Muz
Vice Captain
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- Oct 17, 2024
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Had to split the article over 3 posts. (There's a character limit.)
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“COVID’s helped us out a little bit … it’s a bit more like the NSL where there’s some top senior players, and they’re helping to bring young players through,” Morgan said.
Mid-range players, too, are finding their earning capacity in Australia has dropped, and are looking elsewhere. Lachlan Brook, 24, is a good, solid player. In the past, someone like him would stay in the A-League through his prime years. Instead, he’s at Real Salt Lake in Major League Soccer and last season he was on almost $440,000 - far more than he could earn at home.
With those sorts of players increasingly heading overseas for a better payday, there is more room in the A-League for young players to blossom. They also have much more upside when it comes to the transfer market, a space within which Australian clubs have finally figured out how to operate successfully.
Former Socceroo Zeljko Kalac.Credit:Getty Images
In the ensuing years, the global transfer market exploded – in 2017, Neymar moved from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain for a world record fee of over $360 million – but in Australia, Kalac’s record stood untouched for almost two decades.
Then, in 2023, it was broken three times within eight months – and twice by the same club. First, Melbourne City pocketed $2 million from the sale of Socceroo Jordan Bos to Belgian club KVC Westerlo. Marco Tilio then left City for Celtic for a slightly bigger fee, before Adelaide United’s Joe Gauci joined Aston Villa for a reported fee of $2.5 million.
There is no better example of the rising value of Australian players than Ariath Piol, one of three players sold by Macarthur FC in the January transfer window. He moved to Real Salt Lake for about $800,000 and made his debut this past weekend.
Former Macarthur FC striker Ariath Piol.Credit:Getty Images
Piol, 20, played his first game of professional football last February. He started only four times in the A-League and has never completed a full 90 minutes. He’s a raw but exciting talent, the kind of player who could turn out to be absolutely anything, or nothing at all. And yet, the Bulls were able to turn him into roughly the same amount of money as Adelaide United received almost five years ago from another MLS team, Charlotte FC, for Socceroo Riley McGree.
This amount of money is pocket change for the world’s biggest clubs. But for A-League clubs living on the breadline, it’s crucial revenue that helps keep the lights on. Piol’s sale alone is almost double the annual distribution that Macarthur FC received this season from the APL. In fact, players union Professional Footballers Australia found that in 2023-24, transfer revenue outstripped broadcast income for the first time.
It’s difficult for A-League clubs to compete for eyeballs, crowds, government support and corporate dollars against the other bigger, richer sports in this country – but money raised by selling players on the transfer market is an extra income stream which is not subject to the whims of the Australian sporting landscape, and not available to any other code. And the savviest clubs are doing everything possible to maximise their returns.
“It’s the right approach,” says James Kitching, an Australian sporting administrator who previously served as FIFA’s director of football regulatory – effectively putting him in charge of the global transfer system.
“They’ve stumbled on it by necessity because revenues have dried up from other sources and there is an issue when it comes to distributions. That’s fine. The clubs have the opportunity now to unlock a revenue stream which no other sport can touch.
“This is how the financial model of football was actually set up across the vast majority of the world. Australia has not embraced that model or really properly understood that model, but we’ve been part of that system since 2001, since it was first introduced. There is so much money that has been left on the table [over the years] … it’s quite staggering.”
It’s worth noting that Football Australia takes a 10 per cent clip of all A-League transfer revenue, as per the league’s independence agreement with the governing body – and that most deals include various clauses and triggers which lead to more payments beyond the up-front fee.
Macarthur also sold inexperienced defender Oliver Jones to Danish club Randers for $260,000 and Jed Drew, one of the A-League’s most dynamic attackers, to Austrian club TSV Hartberg for $300,000, in January.
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“COVID’s helped us out a little bit … it’s a bit more like the NSL where there’s some top senior players, and they’re helping to bring young players through,” Morgan said.
Mid-range players, too, are finding their earning capacity in Australia has dropped, and are looking elsewhere. Lachlan Brook, 24, is a good, solid player. In the past, someone like him would stay in the A-League through his prime years. Instead, he’s at Real Salt Lake in Major League Soccer and last season he was on almost $440,000 - far more than he could earn at home.
With those sorts of players increasingly heading overseas for a better payday, there is more room in the A-League for young players to blossom. They also have much more upside when it comes to the transfer market, a space within which Australian clubs have finally figured out how to operate successfully.
‘So much money has been left on the table’
For many years, the outbound transfer fee record in Australia – for a player moving directly from an Australian club to an overseas club – was $1.7 million. That was when Zeljko Kalac was sold by then-National Soccer League outfit Sydney United to Leicester City, who were playing in England’s second tier, in 1995.Former Socceroo Zeljko Kalac.Credit:Getty Images
In the ensuing years, the global transfer market exploded – in 2017, Neymar moved from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain for a world record fee of over $360 million – but in Australia, Kalac’s record stood untouched for almost two decades.
Then, in 2023, it was broken three times within eight months – and twice by the same club. First, Melbourne City pocketed $2 million from the sale of Socceroo Jordan Bos to Belgian club KVC Westerlo. Marco Tilio then left City for Celtic for a slightly bigger fee, before Adelaide United’s Joe Gauci joined Aston Villa for a reported fee of $2.5 million.
There is no better example of the rising value of Australian players than Ariath Piol, one of three players sold by Macarthur FC in the January transfer window. He moved to Real Salt Lake for about $800,000 and made his debut this past weekend.
Former Macarthur FC striker Ariath Piol.Credit:Getty Images
Piol, 20, played his first game of professional football last February. He started only four times in the A-League and has never completed a full 90 minutes. He’s a raw but exciting talent, the kind of player who could turn out to be absolutely anything, or nothing at all. And yet, the Bulls were able to turn him into roughly the same amount of money as Adelaide United received almost five years ago from another MLS team, Charlotte FC, for Socceroo Riley McGree.
This amount of money is pocket change for the world’s biggest clubs. But for A-League clubs living on the breadline, it’s crucial revenue that helps keep the lights on. Piol’s sale alone is almost double the annual distribution that Macarthur FC received this season from the APL. In fact, players union Professional Footballers Australia found that in 2023-24, transfer revenue outstripped broadcast income for the first time.
It’s difficult for A-League clubs to compete for eyeballs, crowds, government support and corporate dollars against the other bigger, richer sports in this country – but money raised by selling players on the transfer market is an extra income stream which is not subject to the whims of the Australian sporting landscape, and not available to any other code. And the savviest clubs are doing everything possible to maximise their returns.
“It’s the right approach,” says James Kitching, an Australian sporting administrator who previously served as FIFA’s director of football regulatory – effectively putting him in charge of the global transfer system.
“They’ve stumbled on it by necessity because revenues have dried up from other sources and there is an issue when it comes to distributions. That’s fine. The clubs have the opportunity now to unlock a revenue stream which no other sport can touch.
“This is how the financial model of football was actually set up across the vast majority of the world. Australia has not embraced that model or really properly understood that model, but we’ve been part of that system since 2001, since it was first introduced. There is so much money that has been left on the table [over the years] … it’s quite staggering.”
It’s worth noting that Football Australia takes a 10 per cent clip of all A-League transfer revenue, as per the league’s independence agreement with the governing body – and that most deals include various clauses and triggers which lead to more payments beyond the up-front fee.
Macarthur also sold inexperienced defender Oliver Jones to Danish club Randers for $260,000 and Jed Drew, one of the A-League’s most dynamic attackers, to Austrian club TSV Hartberg for $300,000, in January.
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