Six potential A-League explosions for the 2018-19 season

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

On Tuesday I wrote of opportunity and a recent Matt Simon hat trick. Today, the focus shifts to a group of young players with opportunities of their own and the chance to take the A-League by storm.

In a salary-capped league, clubs are forced – thankfully – to develop local talent rather than casually cherry-pick seasoned professionals at will.

Without the purse strings to merely dismiss an underperforming player and instantly purchase an improved version as the uncapped powerhouses of world football often do, A-League clubs look for a diamond in the rough or a young talent with enormous potential.

Hence the game of musical chairs that often takes place during the off-season and the significance of homegrown success stories like Aaron Mooy, Andrew Nabbout and Daniel Arzani are born.

There are a host of players with the opportunity to make 2018-19 their own and put their stamp on the upcoming A-League season. The domestic football world is indeed their oyster and it will be fascinating to monitor their progress.

Nikola Mileusnic (Adelaide United)
One of my personal A-League favourites, Mileusnic, is building a rather impressive body of work in Adelaide.

Now 25 and growing in composure and experience, his nimble footwork and explosive speed have proven a handful for many A-League defenders in his 43 games at the top level.

This could be a turning point in his career with a well-stocked attacking unit assembled by Marco Kurz.

If and when Mileusnic starts to find the net more frequently, the threat he presents will increase considerably and his full potential could be realised.

Adam Taggart (Brisbane Roar)
The thing I like most about Taggart is the simple fact that he bucks the trend of an obvious dearth of local striking talent in the A-League.

His conversion rate in stints with the Newcastle Jets and Perth Glory is excellent and his Golden Boot Award with Perth in 2013-14 was a brilliant achievement.

After sad times on foreign shores, injuries and a lack of opportunity, John Aloisi may have just found the x-factor up front for which the Roar was searching.

Personally, I hope Taggart stays fit, in form and slams 20 goals past rival keepers this season. It would great for both Brisbane and Australian football.

(Photo by Ross Swanborough/Getty Images)

Riley McGree (Melbourne City)
Even though McGree’s wonder goal was deemed inferior to a composed and clinical strike by Liverpool’s Mo Salah during the week, the 19-year-old has the world at his feet.

Infectious enthusiasm, speed and a daring spirit, hence the absurd nature of the scorpion kick he brazenly produced from the edge of the box, make McGree one of the most watchable young players in the league.

His move to Melbourne City sets him up for a boon year. He will be surrounded by experience and quality and the effect that will have on his own development will be considerable.

Kenny Athiu (Melbourne Victory)
Much time, energy and patience has been invested in the Sudanese-born attacker. His goal scoring prowess at Box Hill United and Heidelberg United made waves and the Victory were keen to have him.

However, there was an awkwardness about his skills up front when given a chance at the top level and he only managed one goal from six games in last seasons’ campaign.

There is something intriguingly promising about his potential, almost a suggestion that if the key to the 6 foot 7 inch forward is ever found, the A-League might be in for a goalscoring spree.

There were clear signs of improvement in the Victory’s FFA Cup match against Apia-Leichhardt, despite the disappointing result and it was Athiu’s brace that brought Melbourne back into the contest.

Kevin Muscat will be hoping more than anyone that the 26-year-old enjoys his best season on record.

There could be a vital role for Athiu to fill, particularly when Asian Champions League play comes around.

Daniel De Silva (Sydney FC)
It is something of a bizarre and quirky honour to be the first man loaned from one A-League club to another.

Former Central Coast whizz-kid Daniel De Silva will own that label forever and arrives at Sydney FC with a wealth of skill, promise and energy.

Anyone that has seen De Silva play knows his potential and at 21, it is still far from tapped.

With such a slight frame, he lacks the strength through the thighs and buttocks that Daniel Arzani possesses and uses to his advantage, yet there are similarities between them.

If De Silva is able to ‘fill out’ and add a little more physical power to his considerable skill on the ball, Steve Corica may have a gun on his hands.

Sadly for the A-League, De Silva does appear to have a future off-shore but for now, his goal will be to add to his resume with a ripping year of A-League play.

Daniel De Silva of Sydney FC (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Nick Fitzgerald (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Part of me wonders whether people realise just how good Nick Fitzgerald could be or perhaps should be at this point in his career.

It appears the Wanderers might and have purchased the Sydney born 26-year-old as part of an impressive recruitment drive over the off-season.

No doubt, Fitzgerald’s time at Melbourne City has added to his football smarts and he arrives in Western Sydney with the potential to make a significant splash in Australia’s largest football market.

The Wanderers need a fresh approach, some new energy and a clean palette from which to work. A player like Fitzgerald might just savour the change of environment and provide Western Sydney with exactly what they were looking for.

Nick Fitzgerald during his time with Melbourne City. (AAP Image/Dan Peled)

There is a host of promising young talent with the opportunity to take the league by the proverbial scruff of the neck.

Joey Champness and Ryan Kitto spring to mind immediately – both coming off the back of impressive performances last season. In fact, a follow-up piece seems likely.

These are some of my favourites but who do you see as the emerging stars for 2018-19?

The Crowd Says:

2018-09-28T02:48:27+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Agree. This is why we need to align the ALeague season with the rest of football, or, in particular, align the ALeague season with the NPL season.

2018-09-27T22:19:44+00:00

Post_hoc

Roar Rookie


I would argue things are getting better, the Sydney based A league clubs have academies, the older youth play NPL1 or 2 over winter, and then go into Youth League over summer, before going back into NPL. It would be interesting to see how many games they play, but I would argue it is up there.

2018-09-27T22:01:31+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Very good observations.

2018-09-27T20:05:54+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Yeah agreed. I’m a big fan of the youth teams playing in the NPL for development but the lack of alternative during the HAL season is hampering player development.

2018-09-27T13:24:38+00:00

Barca4life

Guest


Thankfully the next gen of players are all if not most are comfortable on the ball due to the effects of the FFA NC, what they need is opportunity to play senior football on a regular basis. The golden generation had a great youth structure with the NPL and state leagues which meant they could play up to 40 to 45 games per year with around 32 teams, a contrast to now and its no wonder we struggle to develop talent into first team regulars with smaller structures in place.

2018-09-27T11:02:20+00:00

Midfielder

Roar Guru


agree

2018-09-27T09:20:55+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Petafta was written off by van Egmond at the Jets due to his lack of physicality (read: ease at getting knocked off the ball). It certainly shot his confidence so much that he was just keeping a squad spot warm for someone else by the end. De Silva to me seems to have more of a mentality issue in that he seems to think he should be elsewhere, or that it is going to happen for him automatically, where he just needs to work harder on his mental game. Something in the teen prodigy alumni that maybe few emerge from that expectation intact. Something for Arzani to watch out for, too.

2018-09-27T09:12:33+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


It use to be that some number of senior players could get a run in the NYL team. It was a good way of easing back into match fitness. Became a bit harder when the NYL was scaled back to an eight game season.

2018-09-27T09:00:39+00:00

Midfielder

Roar Guru


sounds the way to go.

2018-09-27T07:05:09+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


I think it's going to be a great season. Let's hope it's dominated by play, and young Ausy players, and not politics.

2018-09-27T05:55:05+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


Player development has always been a problem in this country. We used to produce a lot players in the EPL that was not blessed with the greatest technical ability, look at the best in the EPL now, the most gifted players are not the British players. Our golden generation outside of 2-3 were mainly British type players. We really need a complete change of direction, we need more players comfortable with the ball at their feet.

2018-09-27T05:52:11+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Saw that announcement yesterday, Middy. Just confirms what many of us have been saying about LiveStreaming is the way to reach the football market in Australia. And, if you're an ISP or mobile carrier, content is now becoming the point of difference to prevent customer churn. Great move by OVO. I didn't know much about them, but I do now. Had a quick look & their HD quality was outstanding on their desktop App. Strong rumours now that Optus will be ready to take up the ALeague rights when the ALeague goes independent. FoxSports will still broadcast all matches, but it won't be an exclusive contract.

2018-09-27T05:49:38+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


Yes Fad, there are a lot of players to get excited about. Very excited at the amount technically gifted players (now not saying all will succeed) coming thru the ranks at present. Still a long way to go, but far better then when we just relied on the fit, fast & strong types with little technical ability.

2018-09-27T05:13:10+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


His best 10 years are ahead of him.

2018-09-27T05:04:33+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Well Goodwin’s not exactly young, he’s 27 in December

2018-09-27T05:01:47+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Agree on Petratos, once he lost weight and applied himself he was excellent. We’ll see this season. Pepper needs to play to improve though - this is the biggest weakness in our structure, if you’re not playing first team football you’re not playing football (no reserve league)

2018-09-27T04:37:46+00:00

Chen Yang

Roar Pro


Keanu baccus is another brilliant young player..started a few games at right back last season but is wasted there. Excellent passing range and a tempo doctating type player, Modric style

2018-09-27T04:32:07+00:00

Chen Yang

Roar Pro


How about Josh nesbitt at central coast? Small in stature (in fact he looked tony next to bolt) but absolutely fantastic technique. Marco rojas-esque with better bision and composure

2018-09-27T03:54:09+00:00

Fadida

Guest


Agree totally

2018-09-27T03:53:12+00:00

Fadida

Guest


Hopefully you are right Waz, thought think you are seriously over rating him. Comparisons with Petratos are null and void though, he always had excellent technical ability. He just needed to be played in the right position and be fitter.

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