Roar and Jets make strange starts to transfer season

By Evan Morgan Grahame / Expert

The off-season hasn’t even begun, and already we have two clubs – one of them in the finals – rolling up their sleeves, taking aim, and firing square into the boot.

The Jets, firmly in the rebuilding frame of mind after finishing last and sacking their coach, have signed Roy O’Donovan from the Central Coast Mariners. The decision to buy a striker is not an odd one, but choosing O’Donovan is.

More on that later, because meanwhile, the Roar have courted the chagrin of almost their entire supportership by ham-fistedly orchestrating a bizarre exit route for their veteran star Thomas Broich.

Broich, 36, has apparently been left in the lurch by manager John Aloisi and the Roar hierarchy, with no concrete offer for next season. The German thus has felt compelled to speak publicly to the media about the situation, and the Roar have only yesterday begun attempting to limit the damage, with Craig Moore and Mark Kingsman – the latter meekly on Twitter – putting out some puzzling explanations.

Broich, while certainly showing his age this season, nonetheless remains one of the Roar’s most creative players. He ranks inside the league’s top ten for both assists and chances created, leading his team in both categories. He has missed only three games this season, and starts and finishes the match in the vast majority of his appearances. His defensive hustle is underrated, his veteran leadership, one must assume, is utterly invaluable.

More than this, he is the club’s greatest ever player; to leave his future to hang awkwardly in limbo, with what is now his last finals campaign arriving, beggars belief.

Kingsman’s reply to a random questioner’s tweet hardly bolsters confidence that Broich will be given an adequate send-off – indeed, the most appropriate way to honour the German’s last few seasons in the A-League would be to resign him, his legacy alone argues for this.

But, in Moore’s words: “Thomas Broich is a legend of the football club. But at the end of the day, football is a business and people come and go. It does happen.”

There was a lovely moment in the Roar’s 5-1 win over the Mariners at the start of the month when, following a horribly miscued clearance, Broich pointed to the name across his back, cashing, in faux self-adulation, a a free pass for one botched hack.

He has more than earned the right to one sour pass, having banked countless sublime ones at Brisbane, but apparently that’s where the privilege ends.

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Broich cancelled plans to retire at the end of the season, but had no intention of prolonging his playing career at another A-League club. Right now, any team with money to spare and a visa spot might be tempted to snatch him up. The thought of him lining up alongside old partner in crime Besart Berisha in Melbourne, well, that possibility is simply too horrible to bear for the Roar faithful.

Have Brisbane thrashed out a deal with Golden Booted Jamie Maclaren, one that makes Broich a regrettable piece of collateral damage? That would be, if not justified, at least a little more understandable.

Yet Moore strangely intimated the decision not to assure the German of his future was essentially down to a choice between Broich and 18-year-old Joe Caletti, who has played in a little over a quarter of the Roar’s 2016-17 campaign. That explanation has not satisfied fans.

Now, to O’Donovan and the Jets.

It was made official yesterday, and as much as some Central Coast fans will grit their teeth at their top goalscorer waltzing over to their F3 Derby rivals, others are a little relieved.

O’Donovan is not, according to both the stats and the eye-test, an efficient striker, while Newcastle need a goalscorer who will convert chances efficiently.

Their Jets’ season, which tumbled down into a inky pool of disappointment, was plagued by a plethora of unrealised opportunities. Andrew Hoole was second only to Diego Castro in terms of chances created, and second only to Gui Finkler for crosses made. Andrew Nabbout was doing his best, inside the top ten for shots taken, and illuminating the league on his best nights. There is plenty of creative activity whirring around the midfield, but no one to effectively finish things off.

O’Donovan scored 11 goals for the Mariners, but did so with a minutes-to-goal ratio almost twice that of the league’s best strikers, Berisha and Maclaren. Relevantly, the Irishman took almost as many total shots as Berisha as well. He has a worse shooting accuracy than both Nabbout and Hoole, and of the top six teams’ strikers, only Berisha and Perth’s Andy Keogh were found offside more often than O’Donovan. He creates fewer chances than almost all of the top six teams’ starting strikers, and won just one penalty this season.

The Irishman reportedly rejected an offer from the Mariners, with the Jets likely offering a more handsome package. Newcastle had an equal league-worst chance conversion percentage of 11 per cent, four points worse than the Mariners, scored the second fewest goals in the league, with fewer assists than the Mariners, and more shots on target.

All of these numbers indicate an active, but highly inefficient attack, one that might be markedly improved by a reliable finisher. O’Donovan’s season indicates he is not that player.

Hoole is also out of contract, and there were vague reports a few weeks ago that he had fallen out with the club. If he is to leave, and an adequate replacement is not secured, he will take a huge portion of the team’s creativity with him, and O’Donovan will have even less to work with.

This does not even touch on how searching for a replacement for sacked manager Mark Jones will complicate things.

The Jets have also confirmed that Daniel Georgievski will join them next season, as well as Kosta Petratos and Mario Shabow.

So, as one ill-fitting attacker is brought in at Newcastle, a beloved talisman is callously ushered out at Brisbane. The true wisdom or folly of both of these decisions will become clear in the months to come.

At the moment though, it’s certainly a strange start.

The Crowd Says:

2017-04-20T12:47:44+00:00

Arto

Guest


Evan, One might argue that O'Donovan's stats are bad, because the service he has from his fellow players requires him to take his chances from more difficult scoring positions? I'd be interested to see a more detailed break-down of stats for him - eg: shots on target inside penalty area, or even shots on target inside 6-yd Box. It'd also be interesting to see what other aspects O'Donovans game brings to the team - what's his work-rate like in terms of hussling the back-4? How many key passes does he supply in a game (ie: passes that either create a chance or are 2nd-last before a goal). How many kms does he run on average? If that suits the Jets style for next season then maybe he won't be the disaster you predict him to be... Either way, the Jets are a bit of a mess at the moment so it'll be a while before we know much about their chances of making the Finals again... The Broich situation is a bit of strange one, IMO... an important player makes a decision on next season during the week prior to arguably the most important gamne of this season so far! Maybe what makes him such a great player is the mindset he has, but whilst I think Roar have bungled this media-wise, Broich shouldn't have come out now with this as it's just a Circus beside their preparations for Friday night's game!

2017-04-20T12:35:19+00:00

Arto

Guest


Agreed, Fadida. He basically said as much himself in an article that mentioned the reasons behind him leaving Sydney FC - that he couldn't cope with Arnold's rigid adherence to structure and he needed to be allowed a freer role...

2017-04-20T09:20:44+00:00

Swanny

Guest


O Donovan is a good striker . You can use stats to back your argument, but 20 goals in 42 games for ccm is very good . To put o Donovan up against berisha is comparing apples and oranges . Would berisha strike rate be as high at clubs like the Mariners , hardly likely

2017-04-20T07:47:43+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


there's an article in AFR says that, and says negotiating now with ABC. It says the issue FTA has is the non-exclusive rights being sold (concurrent with Fox telecast) and $2mil payment to Fox for production.

2017-04-20T07:15:52+00:00

Sydneysider

Guest


yes that's right. Fold the league.

2017-04-20T07:07:51+00:00

Britexit

Guest


Is that right that the FFA haven't received a bid from a commercial TV bidder for the A league and Socceroo rights

2017-04-20T05:37:03+00:00

FullBack4

Guest


Nothing strange about Jets, thats a darned good signing

2017-04-20T02:39:04+00:00

Greg

Guest


I think O'Donovan is a great, under the cap, signing. Marquee, no way, but a very solid signing.

2017-04-20T00:50:13+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


yes, he reassured us all by saying 'it's complicated, I don't want to talk about it.'

2017-04-20T00:48:49+00:00

Lionheart

Guest


well said again JB, have to agree wholeheartedly and he's not just a player mattq, he's Thomas Broich

2017-04-20T00:47:15+00:00

Chopper

Guest


John Aloisi tried to deflect the Broich issue away from conversation in the live facebook interview but failed with 90% of comments wanting Broich to stay and a few asking for Moore to go.

2017-04-20T00:24:54+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


Agreed. Hoole has proven to be NPL level. Has the skills but zero composure.

2017-04-19T23:34:24+00:00

Bfc

Guest


Craig Moore is right, but the way the Roar have handled the situation is a lesson in "how not to...". Is money so tight that JA couldn't even make an offer to Caletti and Broich?

2017-04-19T23:14:49+00:00

mattq

Guest


gosh supporters are strange creatures. it's just a player man. he's been offered a coaching role, it's his choice. had to happen at some time.

2017-04-19T22:52:53+00:00

Fadida

Guest


Hoole won't be missed much. He had all the potential ingredients, including great pace. He also treads on the ball more than any player I've ever seen. His biggest weakness is his mental fragility and brittle confidence. One bad mistake and his game falls apart, and the ball treading begins

2017-04-19T22:13:46+00:00

Franko

Guest


O'Donovan is set to be replaced by Cirio. The merry-go-round continues.

2017-04-19T20:57:18+00:00

j binnie

Guest


This situation at Roar should never have come to pass. It's a management 'stuff-up" of the highest proportions and actually highlights troubles that have long existed at the club despite their almost impeccable "on field" performances in the short HAL history. Discussions between managements and players re . remunerations are extremely private affairs and should be handled with "kid gloves", but it is obvious in this case that one of the top players ever to grace the HAL has had to go public as to why he would be leaving the club in the next few weeks, whilst experiencing total club "silence".. He has been "criticised" for going public when he did, but any experienced management team could have extended that important time frame by simply keeping the discussions going along for another few weeks and then the player would not have to have gone public when he did. The story about him being sacrificed in order to keep Caletti is pure comic book fantasy, if money is that tight at the club then they should learn to "cut their cloth to fit the suit" before the inevitable occurs, and the FFA have to step in as they did before. Now the long suffering fans are being asked to turn out in force this coming Friday to give a player, now regarded as expendable, a "rousing send-off" ,so we have to assume he is a "shoe in " to be playing in one of the club's most important games of the season.!!!!!! The mind boggles,as I say ,straight out of Captain Marvel. jb.

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