Australia isn't ready for Australian coaches

By Lucas Radbourne Pugh / Roar Rookie

Australia is a conflicted sporting nation.

We love the underdog tag but hate the inferiority it suggests. We embrace a fair-go ethos and then crucify our teams, coaches and administrators when they don’t win.

We wear our robust physicality as a badge of honour yet recoil at any insinuation of tactical ineptitude. We’re not the sporting nation we think we are.

For every Ash Barty there’s a Nick Kyrgios, Bernard Tomic and Lleyton Hewitt dummy spit.

For every Ricky Ponting there’s a Shane Warne scandal, David Warner altercation and Steve Smith tamper-gate.

For every Sam Kerr there’s a Kevin Muscat breaking someone’s leg, Craig Johnstone surfing for England and Tim Cahill blocking someone on Twitter.

And for every David Pocock there’s, well, Super Rugby.

Australian sport is a lot of things, but it’s neither mature nor sophisticated. So why do we think that when it comes to one of the sports we’re least successful at we can progress under Australian coaches?

(Pier Marco Tacca/Getty Images)

The modern Australian football landscape has been laid on the unifying effect of the 2006 World Cup.

It energised the A-League (Melbourne Victory averaged 31,000 people per match that year), brought a new generation of fans to Australian football and rebranded the Socceroos as the epitome of Australia’s underdog infatuation, transforming them into the nation’s (statistically proven) most loved national team.

There was a golden generation, a wealthy benefactor, a grand new vision. But it couldn’t have happened without a gruff, world-weary Dutchman gathering all the pieces and finishing the puzzle.

The modern Socceroos were built on the back of foreign coaches: Terry Venables proved we could match the world’s best, then Guus Hiddink taught us how.

Though many may shudder at the prospect of another Hesterine De Reus, the Matildas too were built on foreign sweat and blood.

The seven-year spell of Tom Sermanni in the late 2000s firmly evolved the Australian women’s national team from the days of posing nude for calendars to the lofty heights they enjoy today.

So why have we suffered through a plethora of average foreign and domestic coaches since?

The issue isn’t whether the coach is Australian, Argentinian or Afghani. The issue is whether the coach is good enough, and Australian coaches just aren’t good enough. Not yet.

What’s truly lacking is elite foreign experience.

(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Ange Postecoglou is arguably the greatest coach Australia’s produced. He had the capacity to transform the Socceroos from a defensive, counter-attacking outfit into an attacking, possession-based team. But he couldn’t enable them to compete on a global stage.

He suffered at the double-edged sword of Australian coaching. He lacked global understanding and he was too emotionally involved. The weight of home-grown expectation eventually proved too great.

Make no mistake, the Socceroos coaching role is the toughest gig in Australian sport. There is no wider variety of egos, styles and backgrounds to manage and no harder competitions to succeed at.

Soon, however, it will be coaching the Matildas.

Unlike the Socceroos, the Matildas have had a running start. Their 2-1 loss against Italy and stunning rebuke of Milicic’s tactics says it all.

“I’m so upset. More for the style in which we played the second half … this high line is absolutely ridiculous,” Canberra United coach Heather Garriock said post-match.

“If you think as a coach you can come in and change your philosophy and change the style within five matches … we have just been crucified, not once but twice.”

Ante Milicic (Power Sport Images/Getty Images)

A four-time world champion in the men’s game, the Italian women’s national team are playing their first World Cup since 1990, the victims of years of negligence and underfunding on the part of the Italian football confederation.

But the days of European superpowers ignoring women’s football are over. The Italians said pre-match that while the Matildas were athletic, they’re tactically inferior. They were right.

The day 60,000 fans packed the Wanda Metropolitano to watch Atletico Madrid play Barcelona in the Liga Feminina was a warning shot to female football outside Europe. The sleeping giants have awoken.

Unlike the Socceroos, the Australian public have already tasted success in women’s football and adjusted their expectations to suit. Our athleticism and the relative wealth of opportunities for Australian sportswomen had ranked us among the world’s best.

Soon a few foreign journalists had put us among the favourites and suddenly every Australian news organisation was claiming we were going to win the World Cup.

But after the players are esteemed and the pressure is heaped, all that remains is the coach.

It can no longer be excused that our players aren’t good enough. It can’t be governance crises either – look at the discrimination suffered by other women’s sides in this competition. It has to be the tactics.

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As a country we can’t even decide what our sporting identity is. We’re far too conflicted about what sport means to handle the responsibility of coaching a winning football team.

This isn’t to mention the specific lack of professional opportunities for Australian coaches or that our coaches all grew up in a semi-professional system.

After the World Cup, the question will likely be why FFA thought it was appropriate to appoint Ante Milicic – a coach with no experience of the women’s game, a purported reluctance to take the position and a short, unsuccessful record in international football – as coach of the Matildas.

It seems an extraordinary opportunity wasted, rendering FFA’s claims that Alen Stajcic’s sacking was for “purely football reasons” laughable.

At best this women’s World Cup could be the biggest tournament in Australian football history. At worst it’s our greatest chance since 2006 of implanting ourselves on the world stage, a chance to right the wrongs of the past 13 years more broadly.

But if we’re destined to suffer yet again at the lack of foresight from those governing Australian football, at least we can persecute exactly where we keep going wrong.

Pim Verbeek and Holger Osieck were meagre appointments in the wake of Hiddink – an Asian Cup semi-final and a Gold Cup their only notable international achievements – tainting the reputation of foreign coaches Down Under.

This led Australia to appoint Postecoglou and Graham Arnold before we, or they, were ready.

Former Socceroos coach Ange Postecoglou (AAP Image/Matt Roberts)

Now the female game has also passed the point where sticking in a successful W-League coach or a Socceroos assistant is good enough to compete at the highest level. At its heart it’s not just Euro-snobbery, it’s ensuring Australian coaches receive the same foreign education as Joe Montemurro before we hand over the keys.

While the rest of the world rapidly evolves around us, Australia has reached our national coaching zenith. Unless we appoint elite foreign coaches, we won’t just stagnate, we’ll decline.

Crying poor is no excuse: coaches simply aren’t that expensive. Zinedine Zidane and Diego Simeone only earnt $4 million more than Keisuke Honda last season.

National team coaches cost even less.

Jorge Sampaoli, Gareth Southgate and Carlos Queiroz were paid only fractionally more at the 2018 World Cup than we paid Bert van Marwijk for a uselessly short stint, while Belgium’s Roberto Martinez was paid less.

FFA, through Fox Sports’s marquee fund, shelled out millions on securing Keisuke Honda for a single A-League club but have never seemed to consider the cumulative value that a marquee coach could have.

Former Socceroos coach Bert van Marwijk (Michael Regan/Getty Images)

Your average football fan isn’t just disconnected from the A-League, they’re disconnected from Australian football.

They’re not going to watch or attend the A-League en masse because a former AC Milan midfielder is playing for Victory, but they will watch the A-League if the Socceroos are performing well on the world stage.

They’ll want to experience Australian football and know where the next generation is going to come from.

People won’t start watching the W-League if you bring in foreign stars. But they will start watching if the Matildas play exciting, attractive football at the World Cup. They’ll be hooked on the patriotic pride and excitement.

Australian football has a peculiar advantage in this area because of that conflicting ideal at the heart of our sporting mythology – the love of the Aussie battler.

Australia’s cricket and rugby sides are expected to win, which means if the Wallabies perform strongly in their World Cup, it’s unlikely to spark wider public interest. Average Australian rugby attendances actually dropped after the Wallabies made the World Cup final in 2015 – it doesn’t excite mainstream Australia that we beat up Tonga and Fiji.

Football is a different story. It’s us against the world, and by virtue of being traditionally unsuccessful the Socceroos and Matildas can inspire people to love their sport in a way that no other national team can.

But coaching isn’t just an issue for our national teams.

The most successful expansion team in modern football history, MLS club Atlanta United, started life in a saturated sporting market in an area with no football history nor interest and without a single big-name marquee footballer.

Instead they focused on the coach, appointing former Argentina boss Gerardo Martino.

Brilliant attacking, flowing football soon followed. Atlanta were entertaining, consistent and immediately competitive. Best of all, rather than relying on short-lived and expensive foreign signings, they were able to build heroes out of home-grown players who didn’t depart after a single season.

A-League clubs suffer from a revolving door of meaningless marquees, their subsequent lack of identity rooted in an absence of purpose. It all comes down to coaches – they pick the teams, preach the philosophy, espouse the virtues and mould the talent.

Most importantly for Australia, they’re not just responsible for results but fore who our sporting role models are as people.

The Crowd Says:

2019-06-13T21:57:26+00:00

chris

Guest


Good response Fad. The article was Euro-snobbish. As you point out, how can Terry Venables be considered successful when he basically butchered our qualification to France 98? Imagine if it was an Aussie coach that squandered a 2 goal lead with 15 to go, with a flat back 4 standing wider than the Sydney heads. And a high line for good measure!

2019-06-13T21:50:21+00:00

Fadida

Roar Rookie


Does last night's result mean Brazil aren't ready for Brazilian coaches?

2019-06-13T11:36:34+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Your last paragraph is correct in so many levels. Good post all-round.

2019-06-13T11:34:21+00:00

Will

Guest


Australian coaches who have come along way still show tactically rigidity in their style unlike top coaches in Europe and South America have excellent flexibly to make the key technical and tactical changes in games. Helps to have the quality of players though. But I also think foreign coaches will often avoid bias with player selections with honest options which we had with Hiddink, Verbeek and Van Marwijk. Also easier for local players to show that. Great piece!

2019-06-13T11:30:30+00:00

JuniorCoach

Guest


@Pacman You should check out the FFA Skill Acquisition phase in the curriculum. It perfectly explains the technical based skills such as 1v1, striking the ball, first touch and running with the ball. All relevant skills that the players must have in the professional level, so the skills are taught but the best ones really do it well by practicing on their own time. But the emphasis on technical skills is bigger than ever before, the interpretation on how it’s done is the question mark that’s why the coaching is so important.

2019-06-13T10:55:22+00:00

Redondo

Roar Rookie


It’s normal pacman. Welcome back!

2019-06-13T10:37:35+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


I am an occasional poster. When I read my response to jb, it appeared as one large and virtually unreadable paragraph, hence my comment. Some minutes later, the formatting is correct. Is this normal, or was it an aberration?

2019-06-13T10:37:07+00:00

Fadida

Roar Rookie


Always does that. It'll format in a few minutes

2019-06-13T09:59:24+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


I used paragraphs. What happened?

2019-06-13T09:56:29+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


You well know jb, as you have identified the challenge in many posts, that the skills acquisition issue is not being dealt with during the critical learning years of our junior players. In my opinion, 9yrs - 12yrs is the prime time for juniors, preferably those who have been kicking a ball for several years. It obviously progresses after this, but these formative years are critical. We will continue to fail to produce adequately skilled players until an appropriately designed system is put into place. Such a system needs to identify and compartmentalise the required skills, and then identify the juniors who display the determination to develop the identified skills. If a junior/youth player says to his coach that "juggling the ball is boring", then immediately show that player the door. His attitude will not change! Unfortunately, this does not happen, thanks to the dearth of players willing to immerse themselves into the unforgiving demands of repetitive learning and practising. You have identified the issue as: "... today our youngsters are constantly being inundated with all sorts of attractions to keep them away from sports in general". I would suggest the word "attractions" be replaced by "distractions". I doubt our football administrators are qualified to deal with such a basic issue. Far too many "suits" on six figure salaries! Cheers.

2019-06-13T09:13:59+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


No he's not. As the FFA article says: Recent signings such as Kosta Barbarouses (to Sydney FC), Daniel Georgievski (to Western Sydney Wanderers) and Filip Kurto (to Western United FC) will not be officially registered with their new club until the registration period opens on July 24. How does the Hyundai A-League transfer window work? https://www.a-league.com.au/news/how-does-hyundai-a-league-transfer-window-work

2019-06-13T08:36:42+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


so Kosta's not registered yet?

2019-06-13T08:30:25+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


FFA released a document yesterday explaining that new signings cannot be "officially registered with their new club until the registration period opens on 24 July." So, there's no point rushing any announcements. This is the holiday period for clubs.

2019-06-13T08:02:51+00:00

Fadida

Roar Rookie


And yet JB countries like Greece can win against all odds, despite having clearly inferior players. How? Coaches setting up strategies to maximise their playing talents and nullify the opposition. Porto winning the Champions League is another. Not the best players but brilliantly set up - by the manager Yes, players can win or lose a game with brilliance or a mistake, but the game is a long way removed from the days of the "trainer", when players ran the dressing room and decided how they played

2019-06-13T07:57:43+00:00

Fadida

Roar Rookie


Absolutely agree LH. They are skills not football specific though, hence the success of teacher types like AVB and Sacchi. Don't agree you have to have coached women before, but you must have a penchant for teaching, which is needed for both sexes. The big difference in the womens game from a football POV is the huge amount of space available . This requires coaches to control the space, and makes an athlete like Kerr so much more effective than in the men's game. The other big difference is the ease of scoring if you can get the ball anywhere near the corners, particularly higher up.

2019-06-13T07:49:30+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


“In Brisbane we have seen a new coach employed and up to 15 players “sacked” and yet the silence emanating from the club is deafening with only weeks before training is due to commence.What sort of message does that send to the 10-15,000 loyal fans” It sends the message jb that at long last they have managed to shut off the internal leaks! Between the 10 A-League clubs in total there’s been just a handful of announced signings; as you will know, the number of actual signings will be 10x that but all are announced in due-course.

2019-06-13T07:16:08+00:00

jbinnie

Guest


This subject under discussion once again shows the amount of reliance being thrust upon the shoulders of coaches per.se. Coaches do not play, win, or lose games ,it is players who do that and so if we are to find out what is wrong with our game here it is not coaches ,or their performances, we have to examine it is the talent,skill and comprehension of the players under their control that has to be examined. Today we are not producing players of a standard that enables us not only to dominate our Asian neighbours but in reality sees us a long way behind the strongholds of world football,be it Europe or South America. When watching the Socceroos or the Matildas playing one is constantly reminded of the huge gap in inherent skills in our players and no coach in the world can cure that problem in a week or two, so what is to be done?. In our "Western Society" today our youngsters are constantly being inundated with all sorts of attractions to keep them away from sports in general, where the emphasis is on hard work and discipline.It is in this area that much work has to be done for today football at the highest level presents a well rewarded career path that can set up a youngster for life and yet that message never seems to be aired. It can be proved by looking at our tennis players who have somewhat fallen from grace in recent years. The lad Millman, whose father was a "soccer" player, no doubt works hard at his game but knowing his father well I think the lad will forgive me for saying his father also worked very hard at his game but never attained the earning potential that the boy has achieved in his sport. So we come back to how the game is being run. The Australian public loves winners,crowd figures prove that,and yet we have a multi million dollar 'plan" that is proving to be the biggest con trick ever, for the basics in the Curriculum are actually factors that can be found in coaching manuals from 40 years ago.Publicity at the highest level of the sport appears to be have been replaced with secrecy,with cards obviously being played close to the chest in every area of our sport. In Brisbane we have seen a new coach employed and up to 15 players "sacked" and yet the silence emanating from the club is deafening with only weeks before training is due to commence.What sort of message does that send to the 10-15,000 loyal fans that they have built over their short history? I hate to imagine. Football has problems but I'm not so sure they can all be placed at the feet of coaches. Cheers jb.

2019-06-13T07:11:40+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


But I'd argue you need to know how to handle a horse, and a group of young girls, before ...

2019-06-13T05:35:30+00:00

Fadida

Roar Rookie


There is still the mistaken belief that to have been a jockey you have first needed to be a horse. Mourinho, Arrigo Sacchi, Vilas Boas and many others would agree with me, though Jose is no doubt a horse's a@$€

2019-06-13T05:09:21+00:00

Redondo

Roar Rookie


Excellent rebuttal - I give it 10/10. I think the cringe extends to our own coaches - it seems if you played in a European league people think you know all there is to know about Football. Several Aussie A-League coaches with European playing experience have clearly shown that means bughgher all when it comes to coaching.

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