Sydney talent lined up for Croats
http://www.smh.com.au/news/football/sydney-talent-lined-up-for-croats/2008/07/10/1215658037277.html
Sebastian Hassett
July 11, 2008
THE Sydney club that has produced 32 Socceroos is forming a junior development plan to funnel through some of the nation's best talent to play for Croatia.
FFA chief executive Ben Buckley yesterday threatened to "raise the legalities" of the issue with world governing body FIFA after learning that Sydney United, long considered among the finest cultivators of junior talent in this country, have started discussions with the Croatian Football Federation (HNS) about sending budding young stars to the Balkans.
While connections between Australian-Croatian clubs and the HNS are not new, the development of such a plan would mark the first time a formal structure has been put in place to parachute youngsters into the Croatian system with a view to some playing for the national team.
The scheme is believed to have been hatched during a visit following the recent FIFA Congress in Sydney, with HNS officials taken to the Edensor Park-based NSW Premier League side to meet club directors and discuss the proposal.
During the visit, HNS vice-president Ivan Brlekovic told the club's elite junior players of his desire to see some of them rise through the Croatian ranks and eventually play for the Vatreni.
The club's website quotes him telling the players: "I hope to see some of you boys playing for the Croatian national side in years to come." He adds he was pleased to see 69 per cent of the club's players had Croatian heritage.
The website also says the two parties are considering "technology options" to help scouts track the progress of players earmarked for the new plan.
"If such a relationship was formalised, we would as a matter of course raise the legalities of it with FIFA and consider any action open to us in respect of the club and the Croatian Football Federation," Buckley told the Herald yesterday.
Club secretary John Montibeler confirmed the discussions, while still in their early stages, had been instigated by Sydney United, which draws much of its support from the Croatian community.
"It's still within the concept stages, but we're hoping to develop a good relationship with them … [we want to offer players] the experience of going and playing at a higher level," he said. "The A-League offers a certain standard, but what they've got over there is the next level. You talk to every young player and their dream is to move offshore and go where the big bucks are."
Football NSW general manager Ian Holmes confirmed that each NSWPL club received competition subsidies of "a couple of hundred thousand dollars per year" from the state federation.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/football/sydney-talent-lined-up-for-croats/2008/07/10/1215658037277.html
Sebastian Hassett
July 11, 2008
THE Sydney club that has produced 32 Socceroos is forming a junior development plan to funnel through some of the nation's best talent to play for Croatia.
FFA chief executive Ben Buckley yesterday threatened to "raise the legalities" of the issue with world governing body FIFA after learning that Sydney United, long considered among the finest cultivators of junior talent in this country, have started discussions with the Croatian Football Federation (HNS) about sending budding young stars to the Balkans.
While connections between Australian-Croatian clubs and the HNS are not new, the development of such a plan would mark the first time a formal structure has been put in place to parachute youngsters into the Croatian system with a view to some playing for the national team.
The scheme is believed to have been hatched during a visit following the recent FIFA Congress in Sydney, with HNS officials taken to the Edensor Park-based NSW Premier League side to meet club directors and discuss the proposal.
During the visit, HNS vice-president Ivan Brlekovic told the club's elite junior players of his desire to see some of them rise through the Croatian ranks and eventually play for the Vatreni.
The club's website quotes him telling the players: "I hope to see some of you boys playing for the Croatian national side in years to come." He adds he was pleased to see 69 per cent of the club's players had Croatian heritage.
The website also says the two parties are considering "technology options" to help scouts track the progress of players earmarked for the new plan.
"If such a relationship was formalised, we would as a matter of course raise the legalities of it with FIFA and consider any action open to us in respect of the club and the Croatian Football Federation," Buckley told the Herald yesterday.
Club secretary John Montibeler confirmed the discussions, while still in their early stages, had been instigated by Sydney United, which draws much of its support from the Croatian community.
"It's still within the concept stages, but we're hoping to develop a good relationship with them … [we want to offer players] the experience of going and playing at a higher level," he said. "The A-League offers a certain standard, but what they've got over there is the next level. You talk to every young player and their dream is to move offshore and go where the big bucks are."
Football NSW general manager Ian Holmes confirmed that each NSWPL club received competition subsidies of "a couple of hundred thousand dollars per year" from the state federation.