An Englishman falls for Sydney FC, A-League

By The Crowd / Roar Guru

Whilst travelling in Sydney recently, I decided I ought to take in some football. Would I enjoy a temporary summer romance before I returned to the Riverside (my spiritual home)? Or would I be left disappointed by the A-League’s quality?

It’s the 92nd minute inside the Sydney Football Stadium and Sydney FC are holding onto a deserved but delicate 1-0 lead against Gold Coast United.

Eighteen-year old Dimitri Petratos scored his first senior goal for the Sky Blues on 33 minutes, a blinder, after long spells of pressure from the home team.

As Gold Coast push further forward trying to find an equaliser, they leave themselves increasingly exposed at the back, and after they lose the ball on the halfway line, Sydney full-back Sebastian Ryall bombs forward and plays a peach of a ball into the six-yard box, new boy Juho Mäkelä (Hearts fans may remember his unspectacular time at the club) duly obliges and bundles it in at the back post.

Cue effing insanity.

It starts raining beer from all the pints (sorry, schooners) that get thrown in the air. People who don’t have a beer at hand are recycling people’s empty cups and throwing them back at each other. I’m dripping wet. It’s like a Slipknot gig.

I start chucking whatever I can get my hands on into the air: beer holders, crisp packets, burger buns, half a Mars bar – I don’t care.

Next, I find myself part of a crowd that’s legging it towards the pitch, jumping over seats two rows at a time. Ryall and Mäkelä – who are enjoying a proper blokes’ hug with each other in front of the crowd – are suddenly surrounded by a swarm of fans, with other players running the length of the pitch to join in this obviously glorious event.

Everyone is going crackers. More and more of the ‘Sky Blue Youth’ start throwing themselves onto the massive pile which has now began to form. I’m covered in limbs and I’m doing nothing but kissing everyone and yelling at the top of my lungs. This is brilliant. I could die and I don’t mind.

I’m going deeper into the mass. But shit, the advertising boards are snapping and collapsing and fans are pouring onto the pitch like fish out of Captain Birdseye’s nets.

Some poor bastard is trapped underneath the heap, his leg is stuck under a Pulsar Watches board and there are at least a hundred nutters on top of him. It turns out to be Matt Jurman and he is screaming in agony and the stewards and fans who aren’t caught up in the madness are trying to free him from certain death.

Amazingly, he wriggles free and hobbles off, leaving the celebrations early while we all continue to go berserk, not fussed that we just nearly killed one of our heroes.

I’ve got my arms around some bloke in a string vest with a dodgy beard and a cowboy hat on – is he my soul mate?

My mind is bent to f–k. I’m nearly in tears. I’m ringing up our lass to share this defining point in my life with her. It was at this moment that I stopped and began to wonder what the hell was actually going on.

Have Sydney FC actually just become the first club team to win the World Cup? Have they won the league? Am I witnessing a historic side guarantee their place in history?

The answer to all of these questions was of course, no.

They’ve simply gained three points in an inconsequential match late in the season that sees them remain ninth in the table. “Ah well”, I thought; I was having a brilliant time, and continued in a stirring performance of “Sydney ‘til I die” until long after the final whistle peeped, minesweeping for scabs of beer, conducted the whole time by our marvellous leader, the ‘fella with the megaphone’.

He’s a lunatic who would scream at the 500 or so fans who gathered in ‘The Cove’ for an hour before the game, throughout half time, and well after the final whistle. If this lad turned up at the Riverside armed with a megaphone he would receive a balti pie straight between the eyes.

Someone might even sacrifice their parmo in a bun.

—-

I came over to Australia in September last year to do a bit of travelling, and wanted to get in as much sport as I could. I went to the first Sydney FC home game I could get to, against Adelaide United, and was very unsure what to expect.

I didn’t anticipate much from the quality, and to be frank I was right not to.

I was also unsure of what to expect from the crowd. Sydney’s stadium holds over 45,000, and last year they won the league, so I was expecting a decent turnout, comparable at least to a crowd at the Boro. What a surprise it was when barely 7,000 made the trip to see high-flying Adelaide in what I was told was going to be one of the better games of the season.

The first half was alright – scrappy football and not much flair, but I’m pretty immune to that, and embrace it as a luxury when it happens in Teesside. I also enjoyed the luxury of sipping a few beers from my seat. Sydney took a 1-0 lead and all was well, but I couldn’t help being distracted by a group of fans behind the goal to me right.

They had some massive flags, a section of drums, and were jumping and singing non-stop. It was like a scene straight out of an Istanbul derby – I was just waiting for a goat’s head to be chucked at Adelaide’s keeper, who was getting plenty of stick.

Half-time came and a combination of curiosity and loads of empty seats led to me having a wander round to see ‘The Cove’ close up.

The queuing system at the bar was ruthlessly efficient and the songs were catchy (a fair few ripped-off English chants), and before I knew it I was right in amongst it.

The second half was shite though; Sydney threw away a 1-0 lead, conceding two shocking goals in the last five minutes to lose 1-2. The scenes which followed shocked me at first, and then disgusted me.

As a Boro fan I am well used to witnessing such atrocities, and usually by the time the goal that has nailed our coffin shut has been announced, thousands of Smoggies have scarpered the crime scene and are well on their way to the pub. Not in Sydney. They didn’t even respond to the goals. They just kept bloody singing.

Did they not notice their team’s demise?

Where was the abuse directed at their beloved team? Where was the booing at full-time? Who was going to run on the pitch and chuck their season ticket at the manager? What’s more, the mad bastards stayed back late singing songs such as “We’re gonna win the A-League, we’re Sydney, Sydney!”

They weren’t; they were rock bottom of the bloody A-League.

So why were they all so goddamned happy? Was it a cultural thing? I didn’t think so, as Rugby League and Aussie Rules games I had taken in had been flatter than a Shrove Tuesday breakfast.

I made the trip to see Australia take on Paraguay in a friendly, a game that the Socceroos won 1-0.

It was a poor game, barely more than a runabout for some of the country’s benchwarmers, and the atmosphere in the ground was very similar to Sydney FC – most fans were quiet, and there was a section of fans grouped together who fancied singing; only at internationals they got a complimentary flag too!

But at the final whistle, a fella who seemed pretty sound of mind turned to me and said that “it was the finest game of soccer he had ever seen”.

Soccer! That said it all. I needed no more explanation. He might have enjoyed the game for personal reasons, but calling it the S word? They were a bunch of clueless, Yank-wannabe, bandwagon jumpers.

I did depart the Paraguay game writing off Australian football fans as tits, and I did assume the role of the condescending football snob.

I swore I’d never go again and would save my money for beer and surfing lessons. But a fascination began to develop with those committed singers, and I found myself making the trip back to Sydney for the Gold Coast game, and this time enjoyed the whole thing from within ‘The Cove’.

What was interesting was that there was a few Nottingham Forest fans at the game, left over from The Ashes and keen to take in some footy.

They were as sceptical as I was against Adelaide, but by the end of the second half, they were loving it, especially the beer bathing. In fact, there’s some footage kicking round in the Fox Sports archives of them acting just like I did at the final whistle.

It is the pure love and dedication for their team which I admire about Sydney’s hardcore fans.

They might not have any deep culture in the sport just yet – the A-League is less than ten years old – but I am willing to ignore these facts in exchange for enjoying a beer in the stands and not getting told to sit down by jobsworth stewards. In fact, the more I learn about Australian football, the greater my admiration becomes.

For example, each team must have a squad of between 20 and 23 players, and are allowed a maximum of five overseas players.

While this might be a policy that is synonymous of Australia’s strict immigration policies and insular political outlook, I feel that this is a stance that within the confines of sport can be admired – particularly coming from a country where homegrown players are fast falling out of favour to unheard-of, uninspired and unexciting foreign imports.

It is precisely for this reason that England’s national team is beginning to suffer. And while Australia might not be a team of comparable quality, they certainly have options who are playing every week at their country’s highest level.

Beyond this, each club has an annual salary cap of $2.3 million – around £1.4 million.

There’s arseholes in the Premier League using bigger piles of cash than that to wipe last night’s… well, use your imagination.

It’s after studying those stats that you realise those lads on the pitch must really love the game, and the fans must love coming to see them play.

The football might be mediocre, relative to what is offered in Europe, and enjoyed by small crowds, but at least the league is run in a responsible and sustainable way.

When I’m back in England I will look forward to monitoring the A-League next season. Just stop calling it soccer, eh lads.

Article first published on WhoAteAllThePies.TV – a UK Football site.

The Crowd Says:

2011-03-04T12:46:44+00:00

jupiter53

Guest


Onya! Couldn't agree more......the point is to commit and support and by doing so hope that your commitment helps to build a better club. One of the benefits of the 7K Sydney crowd is that they are hardcore and knowledgeable supporters. The Cove make a great noise and I don't have to put up with idiots saying "hoof it long!" [Of course I would be happy with a 30K crowd of football literate enthusiasts]

2011-03-04T08:10:51+00:00

Tortion

Guest


It is regularly called soccer on the news, in newspapers and children often go to 'soccer' camps in UK. Nobody I have met in the UK seems to care what you call it although I do say football unless I have had a few. It is a tough one though. Do Australians go with what the majority of the world currently calls it causing endless domestic confusion or do we go with what it is called in our spiritual home? As for the throwing of anything during a match - watch that get banned.

2011-03-04T06:18:05+00:00

punter

Guest


Exactly Slippery Jim, i took as tongue in cheek, some people need to lighten up over a name.

2011-03-04T05:19:38+00:00

Slippery Jim

Guest


Wow guys, it was meant tongue in cheek in the article (obviously), perhaps time to get a sense of humour?

2011-03-04T04:56:09+00:00

Alan

Guest


Love the article. First moved to Austraia in 1987. Never saw a league game here till after I had loved in Singapore for 4 years and realised that I had missed something since i left the UK - football. Now after 6 A-League seasons I have only missed 4 Sydney home games and I am sure that I will be back next season complaining about how badly Sydney FC is run. But they are still my team Sydney Til I Die! Alan

2011-03-04T04:38:57+00:00

Kasey

Roar Pro


But they're not now are they? just as Soccer Australia no longer exists but Football Federation Australia does...names for things change move on and get with the times. New York used to be New Amsterdam and Istanbul is also no longer Constantinople*;)The AFL used to be the VFL and except for some particularly paranoid types in Adelaide/Perth, most have accepted that the VFL name no longer applies to the biggest ARF competition in Australia. **with apologies to They Might Be Giants;)

2011-03-04T04:31:40+00:00

LT80

Roar Pro


Here's a bit of trivia. All of the "rugby" bodies all started out with the word "football" in their name. The ARU used to be the ARFU, before they changed it. The ARL is actually still officially called the Australian Rugby Football League, likewise the QRL is actually officially the QRFL.

2011-03-04T04:19:32+00:00

MyLeftFoot

Guest


Reds settle down, Rob got the point I was making. You said: “when in Rome, do as the Romans do" Like it or not, standard Australian English refers to the game as "soccer", so our English friend shouldn't get overly upset if he hears one Australian (and that's all it was) call the game "soccer". As you said: “when in Rome, do as the Romans do". Otherwise, it doesn't worry me in the least if our game made him vomit. As the ABS stats show, a greater percentage of migrants from both English speaking and non-English speaking backgrounds attend Australian Football games than any other sport. I'm comfortable with that.

2011-03-04T04:13:59+00:00

Rob McLean

Guest


That's a very over the top response Reds. MLF had a fair point and he wasn't referring to the original story, but the debate which has developed from that - and a juvenile one at that. Personally, I don't care if people call the game football or soccer. And, it grates on me when people call Australian rules AFL but I'm not going to lecture them on it or get my knickers in a twist about it.

2011-03-04T04:09:38+00:00

Kasey

Roar Pro


You AFL clowns can't let it go can you? OMG, a foreigner came to Australia and didn't care to watch a sport he either doesn't understand or could care less about..better deport him! He was in Sydney, not Melbourne where they aren't bombarded 24/7 with the party line of AFL down your throat...Get over yourselves, and get out of your AFL-centric bubble not everyone(in this country& less than a handful outside the borders of Oz) care for your precious sport! My God, you lot are going to self-destruct with indignation if the good people of Western Sydney don't take to their new team in droves aren't you? Go on, start the banal name a game crap again...where are the moderators on this site?, this is more than a little tedious:(

2011-03-04T03:36:34+00:00

MyLeftFoot

Guest


“when in Rome, do as the Romans do” Without wishing to state the obvious, but that same dictum could be directed at our English friend.

2011-03-04T02:57:36+00:00

Titus

Guest


" Its similar to the atmosphere at the SCG during an international one day-er" Only if the barmy army are in town. And no offence, but Rugby League and AFL crowds are nothing like an a-league crowd, thats the point, it's unique amongst Australian sporting cultures.

2011-03-04T01:32:00+00:00

Stephen Smith

Guest


Hey Special One, here's a bit of info for you as well - you are right that an Englishman invented the word "soccer" - the reason the term came into use was to differentiate from rugby, which (in turn) was therefore termed "rugger." So, using your strange logic (bag out the Englishman, but continue to use the word he invented), both rugby codes should in future be referred to as "rugger" All of which would make perfect sense, as neither body has the word "football" anywhere in its title (NRL, ARU), in contrast to the FFA. Funny that.

2011-03-04T01:29:16+00:00

Slippery Jim

Guest


I agree that one of the best things about football in Australia is being able to drink beer in the stands! Thoroughly enjoyed the read, Max.

2011-03-04T00:21:19+00:00

Rob McLean

Roar Guru


"He's an alien, he's a legal alien, he's an Englishman in The Cove." Apologies to Sting. Thanks for the read.

2011-03-04T00:19:18+00:00

Nathan

Guest


Great article, Max, a good portrait

2011-03-04T00:11:47+00:00

Fez's are cool

Guest


I don't see what the big deal is here. It can be called either Soccer or Football. Association football is just one of many codes of football, who all have legit claims to the name. Eg, Rugby Football League, American Football, Australian Rules Football, et cetera. Football could mean any one of 4 different sports in Australia, and soccer is a good name to distinguish it from the others, just like the names Rugby League/Union and AFL are used. I don't get the big chip on some soccer fans shoulders about this. Most Australians follow more than one code, whats the problem? On topic, its a good article about the type of passion you get at Australian sports crowds. Its similar to the atmosphere at the SCG during an international one day-er, or at Kogarah on the hill for a Dragons vs Sharks match. I for one love the unique atmosphere at Australian sporting grounds.

2011-03-03T23:05:23+00:00

Kasey

Roar Pro


Gotta love the lack of manners of the non-football people.. ever heard the expression: "when in Rome, do as the Romans do"? You are on a sports opinion-site that clearly uses the term Football to refer to the world game (its right there on the top of the page! Here's a tip..if you don't like Football, leave the Football articles to the Football fans.

2011-03-03T22:18:16+00:00

BES

Guest


Excellent article Max! Loved it. If you happen to be up in Brisbane next weekend - do be sure to get along to Suncorp to watch a real team play real football!

2011-03-03T22:04:03+00:00

nordster

Guest


more cheers ... and you know Max, we have a thing over here called skilled visas ... check em out, i hope your profession makes the list ! Or maybe Uncle Frank can get 'Football Nutter' added to it :D

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