A-League hub may be necessary: Corica

By Ed Jackson / Wire

As New South Wales’s COVID-19 situation worsens and the A-League season creeps closer, Sydney FC coach Steve Corica is aware of the looming reality of starting the campaign in an interstate hub.

The Sky Blues, along with fellow NSW-based A-League clubs Central Coast, Macarthur FC, Newcastle and Western Sydney Wanderers are all undertaking preseason training during the state’s lockdown.

Melbourne Victory, Melbourne City and Western United are having to deal with Victoria’s latest lockdown amid their preseason preparations.

The prospect of being able to host games when the 2021-22 season kicks off on 30 October looks increasingly remote unless the situation in NSW improves dramatically in coming weeks.

The outbreak has already forced the postponement of FFA Cup fixtures while Football NSW has already cancelled all state competitions for the remainder of the year.

It’s left Corica and his staff unsure of when they will be able to play preseason fixtures and having to manage the return of overseas players such as English forward Adam Le Fondre, who is yet to travel back to Australia despite the squad returning to training last month.

While league bosses will be hopeful the situation in NSW will have improved enough to at least let the local teams play fixtures against each other for a period by the time the season starts, the prospect of following the lead of other codes in temporarily relocating teams looms large.

“I wouldn’t rule it out,” Corica told AAP.

“Obviously, we’ve got to do what we’ve got to do to get the league going and if that’s moving somewhere else to play in a hub then so be it.

“It’d be tough, obviously, to leave the family and obviously for the players as well to leave their families if that was the case but I suppose we’ve got to look after the family as well by getting the league going.”

A hub would be a new circumstance for Corica’s team but not for many of their rivals.

Non-NSW clubs had to spend weeks in the state to finish the 2019-20 season in a mini-tournament format after an initial shutdown due to coronavirus in March last year.

Wellington Phoenix had to wait 433 days to play a game in New Zealand across the past two campaigns, spending most of the 2020-21 season based in Wollongong.

The Crowd Says:

2021-08-27T20:04:25+00:00

Blood Dragon

Roar Rookie


WA dose not have the Facilities to host a Hub it's QLD or delay at this point

2021-08-27T10:06:20+00:00

Skoose

Roar Rookie


Make the hub in WA at least it has the best chance of a full season. If there’s no ALeague hopefully they have an extended/night series WA NPL (and promote it and pay the players) as it’s been a good season here in WA for NPL football.

2021-08-24T21:26:46+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


A renegotiation with Paramount might be necessary. Start a month later and perhaps a hub until Christmas will be suffice. That's only a month and then hopefully the new year will be closer to normal. Queensland seems to be the best option for suitable grounds. While the A League / APL don't usually communicate to fans early or well, they do seen to find solutions. They negotiated last season extremely well and I'm hoping they're just as efficient this year.

2021-08-24T11:17:43+00:00

Blood Dragon

Roar Rookie


Perth has 1 Rectangular Stadium it cant host 6 other teams, Honestly would not be surprised if Glory have to Hub as well due to WA's Hard Border

2021-08-24T03:43:10+00:00

Popavalium Andropoff

Guest


Perth’s probably safer than Brisbane but it’s in the wrong timezone - unless Perth was used for maybe 6 weeks and Tassie was used for the next 6 weeks?

2021-08-23T23:45:31+00:00

Blood Dragon

Roar Rookie


Tassie doesn't have the Facilities so it will have to be QLD but hopefully the Rugby Championship and NRL are not to delayed so the A-League can have QLD to itself

2021-08-23T23:37:57+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


The APL has 2 months to work something out. Sydney is pretty much a disaster zone, and no games will be played there until at least December, and even that is optimistic. Melbourne is hanging by a thread, but the outlook is that they aren't going to reduce those numbers to zero any time soon. New Zealand is currently in lockdown as well. Perth won't let anyone in without 2 weeks quarantine. Queensland or Tassie looking like the best places for a hub, or perhaps shared across those states and Adelaide.

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