm
Midfielder said | April 16th 2010 @ 9:00pm | Report comment
ERRRRRRRRrrrrrrrrrrr HMMMMMMmmm … was it not the National Director appointed by BB and FL that brought that in… me thinks a tad to much credit to Mono Man (Fozzie (can only talk about technical issues and how bad the English are) )
For me Mono Man can not even stand in JW shadow
April 16th 2010 @ 2:15pm
Australian Football said | April 16th 2010 @ 2:15pm | Report comment
“It’s hilarious that anyone would give Fozz the time of day.”
Even more hilarious that an AFL Bulldogs supporter would use a Canterbury Bankstown Rugby League Bulldogs motif on his profile Pippi..
Fozzie, has stated since his time at SBS (7 years) a lot has changed for the better. I can concur with him on that—he has been challenging the establishment for seven years and a lot of what he has been saying has always been for the betterment of Australian Football.
——-
AF
April 16th 2010 @ 2:51pm
Dogz R Barkn said | April 16th 2010 @ 2:51pm | Report comment
We might be playing 433 at youth level – but we’re also getting pumped at youth level, and our performance are nowhere near the consistency we managed from the late 1980s all the way through to the start of the 2000s at U17 and U20 level.
Is toughness and willingness to work hard part of our national style, and non-existent in other styles?
How much toughness (both mental and physical) did Bresh show at the 89th minute of Australia’s last WC game?
Who worked harder? Grosso or Bresh and Neill?
Which Australian defender can carry the bags of Materazzi or Vidic?
April 16th 2010 @ 3:53pm
Art Sapphire said | April 16th 2010 @ 3:53pm | Report comment
Dogz aka Mister Football . Can you please desist from using 2 different signatures in the one thread.
Pip disappeared and he has come back as a two-headed monster. What are you trying to prove?
You even go so far as claiming not to know anything about the infamous ‘fos’ article that you wrote.
Please get rid of one of your titles and stop hiding. Its not a good look.
April 16th 2010 @ 5:34pm
Dogz R Barkn said | April 16th 2010 @ 5:34pm | Report comment
I can’t speak for the Roar editors, but I honestly doubt they would allow someone to post with two tags.
I’ve been on the Roar for 4 or 5 months now, and this is the very first time I have ever been accused of being someone else.
I am not someone else.
I am who I am.
April 16th 2010 @ 7:15pm
Australian Football said | April 16th 2010 @ 7:15pm | Report comment
Not two but with three tags with three different email addresses no doubt.
April 16th 2010 @ 5:48pm
Australian Football said | April 16th 2010 @ 5:48pm | Report comment
Art,
I second that motion. Why are the moderators allowing this to happen?
April 16th 2010 @ 4:07pm
Victer said | April 16th 2010 @ 4:07pm | Report comment
Dogz bang on the money again. Don’t forget it was foster and co that pushed for all these extra a-league rounds in a comp with cash flow problems already and teams that don’t have deep playing rosters. No wonder victory got pounded in the acl. All because Australia was bound to be a new european nation.
We had a good thing going, a nice league that was played throughout spring and summer with finals. Everything has to now go back to basics again with a 22 round season. We are not Germany, we have to live within our means.
April 16th 2010 @ 4:46pm
gingerbeer said | April 16th 2010 @ 4:46pm | Report comment
I have to agree that is has to be community driven, if you think you are apart of something you are unlikely to let it die.
I also think that the A- League has to be focusing on junior football .
Simply protecting clubs or proping them up is not sustainable and wont last.
Its a capitalistic venture in a free market economy if you dont survive you die. fittist or smartest survive.
April 16th 2010 @ 5:16pm
David V. said | April 16th 2010 @ 5:16pm | Report comment
We need not to adopt a system based on nationality, but based on style and philosophy independent of nationality. We need proper inspiration.
Brian Clough got his teams playing football the right way, as did Ron Atkinson, Ron Greenwood, Bill Nicholson and Eddie Turnbull – and none of those were continental or Latin American were they?