Wanderers risking it all on two-year Rodwell deal

By TheSecretScout / Roar Guru

One of A-League Men’s worst kept secrets has been revealed, with former English Premier League player Jack Rodwell signing a two-year contract with the Western Sydney Wanderers.

The ex-Man City, Everton and Sunderland midfielder’s wife, Alanna, hails from Sydney and the player has been in Australia for the past several weeks training, in the hope of getting signed by either Macarthur or the Wanderers.

Jack broke into the Everton first team as rambunctious 16-year-old and within a few years, had made a big money move to the Etihad for £12 million (A$22 million), where he was on an eye-watering weekly wage of £130,000 (A$239,000).

His two years at City were injury-riddled. Sunderland then surprisingly signed him for £10 million (A$18 million).

Rodwell’s time at the Stadium of Light was a disaster, as the team tumbled down the leagues and the player refused to agree to the termination of his contract, which was famously documented in the Sunderland ‘Till I Die Netflix series.

In his time on Tyneside, he was earning more than several team’s wages combined and people were calling it the worst value transfer in the English game at that stage.

He also spent an injury-plagued stint with Blackburn and his most recent club, Sheffield United – playing only 70 minutes in 18 months with the club.

The move to Australia is an incredibly risky one for both player and club.

Wanderers are taking a punt on a former starlet (Photo by James Williamson – AMA/Getty Images)

Rodwell’s career has been littered with injuries – clubs have often struggled to work out why he gets so many soft tissue injuries and the best way to deal with them.

Sunderland was trying every preventative measure in the book and out of it, including the controversial Dr Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt giving the player over 50 injections in the space of a week to deal with his injuries.

Australian pitches are notoriously hard and players from Europe struggle to adapt and regularly pick up soft tissue injuries due to them.

Much like Perth Glory with prized injury-plagued English recruit Daniel Sturridge, the Wanderers will need to make sure they have a physio table ready for when Rodwell’s battered body breaks down.

As for the Wanderers, with this talent laden and expensive squad assembled, their target must be the title.

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Player for player, this is the best squad in the league, with depth in every position and young talent ready to step up as well.

Coach Carl Robinson will now be under immense pressure to deliver trophies with Rodwell’s signing – especially after the Wanderers missed the finals last season.

While matters on the pitch look good, off-field issues have followed the Wanderers around like a bad smell during the off-season.

Several of the squad have refused to be vaccinated, a player’s religious views have caused unrest on social media and a boardroom that doesn’t tend to agree on major decisions are just some of the many issues the club has faced.

The A-Leagues’ basket case club has, however, introduced something revolutionary that other clubs should look to follow – ‘The Wander Pass’.

It is a subscription-based service no different to Netflix or Paramount+, where a fee of $15 a month gives you general admission access to all home games.

Work has also started on stage 4 of the Wanderers Football Park, a $6 million upgrade to Western Sydney’s training facility that includes five-a-side football pitches.

Initiatives and investments like the two mentioned are great for the club, but at the end of the day they will be judged by the results on the field.

Rodwell’s signing is incredibly risky due to his injury record, as well as the wages he will be on at Wanderers.

Whether his performances will be enough to save under-pressure coach Carl Robinson is another story.

The Crowd Says:

2021-11-12T21:55:20+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


I don't want to hear this Chris. When the NSW government stopped all community sport the FA could have... They could have.. When WA wouldn't allow anyone in until 90% are vaccinated, perhaps in February 2022 and the FA completed fixtures where they have to play away the FA could have... It's just an excuse, it's east coast bias. You just don't get it!

2021-11-11T02:57:14+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


I think the biggest risk at Wanderers is not being able to get rid of Troisi. If they can get rid of him and sign in fast attacking players that makes runs for their talent they will go great otherwise not sure how this team can work with or without Rodwell. Maybe this Japanese guy they got can fit the bill. Ibini doesn't make runs, Hemed is old and slow. My view on injury prone players is better off with someone who is injury prone but at least you know they can do something. Why do people assume their is still a salary cap, there was a reduced salary cap before the start of last season but that must have been wound back to the original level because everyone started hiring into the season, I found out the reason Corica didnt hire a striker at the start of last season was the reduced salary cap . As for now with the new body where does it say what the salary cap is. Certainly WSW have a lot of well paid players add Rodwell I dont see how they could fit this many under the old salary cap. If their plan is to play a back three , they will definetly then need Rodwell, and even then it will be a bad idea anyway. traore as a wing back that says bottom of the table. Papas if he performs at Newcastle could come in mid season,

AUTHOR

2021-11-11T02:51:05+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


anything over 700k is high in my book

2021-11-11T01:48:13+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


You're still being cryptic, and it's gone from 'high six figures' - which surely means 700k+ - to 'several hundred grand'. I don't have any inside info, but if the number is more than 300k per season, I'd be shocked.

2021-11-10T22:55:22+00:00

josh

Guest


It just hurts that's all :laughing:

AUTHOR

2021-11-10T21:45:25+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


i have issues with clubs spending more than theyre making, eg macarthur who have spent the most out of any other club this off season macarthur, city, victory and wanderers concern me this year (not so much sydney for a change) but i've given you many examples of how clubs are able to get around the cap - involving housing arrangements, cars and even jobs to relatives

AUTHOR

2021-11-10T21:42:15+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


same/same pretty much, dont try and get me on a technicality lol

AUTHOR

2021-11-10T21:41:25+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


never said he was on marquee wages, several hundred grand across 2 seasons is not much (still too much for a injury plagued 30 year old) - considering wanderers are paying someone like johnny koutroumbis over 300k (no disrespect to johnny k who is a great player)

2021-11-10T20:45:02+00:00

josh

Guest


His wife comes from Western Sydney Andy, not Sydney. Big difference there, happy wife = happy life.

2021-11-10T20:44:01+00:00

josh

Guest


Those 3 areas you mentioned don't even come close to Western Sydney when it comes to being a football area. The figure for the complete A-Z Socceroos who hail from the West is up around 75% apparently.

2021-11-10T16:42:17+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


Do you have a source for that? One, I can’t imagine he had much leverage to demand such a figure, and two, I wouldn’t have thought WSW had much cap room left in any case.

2021-11-10T12:36:56+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Nice to have a reality tv star at the Soap Opera that is WSW. “The worst signing in the history of Sunderland Football Club” - so let’s see what people are saying come winter.

2021-11-10T11:09:11+00:00

Paul

Guest


More issues with Melbourne City and Sydney FC with regard to salary cap issues.

2021-11-10T11:07:06+00:00

Paul

Guest


It was openly stated that the contract was modest. He is not coming as a marquee player unlike Sturridge.

2021-11-10T06:58:48+00:00

Tigertown

Guest


I feel that both WSW & Macarthur’s salary cap need to be investigated. Both teams are swarming with talent. Like sweet honey to the bee.

2021-11-10T05:32:20+00:00

chris

Guest


I don't think the APL trumps the govt in when games can be played.

AUTHOR

2021-11-10T05:21:50+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


i dont want to hear the covid excuse anymore lol, all the other leagues/cups around the world in countries with way more cases/deaths than australia went ahead. the rescheduled FFA Cup draw (this round with vic/nsw teams) heavily favours the a league sides. some of these NPL teams will get pasted this round in vic and nsw

2021-11-10T05:04:34+00:00

chris

Guest


Andy can you accept that things are not normal due to covid and scheduling has been thrown out.

2021-11-10T04:46:34+00:00

Football is Life

Roar Rookie


As a former Lambton player........Come on You Wanderers

2021-11-10T03:59:32+00:00

chris

Guest


No doubt western Sydney is a massive football heartland. But so are the southern beaches and the inner west and to a lesser extent the eastern suburbs. These are all SFC heartland so we have nothing to fear from WSW in regards to numbers.

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