Broich brilliance outweighs Del Piero Band Aid

By dinoweb / Roar Guru

Mitchell Grima, in an article on The Roar earlier this week, lamented that the foreign marquee spot was being wasted by many of the clubs in the A-League.

He pointed to the excitement created by David Villa in the league, but just what has been the impact and long term effect of marquees?

First up, Villa is not a marquee signing, but a 10-game loanee. While I will go to see him play, his stint here is little more than a publicity stunt for the new City franchise trying to convince the Melbourne public that they are a viable alternative to Victory.

For mine, the biggest marquees to date have been Dwight Yorke, Alessandro Del Piero, Harry Kewell and Robbie Fowler. These were all players that arrived in the league as names known by people outside the football family.

I doubt many outside of football circles, or even fans of the game for that matter, would have heard the name Shinji Ono before his arrival in this country.

Yorke certainly helped to launch the A-League with a bang, and Harry Kewell gave crowd attendances a measurable shot in the arm at a time when numbers were on a steep decline.

Robbie Fowler also helped to boost attendances wherever he travelled, but was ultimately not enough to save the Fury, and his stint with Perth was forgettable.

Alessandro Del Piero is, of course, the greatest marquee to play in the league. In his first season he substantially increased crowds both in Sydney and on the road, but figures would suggest the novelty value of that waned through season two.

Sydney averaged 18,637 punters through the gate in his first season with the Sky Blue and 18,682 in 2013-14, but that declines to 16,443 when the 80,000 fans who attended the two Sydney FC legs of the derby are taken from their total. Alessandro Del Piero was not enough, by himself, to keep over 2000 fans per week coming through the gates.

Of these four marquees, only Yorke has helped to deliver any silverware.

Let’s contrast Alessandro Del Piero’s effect with that of Brisbane Roar, a club supposedly in need of a bigger marquee.

Prior to the arrival of Alessandro Del Piero, Sydney had an average crowd of 11,861. He helped to boost that figure by 57 per cent, but, as demonstrated, that effect declined in his second year.

Prior to the arrival of Thomas Broich, Brisbane averaged 8,650. That figure has grown every year to now be 14,957, an increase of 73 per cent. Certainly not all of that is down to Broich, but a big part of it is due to the success he has helped to bring. Sustained growth is also a better indicator of increased long-term support than a single season surge.

Perhaps it was worded poorly, but the article also suggests that the foreign marquee spot “consumed” by Broich could be better utilised on some other foreign marquee. This for a player who is widely regarded as best player to ever regularly strap on a boot in the league and who has helped deliver five trophies in four seasons to the Brisbane club.

What more do any fans or clubs want from their marquee than that?

Broich has also continually mentioned the possibility of staying in Australia after the end of his playing career and taking up a coaching role to help develop the local game. Compare that with the ill-defined “legacy” promised by Del Piero or the fly-by-night visit of Villa.

It would also seem to me that the most widely reported news in the past off-season was not the arrival of Villa, but the transfer of Besart Berisha to Melbourne Victory.

I would argue that Ono, Berisha and Broich have made names for themselves in Australia thanks to their on-field performances rather than their past reputations, and they will be remembered more fondly because of that.

I am a Roar fan, and as much as I enjoyed watching Del Piero play, and any number of other marquees, I will take Broich over any of them, any day of the week, and twice on match day.

I have called for it before, and I still firmly believe it is high time journalists spend more time promoting the stars we already have playing in the league rather than pining for “names” from other locations.

Yes, overseas marquees can make a valuable contribution, but how can we convince those from outside our sport that we have a league worth watching when our own media continually call for higher profile imports?

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-16T08:20:23+00:00

Statler and Waldorf

Roar Guru


nothing brings in crowds more than a winning team substance is more important them bling

2014-10-16T06:56:26+00:00

Justin Mahon

Guest


Broich for infield quality, but ADP but massively on the early signs of growth spurred by Kewell in particular. The league was in real trouble, Kewell helped stabilise, but ADP took it to a whole new level. His contribution is the single greatest of an player in the league's history.

2014-10-16T02:30:55+00:00

Bfc

Guest


The Roar made the correct decision to retain Broich as their foreign marquee player. Berisha is the best striker in the HAL but Broich is the best player. Most of the foreign marquee players have made positive contribution as will Villa despite the fact he will play 10 games at most... Broich has helped make the Roar a better side, attracted extra fans by his play and along the way the Roar won the odd trophy. The Roar foreign marquee spot is not being 'wasted'...but the local marquee spot may be...

2014-10-16T02:14:47+00:00

Davo

Guest


The reason why the journos like to hype up marquees is because the general public love the hype of big name players. In league and afl there is no other real measure to go by as the best talent in the world is here, but with football it isn't, and thus the lure of a player than has made world wide headlines for their playing style or historic victories is something that casual fans are attracted to. It's true that Broich brings more to Brisbane than any other marquee player we have ever had, and may have contributed greatly with increasing the crowds over time, however home games are only just part of it. A marquee player in the true sense of the word (such as ADP) will boost crowds at home as well as away. They act as a way of promoting the whole league rather than just the one club. If the A-leagu had 4-5 marquees playing in different teams of the calibre of Lampard, Villa, Gerrard, Iniesta, Totti, all in the same league in the same league, you would see an absolute explosion of support from many Euro football fans and casual local supporters. Nothing produced locally could ever come close to this type of exposure.

2014-10-16T01:15:58+00:00

Leonardo

Roar Guru


ADP was a great boost for Sydney and the A-League, but still think we will be a better team without him. No offence to the great Del Piero, just the way he was used by Farina, his injury dramas and the weight of expectations around everyone's neck at the club while he was here. We are a better team now and confident we will defeat WSW and AU will beat Victory this weekend.

2014-10-16T00:18:22+00:00

Ian

Guest


Back this on Broich helping to deliver silverware. Yeah, I'm a Roar supporter. Also on the point Villa I would find difficult to be described as the best international marquee...is he just in that spot for 10 weeks? so it is great he is here for that period for City but doesn't qualify really as being permanently in a marquee position. ADP definitely best high profile marquee who brought international media acclaim and boosted crowds. He was a very good player especially in his first season here. Loved seeing him play here.

2014-10-15T19:41:52+00:00

Nordburg

Guest


Can you send this to the NRL please -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

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