Class is somewhat debatable but form is everything

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

As a keen viewer of almost every sport known to humanity, I sometimes find myself emotionally engaged in events to which I have no particular interest or allegiance.

The most recent example was a gymnastics competition in Doha that I stumbled across on Foxtel during the week. Australia had a couple of chances to win an overall World Cup title depending upon the success or failure of other competitors.

It appears the Aussies were already in the Commonwealth Games village preparing and unavailable; despite having a chance to round out the year on top of the points competition.

Kicking back on the lounge and waiting for the upcoming La Liga match on Bein Sports I was lured in. A Chinese fella produced a ripsnorter of a vault, stuck the landing and snared victory by the barest of margins and a petite Romanian girl shone on the uneven bars.

In short, I’ll watch anything and my wife’s opinion that I am a ‘sporting slut’ may be accurate despite its offensiveness.

The reasons for my ‘sluttiness’ are clear and when the game is on the line, watching the way competitors react to pressure situations intrigues me. Some lift, finding new ways to astound and defy logic and perception whereas others fall in a screaming heap, flailing away, directionless.

The beauty of football lies in the fact that the stage on which it is played is bigger than any other game. No other sport has as many organised participants and the universality of the game adds layers of meaning that are difficult to grasp for the unconverted.

Thus, the international footballer is placed in the most extreme of circumstances.

(Photo by Joan Cros Garcia/Corbis via Getty Images)

Comparatively, our microcosmic A-League might not play out on such a grand stage and I’m fairly sure much of mainland Europe missed the action in Round 25, however, our local competition is also building to a climax of triumph and tragedy.

After twenty five rounds, it is time to be counted and some of the on-field statements being made by teams over the last five weeks have been impressive and unanticipated.

An apparent gulf in class between the front running Sky Blues and Newcastle Jets and the rest of the finals contenders has all but evaporated and a couple of old stagers have shoved their foot firmly in the door and refused to budge.

Below are the points accumulated from the last five weeks of A-League football.

Melbourne Victory 12
Perth Glory 10
Brisbane Roar 10
Sydney FC 9
Newcastle Jets 9
Adelaide United 7
Melbourne City 7
Western Sydney 4

These numbers question some widely held beliefs and opinions. For all the adoration around the remarkable feats of Sydney FC over the last two seasons, they have stumbled badly and put doubt, gloom, glee and expectation into the minds of the fans, all dependent upon which side of the fence you sit.

Newcastle loomed as the most likely challenger a few months back yet after another loss, this time to City on Easter Sunday, they now look somewhat ‘gettable’ to the six teams hunting them from behind.

(AAP Image/Darren Pateman)

What is pleasing is the surge of the Victory and the Roar; a surge that has revitalised the competition and a highly competitive top four now looks likely.

It was, therefore, no surprise to see 12,019 people attend Suncorp on Saturday, far above the Roar’s season average of 9,093.

Similarly, 15,280 people found their way to AAMI Park to see the Victory put the cleaners through the Wanderers and Adelaide pulled an excellent 11,738, considering the opposition.

These figures stand to reason however, as form is everything. No matter how stacked with talent or expensive a squad might be, nor how promising the future looks, fans will flock in droves when the team is hot.

At this stage of the season, with the rewards within grasp, watching your team build momentum and start to loom into contention is the stuff of dreams for football fans.

Surprisingly, Perth could only rustle up 7,742 patrons, despite the fact that the Glory were and still are, within reach of a finals appearance.

Perth aside, the top contenders have continued to hold up their end of the bargain and the eleven and a half thousand who packed into McDonald Jones Stadium on Easter Sunday for the clash with Melbourne City, were further evidence.

The boon for the A-League has been the increase in the number of contenders and the strong interest in the final stages of the competition.

Criticism from early in the year failed to factor in a rather disturbing fact. With Sydney FC and Newcastle Jets as exceptions, no other team appeared to be in form. Perhaps an argument could be mounted for City who took all before them in the opening month, yet realistically, it has taken many teams quite some time to get rolling.

Now that they are, things look a lot brighter on the horizon.

Forget any ACL excuses for Sydney; Victory’s current run defies that logic and we have a juicy and competitive finish lined up. Six teams are jostling for four places and with the exception of Western Sydney, each one of them is in good enough form to threaten.

No wonder the tipping has proven so difficult.

The Crowd Says:

2018-04-04T00:51:35+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Who needs medals Pip, when you get Special Premiership T-shirts. "All players will embark on a lap of honour following the lifting of the trophy wearing special Premiers t-shirts."

2018-04-04T00:46:53+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


2018-04-04T00:46:40+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Yes and I'm reading - good job Sydney BUT they won because referees favoured them, they played to different rules than other teams, the VAR helped them, the FFA made sure they won, the Lowy family bribed referees and officials . . . . I think the lack of media coverage this season of Sydney and the A-League is a bigger concern. Maybe we need to light more flares at games to get journalists to watch our games.. . :)

2018-04-04T00:38:08+00:00

Cousin Claudio

Roar Guru


Very satisfying result. Hope they get through to the knockout stages of the ACL. Should be able to beat Shenua at home Lets hope the Antlers play their winning team against Suwong.

AUTHOR

2018-04-03T13:31:21+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


Great win from Sydney tonight. Geez!

2018-04-03T11:46:26+00:00

AR

Guest


“This article even estimates that up to 250 million people watch the A-League now...” And Fuss applauds with “Terrific figures”..! You could not make this stuff up.

2018-04-03T11:44:07+00:00

AR

Guest


You gotta laugh when Fuss’ main angry point is...wait for it...the FFA makes more money from the 27 round season than it does from the 3 week final series. Stunning stuff..!...and signed off with a boastful quip about the mental aptitude that only football fans possess. Superb!

2018-04-03T11:20:47+00:00

chris

Guest


You should watch it Macro....you might learn something instead of posting garbage.

2018-04-03T09:29:47+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


“ill informed” - yeah right. Who appointed you as judge and jury on what is balanced opinion and what isn’t? That’s right, no one ... jog on buddy.

2018-04-03T08:21:24+00:00

Mark

Guest


I wasn’t making any comment on the value the FFA places on the plate. You can make your own judgements on that. I was commenting on the fact that you are trying to present yourself as someone who takes a balanced view of the FFA’s performance. However, your comments on this website suggest anything but that, as evidenced by the ill informed comment you’ve made on Adelaide’s presentation. The plate couldn’t be presented at Adelaide’s last match because they didn’t win it until the following night. The FFA offered to present the plate to Adelaide prior to their home semi final, which they declined.

2018-04-03T07:26:44+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Terrific figures. The new ALeague administration must identify ways to reach the most people on the planet & monetise the broadcast. Currently, the Live Stream is via pay per month platform. Imagine the potential revenue if it were on a Free LiveStreaming platform, with 15" targeted ads during the broadcast (as we see with pirate video streams) generating $2 per viewer. The broadcast revenue from overseas viewing will be greater than broadcast revenue from withing Australia.

2018-04-03T06:32:04+00:00

Kangajets

Guest


No Sydney are the best team . The grand final is a different challenge

2018-04-03T05:58:51+00:00

marco

Guest


Sounds like A League is the much much bigger than we are led to believe..............or is Cuz just delusional?

2018-04-03T04:57:02+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Well if you say so, but did they award medals ... or are you just looking at my comment with one eye open?? The point being made is the ffa don’t place a value on the Plate - no prize money, no medals for players, subdued presentations etc ... or do you think differently?

2018-04-03T04:47:00+00:00

punter

Guest


Yeah fair enough, but while you & Kanga doing the conga at Merewether beach celebrating the GF win, will you claim to be best team this year.

2018-04-03T04:13:28+00:00

chris

Guest


Thanks for the links CC. Wonderful global exposure of the A-League. Its funny how our footballers are barely mentioned in msm, yet here they are, all on the world stage. Puts everything into its proper perspective.

2018-04-03T04:01:22+00:00

Mark

Guest


“The year Adelaide won it the presentation was done behind closed doors with no fans present.” At the request of Adelaide’s management, who wanted the team to focus on the finals. Not a great example of you taking a both eyes open approach.

2018-04-03T03:57:17+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


The ffa don’t award medals to players for winning the Plate, that tells you all you need to know. The year Adelaide won it the presentation was done behind closed doors with no fans present. I try to look at football with both eyes open, not just one, so I can see both good and the bad and comment accordingly - it’s not my fault the ffa (supported by an army of apologists) are stuffing the game up lol

2018-04-03T03:29:49+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


I recon so fadida. Slightly concerned that there may be a gap between WSW management and fans though, the lowest point at Roar came when management and fans didn’t get on ...

2018-04-03T03:26:56+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Hope so.

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