Why football is hamstrung in this country
By Adrian Musolino, 29 Jun 2010 Adrian Musolino is a Roar Expert
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- 2010 World Cup, Daily Telegraph, football, Harry Kewell, rebecca wilson, Socceroos, World Cup
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Leave it to Rebecca Wilson, the leader of the anti-“soccer” brigade that still inhabit pockets of the mainstream press, to unfairly kick the boot into the Socceroos and the World Cup. With sweeping generalisations and tired old stereotypes, her latest offering proves why pockets of resistance will never give “soccer” a fair chance in this country.
Wilson is entitled to her opinion, as we all are, but there are major flaws in her argument that need to be highlighted, otherwise she’ll be allowed to get away with such misinformation.
She writes: “This bunch of blokes who appear to have let themselves – and us – down very badly at the World Cup in South Africa.”
Ask diehard Socceroos fans or casual fans alike if the Socceroos let us down as they gallantly went down fighting against Serbia and the answer will be an overwhelming ‘no’. The Socceroos were a goal away from progressing to the knockout stages having rebounded from a four-goal defeat.
Australians like her need to wake up to the reality that this final frontier for Australian sporting success – winning a football World Cup – will be its greatest challenge, given the immense difficulty of taking on and beating so many footballing nations of such a high standard in the only truly global sport.
Not appreciating the huge depth and breadth of world football is the great flaw in non-football fans’ understanding of the game, and it’s why they can so easily label Australia’s performances as “ordinary” against countries as gifted as Serbia, Ghana and Germany.
Only when they understand where the Socceroos have come from and where they are now will these doubters be able to embrace the team and the game; relishing the challenge and not dismissing because of it.
Such logic is not unique to Australia. Following the USA’s World Cup exit, the New York Post’s frontpage read: “This sport is stupid anyway.”
It’s their loss, but it’s a shame we have to hear their flawed logic.
Wilson continues:
“Thousands of words have been written about what Australia, Pim Verbeek and the rest did wrong in that match. But not a single accredited journalist, commentator or expert who was sent to South Africa told the real, hard truth. They skirted around it, claimed the wrong team played against Germany and that the referees were to blame. They did not say the Socceroos were not as good as four years ago, the old blokes were too old and the young ones were just not good enough.”
Obviously Wilson missed the Harry Kewell saga (although she does refer to it in her article, funnily enough), which was caused by a journalist – sent to South Africa no less – questioning whether Kewell was, to use Wilson’s words, “too old” and “not as good as four years ago,” not to mention the countless other debates around the form of Craig Moore and Vince Grella.
On the A-League’s contribution to the World Cup, she writes:
“A penny should have dropped in the last few weeks that players coming out of the A-League have not got a hope against the world’s best.”
While the technical standard of the A-League is debatable, it’s a blatant lie to suggest its current and former players can’t compete on the world stage.
The A-League’s leading goal scorer Shane Smeltz scored against the defending world champions in a team coached by an A-League coach with four A-League players. Those A-League representatives helped hold the Italians to a draw and were undefeated in the tournament.
Jason Culina, an A-League captain, played all 270 minutes for the Socceroos and was one of the most consistent and reliable performers for the national team.
Players such as Dario Vidosic, Michael Beauchamp, David Carney and Mile Jedinak are products of the A-League.
They have more than a hope against the world’s best, and they’ve proven it.
Wilson continues on the World Cup in general:
“When you watch two full weeks of it and your pulse rate increases just three times out of 30 games, you are entitled to an opinion.”
Rebecca, if your pulse wasn’t sent racing while watching Italy-Slovakia, Australia-Serbia, Germany-England or Argentina-Mexico then maybe watching the World Cup, let alone writing about, isn’t for you. You’re entitled to change channels and watch something else. No one is forcing you to watch, and we’d prefer that you didn’t.
You may be asking why I’ve bothered to even respond to such an article. Such fallacies need to be countered otherwise they are allowed to foster and spread because, sadly, too many Australians take what the media produce and accept it as fact. It’s only by countering it that we can hope to bring some fairness and balance to our media and how the Socceroos and football in general are portrayed.
Finally, it would be remiss of me to avoid one obvious truth in Wilson’s article:
“Please don’t email to tell me I am a soccer illiterate – I already know that.”
I couldn’t have said it better myself.
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- 2010 World Cup, Daily Telegraph, football, Harry Kewell, rebecca wilson, Socceroos, World Cup


June 29th 2010 @ 9:39am
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 9:39am | Report comment
Rebecca should have a good look at the following figures and do her best to explain to the hoi polloi what they mean.
Sydney viewing figures:
Saturday Night Prime Time
Rugby Union – Australia V Ireland 166,000
AFL – Swans v Collingwood 59,000
Sunday Midnight
FIFA World Cup Germany V England 167,000
Should John O’Neill or Andrew Demetriou be worried? I am sure Rebecca has all the answers
June 29th 2010 @ 10:30am
Redb said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:30am | Report comment
Art,
What were the Melbourne TV ratings for those 3 games?
June 29th 2010 @ 10:36am
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:36am | Report comment
redb – Rebecca is a Sydney writer, writing for a Sydney paper which is read by Sydney people.
Sydney people don’t care what we watch in Melbourne
June 29th 2010 @ 10:38am
AndyRoo said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:38am | Report comment
You have TV’s down their?
Are they in Color?
June 29th 2010 @ 10:39am
Redb said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:39am | Report comment
No, but they give us some coloured whiteboard markers
June 29th 2010 @ 10:47am
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:47am | Report comment
Very funny redb
June 29th 2010 @ 2:49pm
punter said | June 29th 2010 @ 2:49pm | Report comment
Funny thing is I was in Melbourne last year & they still had trams, like the old days!!!!
June 29th 2010 @ 2:55pm
MVDave said | June 29th 2010 @ 2:55pm | Report comment
Hey watch it Punter…gettin personal now! As Pink Floyd sang (or so l thought) We dont need no Sydnee gridlock…leave our trams alone…
June 29th 2010 @ 2:59pm
punter said | June 29th 2010 @ 2:59pm | Report comment
Sorry MVDave, just staying with the theme above that Melbourne is behind Sydney on & off the field.
No malice meant.
June 29th 2010 @ 3:07pm
Richard said | June 29th 2010 @ 3:07pm | Report comment
Oh no mate they’re nothing like the old days. In the old days they had canvas sides and the wind and rain came straight through the body of the tram. These days they’re sound-insulated and air-conditioned. And Melbourne is ahead of Sydney in this respect. Sydney thought they’d get away with copying Melbourne without being noticed by calling their new trams “light rail”. Light rail my @#$*. They’re trams!
June 29th 2010 @ 3:15pm
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 3:15pm | Report comment
Punter – On the field Melbourne is ahead 2 teams to 1.
Off the field Melbourne has Santo, Sam and Ed
Sydney has Les and Fozzie
Its no contest. You might as well raise the white flag
June 29th 2010 @ 3:31pm
punter said | June 29th 2010 @ 3:31pm | Report comment
Art, we get Santo, Sam & Ed in Sydney too, but I must admit I don’t get to watch them, currently into bed at 9.30pm & up for the 4.30AM game. The IQ is also too full with WC matches that I haven’t caught up on.
As for 2 teams in Melbourne v 1 in Sydney, but what a team, the double champions.
So no white flag just yet.
All in fun, have no smileys to highlight the all the above.
June 29th 2010 @ 9:46am
Richard said | June 29th 2010 @ 9:46am | Report comment
Good article, putting things into much clearer perspective. Lets hope that A-League will be on Free to Air in the near future so that more people develop an educated interest in the game, grow their knowledge and are able to take a more realsitic view of the Socceroos’ achievements.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:03am
Mega said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:03am | Report comment
“Please don’t email to tell me I am a soccer illiterate – I already know that.” – how can anyone who writes that still have a job for a leading newspaper. Media in this country is screwed.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:03am
Farqwar said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:03am | Report comment
Real Australians turn Tall Poppy Syndrome into an opinion piece
June 29th 2010 @ 10:18am
Jason said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:18am | Report comment
Re The New York Post. Have you read the article? To me the headline suggests how much it actually hurt the Americans to lose to Ghana: ie. a petulant, “Ah, who cares anyway?”. I’ve done it many many times – Australia-Iran, MCG, 1997, for example (oh, they gave us so many opportunities to feel this way). I vowed not to care anymore…until the first qualifier for the next Cup.
Some are saying that this World Cup has captured the Americans’ imagination more than any other. Unless the story itself is entirley dismissive, that front page headline on a Murdoch-owned rag actually seems to support that idea. Not flawed logic but a deliberately ironic take on how much it matters. Just when we discovered this “stupid sport” actually is quite good and actually involves teams outside the US in a “world series”, they do this to us.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:38am
MVDave said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:38am | Report comment
Spot on Jason
The New York Times has been running front page updates/reports on the tournament and Team USA…seems the World Game is slowly creeping into the US sports psyche…a record 20 million watched their game vs Ghana (during the afternoon) which is bigger than most NBA finals games and many World Series matches.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:44am
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:44am | Report comment
Jason – A record 19.4 million Americans watched the USA v Ghana game in the U.S.
14.9 million on ABC plus another 4.5 million on Spanish language Univision.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/usa-vs-ghana-most-watched-us-soccer-game-ever-2010-06-28?reflink=MW_news_stmp
June 29th 2010 @ 11:01am
Al said | June 29th 2010 @ 11:01am | Report comment
Surely more than that watched the AFL grand final in the US?!
June 29th 2010 @ 5:03pm
Norm said | June 29th 2010 @ 5:03pm | Report comment
LOL Al.
June 29th 2010 @ 5:04pm
Michael C said | June 29th 2010 @ 5:04pm | Report comment
relevance Al???
June 29th 2010 @ 11:19am
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 11:19am | Report comment
Here is another amazing ratings figure from the land of Uncle Sam
Mexico vs. Argentina Match on Univision Most Watched Program in Spanish-Language Television History with 9.3 million viewers. Add another 7 million that watched it on the ABC network and you get over 16 million.
June 29th 2010 @ 11:52am
MVDave said | June 29th 2010 @ 11:52am | Report comment
Interesting article from the NY Times on WC viewership… http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/sports/soccer/29sandomir.html?ref=soccer
June 29th 2010 @ 12:08pm
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 12:08pm | Report comment
Yes MV Dave – a younger, ethnically diverse audience is pushing up the numbers. The networks are beside themselves with the numbers. Next World Cup in their time zone and will set new records.
I have to give praise to the New York Tiimes. Their World Cup blog is excellent.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:25am
Mick said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:25am | Report comment
Another reason why I no longer buy this so called newspaper
June 29th 2010 @ 10:31am
soapit said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:31am | Report comment
this is why you should never really rate a sports journalists opinion unless they’ve actually spent some time playing the game. too easy to criticise without having any real insight into what it takes to achieve success as well as the differing ways that success can be measured ie. socceroos gallant failure could be viewed as a pass mark as we gave it a good shake and with a bit of luck probably would have gone through.
without the two red cards (deserved or not) we surely would have had a better goal difference and gone through. not saying we had bad luck but if we actually had good luck (ref missed those incidents) we would have made it through but thats sport and you can only understand that by playing.
June 29th 2010 @ 10:57am
Cpaaa said | June 29th 2010 @ 10:57am | Report comment
why do these type of Journos (if I can call them that) feel the need to do this at all. Obviously they represent a large part of their community, which majority is the AFL.
But these types have been doing this shite for as old as the game itself. it makes them feel good, like bullies in the school yard.
June 29th 2010 @ 12:25pm
Tom said | June 29th 2010 @ 12:25pm | Report comment
Let’s be fair when I was at school as an Anglo European child I was called all sorts of things because I played football(soccer) and not league or afl including fagotball , gayboy, the girls sport and I was once called the white wog hahaha.
End of the day football is almost a non contact sport , this is not helped by the professionals at elite level being told to dive , roll and cheat. This has been proven at the world cup 2010 where it seems to be getting worse..
Convincing the masses in Australia would require the sport to be rid of all this so called foul play.
Football cannot go back to the 80s when the sport in some countries was brutal, however the sport needs to stamp out all the cheats so we can enjoy the pure skill of the elite players. I believe Aussies would move to our sport in droves and kids in the school yard would percieve our sport differently. Hopefully the negative stigmas associated with football would fade away.
June 29th 2010 @ 12:37pm
Forgetmenot said | June 29th 2010 @ 12:37pm | Report comment
Hamstrung by arrogance. Soccer fans need to realise that they do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country.
June 29th 2010 @ 12:54pm
Art Sapphire said | June 29th 2010 @ 12:54pm | Report comment
When you were a naughty boy did the teacher make you write out these lines on the blackboard
“Soccer fans do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country”
“Soccer fans do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country”
“Soccer fans do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country”
“Soccer fans do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country”
“Soccer fans do not have exclusive use of the term ‘football’ in this country”