gcand has cullina gone to gc? Or nq? Confused.
NQ aren't the only club to have tabled an offer to him. Both Newcastle and Perth have their marquee spots available.I think the Chipperfield deal is gone, now NQ Fury signed Flower.
The money isn't in Australian Soccer yet to sustain having many high class players....the cap is sort of a safety net to stop clubs spending beyonfd their means.Screw the Marquee rules.
If the A-League wants to get better in quality, the more good players they attract the better, not one per team.
See all soccer leagues around the world though...the rich ones win...See EPLThe problem with removing the salary cap/marquee system from the A-League, is that you would then have 2/3 teams likely dominate simply because they're better off financially which is something you can ill afford in a league that is still well and truly in it's development stages.
That's almost completely irrelevant to soccer in Australia though. Soccer in Europe/South America isn't trying to find it's feet, and it has no real competition for being the no.1 sport/football code in those parts of the world. In Australia, Soccer is probably only the 3rd most popular code, and in a country of only 20 million people it means the sport has a struggle ahead.See all soccer leagues around the world though...the rich ones win...See EPL
The problem with removing the salary cap/marquee system from the A-League, is that you would then have 2/3 teams likely dominate simply because they're better off financially which is something you can ill afford in a league that is still well and truly in it's development stages.
Yeah, as said above, if a team can afford someone, why not go hell for leather going for them? If the A-League can get someone that is well known amongst non-soccer fans, this would boost ticket sales for that team, and the home team that is playing them.See all soccer leagues around the world though...the rich ones win...See EPL
Well if it's not greatly made up of overseas players, I assume you're relying on overseas Australians returning home. And that I cannot see happening often unless they're in the twilight of their career (Culina being the obvious exception) because as it stands, the quality of football in the A-League is still below the level of many 2nd and possibly even 3rd tier competitions in the strongest countries. Even with an increased salary cap, it would be just as difficult to lure better quality players back home simply because the level of competition is below where they're currently playing, and it's likely they still wouldn't be earning as much $$$ in Australia as they could in europe.Who's saying that the teams would be greatly made up of overseas players?
Should be a limit, for example each team could have a max 5 contracted, and the others are local players.
There is an argument to say the answer is no, however IMO it doesn't really make a great difference. Look at the Italians - their league has been dominated by overseas players for years, and they still go OK. IIRC the Inter side that faced us at the San Siro almost two weeks ago contained one Italian. IMO the reason England haven't won a World Cup for 43 years is a combination of poor managers, poor players (youth systems mostly to blame here), and bottling it at crucial times rather than a league being dominated by foreigners, which has only happened in the past ten years or so anyway.Not necessarily. Ask yourself this, and ask any of the british posters, is English football better off for having their best teams dominated by overseas players? Answer is no imo.