The Australian football media is lowering the national team standard

By 144 / Roar Guru

It’s been almost 4000 days since John Aloisi sealed the Socceroos’ first ever win on the World Cup stage, defeating Japan 3-1 in Kaiserslautern in the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany.

While Australia is in a better place than it was half a decade ago, some are under the influence that the standard of our national team has not dropped. Reality check, it has. The Australian football media’s obsession with the A-League’s Aussies has played a part in its decline.

Ange Postecoglou has been influential for the growth of the A-League, finally ingraining an Australian head coach and mentality who understood the strengths of the league and its players.

This is evident through the seven A-League players he took to the 2014 World Cup and our 2015 Asian Cup triumph. At both of those tournaments he had at least three A-League players involved in a match at any one time.

However, the media seem to be taking this too far. Offering up their A-League fantasy sides as possible Socceroo replacements. Many journalists love to snatch headlines by putting into the spotlight players who should be fighting to be playing week in week out let alone making the Socceroos.

Players like Andrew Nabbout, Brandon Borrello are getting a shout for squads in World Cup Qualifiers.

Seriously? Why does Nabbout’s name get thrown into the mix ahead of players like Craig Goodwin, Chris Oikonomidis or Awer Mabil.

I’ll tell you why. Nabbout is playing well in the A-League.

While we all care about the A-League’s progress and I’ll be surprised if there is anyone who has ambitions to lead the charge like I do, but the media must cool its obsession with our Australian players.

After only half a season back in Australia, four months under Mark Jones, Nabbout has seven goals and three assists, I’m not taking anything away from wingers’ performances he’s been key to Newcastle’s position in the ladder, in fact, they’d be hanging around below the six if he wasn’t present.

But when did we start judging national team quality on 14 A-League games?

What does Nabbout have on Awer Mabil’s eight contributions in the Danish First Division? Or Craig Goodwin’s consistent 18 months which saw him boost Adelaide United to an A-League double, while keeping that good form up in a massive step forward to the Eredivisie?

Do people seem to forget the 24-year-old has just 73 professional appearances, 12 of which are from the Malaysian second division last year.

If Socceroos winger Matthew Leckie, the only player in the national team setup playing consistently for a team in one of the top five leagues, can’t breach the Japanese or Thai defence, why do people think Andrew Nabbout or other ‘bolters’ are the obvious answer to our problems?

Melbourne Victory head coach Kevin Muscat summed up the international talk in early January, responding to speculation of James Donachie making a case for a Socceroos squad inclusion, a player at the time who had made only ten appearances for Victory.

“Individuals have a good 45 minutes and next minute they should be in the national team.”

“I think we should treat playing for Australia with more respect than we do”

An exaggeration on time? Perhaps, but the message is clear. The media love to hype up in-form A-League players with a Socceroos berth but in reality they are outliers in depth.

It’s not just wingers, what bout centre-forwards? I have no doubt if Kerem Bulut had ten goals this season, his name would be thrown around ahead of Nathan Burns.

Or maybe if Mitch Nichols throws in seven assists and three goals before seasons end, he may be reported to have one over Mustafa Amini.

The Australian football media must learn that the A-League will produce better players once quality infrastructure and greater following of the game increases. But, stop trying to force the issue.

Put simply, the media are shoving severely underdeveloped A-League players down Ange’s throat and into the spotlight. It is not going to breed another golden generation, nor is it going to help the players that they are hounding with this coverage. Let them play their football and get their game time up, it’s the one thing young Aussies don’t get enough of.

The Crowd Says:

2017-01-30T04:02:37+00:00

punter

Guest


Tell me how many Africans were playing in England, Italy & Germany 15 years ago?

2017-01-30T03:42:37+00:00

Ruudolfson

Guest


Fox Sports interests are with the a-league so of course they will throw in names for the national team contention more so than the players from overseas, vested interests nothing more.

2017-01-30T03:21:20+00:00

pauly

Guest


Really? There were quite a few Africans playing across Europe at the time. The only real difference between the era of the golden generation and now is that South Americans and southern Europeans are playing more regularly in the EPL than was the case back then when such players would generally go to the continent and not even consider England. This may be what has made cracking it in the EPL so much harder for Aussie players.

2017-01-29T23:30:42+00:00

Chris

Guest


So Jeff you dont like football because of certain peoples opinion etc? How odd!

2017-01-29T20:46:29+00:00

Swanny

Guest


English championship clubs could beat Celtic and rangers . Scottish football is going through a weak period

2017-01-29T20:42:38+00:00

Swanny

Guest


I agree. He talked up the Danish premier league. For god sake apart from cope guans bronby , what a weak competition. spain Italy Germany England All great competitions Then French and holland Portugal But nothing else in European clubs is better then a league

2017-01-29T13:06:38+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


this is not your website, fuss

2017-01-29T13:05:42+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


guess what Fuss, this forum isnt your individual domain. why dont you start your own site with punter, caltex and bobby brown?

2017-01-29T13:02:53+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


i hope you believe that

2017-01-29T13:00:51+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


its true, sadly is cohort on this site never pull him into line as they all think they are in a battle. It is their attitudes as to why people dont like football

2017-01-29T12:58:49+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


fuss, - fact football is not the the most populat sport in australia. Fact 2 - you are a blind partisan fact 3 - your use of this 1% is as misleading as your Foxtel 1% of shows

2017-01-29T12:58:12+00:00

concerned supporter

Guest


Read northerner's fuss put down.@4.05pm.

2017-01-29T12:56:30+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


you said you had a 2 yearold and according to this you are at least 70. well done

2017-01-29T12:54:24+00:00

jeff dustby

Guest


are you in a battle?

2017-01-29T12:38:58+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


I was specifically asked whether I want more people watching football. My answer: i don't care. I don't need packed stadiums, nor high Tv audiences, to make me enjoy football. And, I certainly don't want football illiterates sitting next to me ruining my enjoyment.

2017-01-29T12:26:26+00:00

concerned supporter

Guest


northerner, Agree with what you say. I think you shut him up.What a relief for everybody.

2017-01-29T11:23:35+00:00

Jimmy

Guest


Well considering the title has 'national team'..difficult to argue for AFL because there isn't one for that sport...?

2017-01-29T10:14:58+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Chris Rick is a big soccer fan, he just doesn't follow the A-League too closely.

2017-01-29T10:04:47+00:00

Chris

Guest


You can be really annoying. Why do you spend so much time talking about a sport you dont seem to even like?

2017-01-29T08:46:50+00:00

punter

Guest


Rick hence the difference between you & MF. You aint afraid to say what you think. 2 of the biggest sports in Australia BBL & AFL, I just have no time for. Both games relies of the scoring of pts to keep people from nodding off.

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