Football in Australia is in trouble. Its problems have been laid bare time and again but solutions have been difficult to come by. We look to fix that by speaking to influential figures in the game from top to bottom.
Join football journalist Adam Peacock in a new five-part series, tackling the real issues and solutions facing Australian football.
With over two decades of football experience, and having played and coached the game for a number of years at the grassroots level, he sees football through every lens. Adam is a trusted household name when it comes to the world game, and has hosted Australian and international football coverage for 15 years.
To accompany the written series, Adam Peacock, Robbie Slater and Mark Bosnich will record four complementary podcast episodes. This is the first time the ‘Matchday Saturday’ panel from Fox Sports has been back together in almost five years.
Football’s numbers have exploded in the last 12 months. The Matilda Effect is real. So too the Socceroo effect to a lesser extent. Boys and girls continue to flock to the sport. But there’s a problem. Clubs, mostly run by volunteers, are at capacity, turning players away, struggling to accommodate the ones they have in a facilities sense, and also coaching. How do we navigate a way forward in a complex system to keep these kids playing the game, and falling in love with it?
Out of the big pool of grassroots players, talented ones emerge. Playing fees are astronomical at representative level. Coaching courses are expensive, and the reward, in all probability, isn’t a job that will make ends meet. We deep dive into what is being done to develop our kids to a world class standard
The domestic league, thanks to the epic failures of APL management, are in a recession. Dangerously so for some clubs, who may not make it through winter. Clubs are bleeding money, the APL can’t even cover the salary cap with distributions down. So what now. How do clubs not wither on the vine? Developing and selling players will be key. It is happening, but commercial support is crucial.
Both the Matildas and Socceroos set a new standard for themselves at their recent World Cups. But given all that is happening at the levels below, are those high points that will never be reached again? And are those great moments being capitalised on by those running the game?
The Way Forward will look at what the game could look like in 10 years if it embraces these changes, as opposed to its current state of crisis.
The Tackle: Mata has last laugh over ‘embarrassing’ Wanderers
Former EPL star Juan Mata was the spark Melbourne Victory needed against Adelaide, just hours after his former club WSW played one of the A-League’s most dour ever games.
The Melbourne-born teen who has world football giants circling
Melbourne-born teenager Will Ferdinand Cvek has emerged as one of world football’s brightest talents, with the Socceroos to battle giants including England for his international allegiance.
Vergos ends drought with brace in original derby win
Melbourne Victory striker Nikos Vergos has ended his marathon scoring drought in emphatic fashion by helping himself to a brace in his team’s 2-1 win over Adelaide United at AAMI Park.
Victory ‘bleeds success’: This star knows that better than most
She’s been a fan, an opponent and is now a star for her beloved Melbourne Victory. So when it comes to facing the club’s traditional rival, Alana Jancevski knows just how much it means.
From Italy to Sydney: Logarzo makes last-ditch Matildas bid
Matildas midfielder Chloe Logarzo-Berryhill has made the move from Italy to the A-League’s in a bid to earn selection in the Asian Cup squad.
Yallop headed for surgery, Asian Cup dream all but over
Matildas midfielder Tameka Yallop’s Asian Cup hopes are all but dashed with the veteran headed to surgery on her injured hamstring.