Halloran ditches city lights to rekindle passion in the country

By Janek Speight / Expert

The life of a professional footballer is supposed to be all roses. Paid for kicking a ball around a field, often quite handsomely, travelling to all corners of the globe and, if you’re lucky, pulling the adoration of thousands of fans.

Yet even footballers can get stuck in a career rut.

For Ben Halloran, even after the emotional high of playing in the 2014 World Cup, job satisfaction at Fortuna Düsseldorf was a struggle to obtain last season. And he is not afraid to take responsibility.

“I felt jaded coming back [from Brazil],” Halloran explains.

“My heart wasn’t really in it, and I was a bit slow coming back.”

Modern-day footballers can be tiresome beasts at times. Heavily PR-trained, schooled in the art of a cliche and refined in the ability to dodge a tough question, the highly paid sportsman can dish out some unappealing soundbites when faced with a journalist and their pen.

Halloran, thankfully, is a refreshing exception. No bullshit is an apt description. He is more than willing to open up about a season that was a frustrating plateau in his promising career.

It resulted in the speedy winger missing out on Ange Postecoglou’s Asian Cup squad, a disappointment that added to his woes of working at a club which failed to reinvigorate his love for the game.

“The second half of the season was just catastrophic for myself, and for the team as a whole,” Halloran says.

“Three games [following the Winterpause] our coach got sacked, then the second team coach [Taskin Aksoy] came in for the last 15 games and that was just a disaster for the whole team.”

A promising start to the season, which had seen Fortuna in the mix for promotion, plummeted dramatically. Halloran only started one match under Aksoy.

“I didn’t see eye to eye with him and he didn’t want to play me. It was a two-way street. To be fair I wasn’t really interested. I kind of levelled with the fact that I wouldn’t be playing so I didn’t care as much. I was just looking for the finish line to be honest.”

The jaded feeling had failed to evaporate, club upheaval contributing to an already disengaged outlook. Yet the Germans have a saying: “Hopfen und malz ist noch nicht verloren” or “hops and malt are not lost yet”.

Trust the Germans to use beer ingredients as a way to communicate that everything will turn out fine.

Halloran’s drive has returned, the hunger for pitch time renewed after an off-season of reflection. It has resulted in the 23-year-old seeking an escape from the city lights of Düsseldorf, finding a new haven in the tiny town of Heidenheim.

The Queensland local could not have picked a more contrasting city to rekindle his career progression.

“It’s a bit of a culture shock going from the Gold Coast to Brisbane to Düsseldorf to there,” Halloran laughs.

“But I was getting in a bit of a comfort zone. [Düsseldorf] is unbelievable so I think even when I wasn’t playing I was so content with my life that it didn’t really bother me. But everything about Heidenheim seemed like a good fit.”

Heidenheim are a new entity in German football. The club was promoted to the 2.Bundesliga for the first time in its history for the 2014-15 season and managed an eighth-placed finish. It was a significant achievement for a club that had only escaped semi-professional status in 2009.

Their ground, Voith-Arena, holds little more than 15,000 people, the city itself only boasting a population of barely 50,000. It is a pretty town, located north-west of Munich in Baden-Württemberg, the picturesque 12th century Hellenstein Castle towering above the inhabitants.

Halloran is the only foreigner at the club, giving him an opportunity to vastly improve his German, which can be difficult in bigger cities. The team prides itself on strong morale and team spirit and for much of last season it were these fighting qualities that pushed them to a top half finish.

This campaign is a new test for Heidenheim. The landscape of second division football in Germany is largely unpredictable; any team can legitimately make a push for promotion if they string together a few early results.

Last season FC Ingolstadt and SV Darmstadt achieved automatic promotion, while Karlsruher SC were unfortunate to miss out after a devastating play-off loss against Hamburg. None of those three teams would have featured in pre-season promotion predictions. Darmstadt had been touted for relegation.

This season only RB Leipzig, backed by the millions of Red Bull, can be considered clear favourites for a jump to the top tier.

“We haven’t really spoken about our ambitions as a whole,” Halloran says, “but you can tell it’s an ambitious club. They’ve made some pretty good signings in the off-season and it’s a good, young coach. From what I’ve seen from him it’s all been positive and that’s the number one thing for me.

“I think once you start talking about promotion it gets a bit risky. But I think with the team we have and the coach we’ve got we can really do something this season.

“Last season Ingolstadt and Darmstadt got the automatic promotion spots and you can definitely see the similarities between those clubs and Heidenheim.”

For Halloran, just being at a club where he once again harbours the confidence of his coach and which evokes a feeling of content is a relief. Stability and Düsseldorf do not exactly feature in the same sentence too often in Germany’s media.

“In the two years I was in Düsseldorf I think there were six trainer changes, three technical directors, two presidents and I think only a handful of players are still left from when I first arrived. There was a massive turnover every six months.

“With Heidenheim it’s a much more stable club. It’s a little smaller, of course, but the coach has been there since 2002.”

Frank Schmidt played more than 100 hundred games for Heidenheimer SB, a traditional German sports club which FC Heidenheim broke away from in 2007. Schmidt was soon elevated to replace inaugural coach Dieter Märkle and has steered Heidenheim towards relevancy in German football.

It seems like the perfect environment to match Halloran’s relaxed persona and the club’s philosophy and direction fit within his own mindset and ambition to play attractive football.

“The coach insists on playing good football, but he also wants a no risk approach,” Halloran says.

“So if you’re in the defensive third it’s just no risk, put your head down and clear the ball. In the centre, though, he wants his players to play 50/50, with a bit of risk, and up front, it’s 100 per cent. It’s a pretty simple concept.

“He wants to play attacking football. He doesn’t want us to be one of these teams where it’s a small club in the second league and we just fight and play on the counter attack. That’s not the goal of the club.

“We want to try and win every game, and that shows the ambition and philosophy of the club.”

Heidenheim will be without last season’s hero goalscorer Florian Niederlechner, who secured a move to Bundesliga side FSV Mainz, and Halloran, along with fellow new signing Daniel Frahn, will be expected to inject something new into the attack.

Heidenheim host last season’s relegation escape artists 1860 Munich in the season opener on Sunday, a big test against one of German football’s sleeping giants. Getting game time is imperative for Halloran after a season spending too much time on the sidelines, and the Socceroos are also on his list.

“That’s another big reason for the move,” Halloran says.

“It was disappointing for sure [missing out on the Asian Cup] and I still feel I could have added something to the squad.

“But I need more game time and it’s nice to have a coach that has confidence in me. As far as I know with Ange and his philosophy is that as long as I’m playing regularly I’ll get a look in.

“[Heidenheim’s] a new challenge for me, it will be nice to finally get things underway.”

Again, to borrow from the colourful German language, “Rosigere Zeiten brechen an” – better times are ahead. Hopefully it all comes up roses for Halloran this season.

The Crowd Says:

2015-07-22T00:05:41+00:00

nearpost

Guest


Good article Janek. Halloran and Leckie in the A League - everyone would say Leckie was the more impressive of the two, and no surprise that Leckie despite his lack of goals has done more at a higher level. Halloran was lucky Kruse was injured or he would never have got to a World Cup. Luckiest Australian ever to get game time at a World Cup. (You can add Bozanic and McGowan to that list.) Halloran was pace and not much else. Leckie has so many more options. His energy in the Asian Cup Final alone was awesome. I was stunned by Hallorans lack of intensity in the game against Spain. Suspect Ange was as well. Can't see Halloran ever getting a spot in the Socceroos again. Ibini is a better option, Kruse, Leckie, Oar, and others way ahead of him and the guy from Italy also in the mix. I'd take Rukavystya over Halloran just now. Maybe Mabil is at the next Halloran - but most A-league fans will have noticed him a little more I suspect. Halloran was a player of pace in the A-League but most were surprised that he was taken so early. Possibly the worst young talent to be taken from the A-League. Had he acheived anything here? Can he play anywhere other than right wing? How's his skill set? Enough to excite? I expect to see him back in the A-League inside 12 months - and maybe a spell in the A-League under the right coach will get the best out of him and get him back to enjoying the game. Franjic hardly played yet Ange kept him for the Asian Cup - even if he struggled for fitness in the group games. Bozanic and McGowan played post World Cup at Club level and Ange dropped them for the Asian Cup. What does that tell ya? Ange saw enough in the World Cup to assess Bozanic, McGowan and Halloran - they've had their (massive) opportunity and with the likes of Luongo, Kruse, Sainsbury, possibly Elrich, Amini, Da Silva, Rogic and others battling for fringe Socceroo spots the World Cup incumbents have been passed by it seems. Sounds like the downward spiral from the giddy heights of World Cup selection has begun. Welcome home Ben - you know it makes sense.

2015-07-21T21:10:57+00:00

Stevo

Roar Rookie


+1

2015-07-21T11:14:21+00:00

144

Roar Guru


yeah love the aussie abroad articles, one of the things i look forward to every week, now that aussies are rising on the european stage with Lekcie and Luongo moving up in football world.

2015-07-21T04:05:17+00:00

j binnie

Guest


Fuss - You touch on my worry without spelling it out. Most clubs in the world's top levels have "contacts" or if you like "scouts" who maintain connections with their "employer".As I said, Ben showed basic talents ,"a rough diamond" so to speak, in his early career at GCU and Roar but in my opinion and the opinion of others I am acquainted with (ex EPL players) he still had much to learn that he could have learned here.Now we find the lad has gone through what could only be described as a debilitating experience (football wise) and in my opinion that is a wasted year in his career. My worry?. Who if anybody, was advising the kid when he was considering the offer from the Bundesliga????? I will quote you another more recent experience worked "in reverse." Do you remember the 2 players that Roar signed in the Farina era,Charlie Miller, a brilliant but flawed footballer who was followed by another Rangers cast - off. Both were failures but who recommended them????? Get my point??? These top clubs in Europe I mentioned have a budget for acquiring "promising" young players and for every success they gain there will be lots of "failures". That's how the system works. Your mate jb

2015-07-21T03:45:20+00:00

fadida

Guest


Agree withe the above. Always love Janek's "Aussie abroad" articles Not sure about Halloran's career prospects though. His description of "giving up" isn't suggesting the most driven character. Expect to see him go "Nick Ward" , which would be a shame as he has plenty of talent.

2015-07-21T03:23:51+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


jb I value your input on such matters very highly - 2nd to none on this forum. So, I need to ask: what about the buyer's motivation? We are talking about a club in Germany that has access to thousands of German players. Tens of thousands of European, South American, African players. They chose Ben Halloran. Why? It would be easier, cheaper & less risky to invest in local talent? But they decided to recruit a player from Queensland. They must have seen something.

2015-07-21T03:11:44+00:00

j binnie

Guest


There is a darker side to this report that should make the reader aware of a side to football that requires greater examination.I watched the "younger" Ben Halloran play firstly with Gold Coast and then with Roar and there was no one more surprised than me when he left these shores for a club like Dusseldorf. Why the surprise the reader may ask? Ben had much going for him as a raw talent, he was very quick,he had what appeared to be a great attitude ,but like most of his Australian compatriots of his age there was still much to be improved in not only his overall play,but even in the basic theory of the game.I was equally surprised when he was picked for the senior Socceroo squad for I refused to believe that 1 season at a Bundesliga club had taught Ben all his career needed to get to that level.And so it appears to be. Like many others before him he has followed that much travelled road to a "better world" only to be brought back to reality with a bang. The dark side???? Who was it convincing Ben he needed to go to Germany at that stage of his career??????. Let's hope the lad finds what he is looking for at his new club. jb

2015-07-21T00:38:49+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


I hope Ben finds his desire again. He's one of those guys you just want to see succeed and playing for the Socceroos. Thanks for the article. It's now a town on my tour list, watching a home game with Ben the only foreigner would be a good experience.

2015-07-20T23:48:44+00:00

Ben of Phnom Penh

Roar Guru


I keep forgetting Halloran is only 23. Nice article, Janek.

2015-07-20T23:40:29+00:00

Ian

Guest


As above - good story. Refreshing also.

2015-07-20T23:36:01+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


Really enjoy reading these articles, Janek - you've created a real niche in the football writing market. Well done & thank you. Good luck to young Halloran. Takes a lot of mental toughness to move out of the comfort zone of AUS to a new country, new culture, new language & compete with locals who are as desperate as you to make it as a pro footballer. It's a cutthroat environment that only Aussie sportsmen involved in global team sports will encounter.

2015-07-20T23:31:20+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Such a good story. Great find, Janek. Halloran is still a young man and his Dusseldorf experience will thicken his skin.

2015-07-20T23:27:10+00:00

Franko

Guest


Good piece. Hopefully gets back to loving football and playing week in week out.

2015-07-20T23:19:02+00:00

Caleb Shepherd

Roar Guru


Fantastic article mate, great read. Good to know Bens feeling on the up, will be interesting to hear how their season goes.

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