Official Wellington Phoenix Supporters Thread


Official Wellington Phoenix Supporters Thread

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pv4 wrote:


2014/15   
Michael Boxall   
   

I believe boxall is joining brockie in sth africa and wont see out this season
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spfc wrote:
pv4 wrote:


2014/15   
Michael Boxall   
   

I believe boxall is joining brockie in sth africa and wont see out this season
Boxall said its news to him when asked. SuperSport United tried to sign Moss but he rejected them to re-sign with us.
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Ryan's Rovers wrote:
spfc wrote:
pv4 wrote:


2014/15   
Michael Boxall   
   

I believe boxall is joining brockie in sth africa and wont see out this season
Boxall said its news to him when asked. SuperSport United tried to sign Moss but he rejected them to re-sign with us.

oh ok, would have been a loss for nix because rate him better than sigmund imo
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Good stuff from the Fever lads
[youtube]nUqvbhE0PTI[/youtube]
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Wellington Phoenix to face NZ A in pre-season match in New Plymouth



Wednesday 22 Jul 2015 2:27 p.m.

The Wellington Phoenix's build-up to the new A-League soccer season will include a match against New Zealand A in New Plymouth.

The sides will meet in an afternoon fixture at Yarrow Stadium on August 23.

Phoenix head coach Ernie Merrick is looking forward to taking his team to New Plymouth.

"The game against New Zealand A is an integral part of our per-season programme," Merrick said.

"It will give us an idea of where we are at and it is also good for New Zealand Football to get another game under the belt of domestic-based players.

"We have played New Zealand A in each of our last two pre-seasons and it has been well worthwhile.

"It is also an opportunity to let a football area like New Plymouth see the Phoenix players in the flesh."

The Phoenix, who have played NZ A in each of their past two pre-seasons, open their A-League campaign at home to the Newcastle Jets on October 11.

3 News / NZN


Read more: http://www.3news.co.nz/sport/wellington-phoenix-to-face-nz-a-in-pre-season-match-in-new-plymouth-2015072214#ixzz3gcNTp27o

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A little long, but worthwhile read
=d>
Quote:
New Zealand’s Future In Football Now!

It’s been a hugely satisfying and exciting year for the Wellington Phoenix Football Academy.
As we come to the end of the Academy’s second full year of operation it’s a good time to reflect on how far we have come and what has been achieved. The growth has been exceptional but what has been most exciting is the quality of player that is coming through and being developed within the programme. And we’re only just at the beginning of what this Club can achieve through its Academy structure.

When Welnix took over the Club in 2011, one of the first things the new owners identified was that there was no pathway for the development of professional players in this country. The Phoenix relied on players being developed outside the Club and coming through as finished products, or by buying comparatively expensive overseas players to fill its A-League playing roster. When new Head Coach Ernie Merrick joined the Club in May 2013, he built further on this setting the challenge for a comprehensive, 12 month, 40+ game a season youth development programme if we were going to develop the very best football talent. He wanted a programme that faciliated a progression through the Club's structure - all teams had to play in the same way, with the same philopsophy, so that players could move seamlessly between teams so much so that when young players came through to train with the first team they were assimilated easily. The challenge was out and we had to work out how to meet it.

Academies are expensive and time consuming to start up, and for a small Club like ourselves, this can make the whole exercise impossible.

Luckily for us we had a savour! In mid-2013, Ricki Herbert arranged for me to meet Andy Smith at Christchurch airport for a brief meeting. Andy, along with his wife Jane, were running Asia Pacific Football Academy - widely regarded as one of, if not the best, private football Academy in New Zealand. Andy was very keen to establish a working relationship with us because, as he put it, we were the only natural pathway for elite players who wanted to be professional football players.
Long story short, what started from that first meeting eventually evolved to the entire APFA Academy moving from Christchurch to Wellington in 2014. What this gave us was an immediate economy of scale and also a huge amount of intellectual property – the existing APFA players, structures, processes and even coaches all made the move, while Andy continued on as a strategic consultant and Jane managed the administration and pastoral care of all the players.
When contemplating the move of APFA to Wellington, we identified that a base for the Academy would be crucial. Because of the age of the players in the Academy, it had to be a school or schools to enable the players to maintain their education while at the same time being able to participate in the intensive football training sessions.

My very first meeting was with Scots College Headmaster Graeme Yule, and I was struck by how excited and open he was to the project in that very first meeting. Subsequent to that meeting I met with pretty much every boys school in the Wellington region and while we went down a number of possible pathways, Graeme’s enthusiasm, flexibility and willingness to work with us – as well as Scots’ exceptional academic record - is what convinced us that they would make the best partner.

Given Scot’s College private school status, it was also important that we had other options for students who preferred State schooling – and again, willingness to be part of the programme and could see the vision, was crucial. St Patrick’s Kilbirnie and Rongotai College were selected as meeting that criteria.

Scots College, along with St Patrick’s Wellington and Rongotai College were officially announced as the school partners for the Academy in 2014, and we were up and running.

Since then we have built on the Academy foundation.

In November 2014, we announced our very first Wellington Phoenix Soccer School. Coaches Leigh Kenyon and Hiroshi Miyazawa, formerly of Wynton Rufer’s WYNRS Academy, were looking for a new opportunity. WYNRS, along with APFA, have been extraordinarily successful in developing some of the best football talent in New Zealand. Based in Auckland, by a happy coincidence, we were looking at building a beachhead in the country’s largest metro – by sheer numbers alone there are a number of very talented footballers living there, but also it is important for us as a Club commercially to have a solid base in the Auckland market.

The Wellington Phoenix Soccer School ticks both those boxes for us.

In the summer of 2014 we participated, as the Wellington Phoenix, in our first ever season of the ASB Premiership. This summer competition is crucial to giving the very best of our Academy players, along with professional players needing additional game tie, a vehicle to continue their development. It is part of Ernie’s philosophy that young players need to be playing at the highest possible level and that is where we play these young players. Last season, the average age of our players in the ASB Premiership was 17 years!

Coached expertly by Andy Hedge and Valerio Raccuglia, the young boys performed exceptionally well – with a won 7 lost 9 record, including a memorable 3-1 away win over Auckland City FC, the team exceeded expectations in its first year. We always knew there was going to be a learning process, and we go into this next ASBP season knowing a lot more. But the fact that a very young team was playing against adults and maintaining their own was justifying the programme we had put in place.

The Phoenix matches were also the highest attended of any in the ASB Premiership last season. There is a very real interest nationally in the players that are coming through the programme, and of course ‘brand Phoenix’.

Earlier on this year we took a very young team to the Hong Kong Football Sevens Tournament. Selected primary from Academy players with a few professionals thrown in for balance, the boys performed exceptionally well - only being knocked out in the semi-final by golden goal extra time by eventual winners Atletico Madrid. Along the way they beat English Premier League side Aston Villa 4-1. Comments very extremely positive – besides their play, the character of the players was widely praised.

We announced in August this year the inaugural Winston Reid Wellington Phoenix Football Academy Scholarship. In conjunction with Scots College, the Winston Reid Scholarship is intended to give the very best footballers whom might not otherwise have the chance due to finances, to live in Wellington, attend Scots College and participate in the Academy full time.
The first two recipients - Sapreet Singh and Max Mata – both from the Soccer School in Auckland – are extremely exciting young football players. The Scholarship is quite clear in that both football ability and character are important – and both are quality individuals who will do Winston and the Phoenix proud.

At the beginning of the year we announced our winter club association with Wellington United. In order to meet Ernie’s desire for a 12 month integrated programme, a winter club is essential. The constitution of Capital Football means that we couldn’t just drop a team into the local competition without starting at the very bottom – it would take us 14 years to work our way from the bottom to the top of Capital Football’s competition! This would not be ideal under Ernie’s grand plan to have competitive football!

After discussions with a few Clubs, Wellington United was selected as the winter club because of a willingness to partner, but also because logistically with Newtown Park (home of Wellington United) being the training base for the first team, logistically it made sense. Our coaches, medical team and football facilities are already on site and present – the synergies were just too strong to ignore.

After a regular season of won 15, drawn 2 lost 1, goals for 80, goals against 26, the Wellington United Capital Premier side progressed through to a play-off against Team Taranaki. A 2-0 away win (two goals to James McGarry) in New Plymouth was followed up by a 3-1 home win at Petone (goals to Logan Rogerson and Ruairi Cahill-Fleury) to see the team win promotion back to the highest local competition for season 2016. The winter programme was a great success – our players had good, hard competitive games, we had seen which players showed promise and could fit it with older, experienced players and we built a winter programme that ticked the boxes for the number of games required in a year.

This year in summer 2015, not only will we have the ASB Premiership side, but we will have a team in the ASB Youth competition. Coached by our very experienced and knowledgeable WPFA Head Coach Jess Ibrom, this will allow our Academy youth players to be tested against the very best in New Zealand. While for most franchises the ASB Youth is an under 20 competition, for us we will run it as an under 17 team.

Our excellent working relationship with Capital Football and their CEO Richard Reid has meant that our programme has flourished. The Academy youth players play regularly against Capital Football age group and select teams (as well as against other schools around the region). One scholarship a year is allocated to the best player in Capital Football’s Federation Training Centre to train full time with both with the Academy and with Capital Football. Midfield player Sam Adams won this scholarship in the first year and has shown outstanding improvement in both programmes.

This month we announced the first two Academy graduates to be signed to professional contracts. If there was ever any doubt that there is a pathway through the Academy to a professional football contract then this dispels it! Outstanding young players James McGarry and Logan Rogerson, both 17, both stand outs in the winter and summer competitions, were rewarded with professional contracts and Head Coach Ernie Merrick was effusive in his praise for the young prospects. James has spent almost his entire teenage life in the programme - three years at APFA in Christchurch before making the move to Wellington. Logan joined us later as part of the Academy-Football School of Excellence finishing school – Ernie scouting him at the same U17 World Cup qualifying tournament in Samoa where we found Max Mata.

Ernie has been categorical in stating that both young professionals will have game time in the A-League this year.
So in the two years since that very first meeting with Andy Smith at Christchurch airport, the Academy now has four teams, 35+ students (both domestic and international), has teams in the local Central League, ASB Youth and ASB Premiership, as well as playing a number of games a year against local opposition and has produced the first two fully professional players.
There are currently plans to expand the entire Youth Development programme – more soccer schools around the country, a Women’s Academy, more teams playing in more competitions, and more internationals in our programmes.

We have a very solid development programme in place – about two years ahead of where the other Australian A-League Clubs are at. Where the other Clubs are struggling to get teams into winter competitions, our very good working relationship with Richard Reid and Capital Football and with New Zealand Football with the national and youth leagues has meant we have a very strong annual programme of competitive football.

James McGarry and Logan Rogerson are the very first two players to get professional contracts out of the Academy. But there are more in there – we have players in the Academy who will be professionals of that there is no doubt. Because of the hard work and good will of a number of people, the structures are now in place for the young football youth in New Zealand to become full time professional players.

The future of football is here, in Wellington, now!

http://www.wellingtonphoenix.com/article/new-zealands-future-in-football-now/z3v5cqempos11332mt4vjgkgr
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It's this sort of investment which makes the FFA and WelNix stalemate so bizarre, The Phoenix are clearly investing heavily in the future, the programme is young but is already getting results.
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RyanM wrote:
It's this sort of investment which makes the FFA and WelNix stalemate so bizarre, The Phoenix are clearly investing heavily in the future, the programme is young but is already getting results.


Investing heavily in the youth of the wrong nationality in the FFA's eyes. I think the sooner the A-League becomes independent of the FFA the better.
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bulio wrote:
RyanM wrote:
It's this sort of investment which makes the FFA and WelNix stalemate so bizarre, The Phoenix are clearly investing heavily in the future, the programme is young but is already getting results.


Investing heavily in the youth of the wrong nationality in the FFA's eyes. I think the sooner the A-League becomes independent of the FFA the better.

They do have players from around the world at the academy. I think there is one currently there from Mexico even. Promising young Australians should seriously look at it as an option - hey if the FFA want I'm sure that the Welnix group would be happy to have a couple of talented Australians on a full scholarship at the academy if at least a 10yr licence can be agreed upon.
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Whats the starting XI and formation looking like atm ?
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Bullion wrote:
bulio wrote:
RyanM wrote:
It's this sort of investment which makes the FFA and WelNix stalemate so bizarre, The Phoenix are clearly investing heavily in the future, the programme is young but is already getting results.


Investing heavily in the youth of the wrong nationality in the FFA's eyes. I think the sooner the A-League becomes independent of the FFA the better.

They do have players from around the world at the academy. I think there is one currently there from Mexico even. Promising young Australians should seriously look at it as an option - hey if the FFA want I'm sure that the Welnix group would be happy to have a couple of talented Australians on a full scholarship at the academy if at least a 10yr licence can be agreed upon.

It would be great to have Australian kids looking at the Academy (which I do think is great for football here btw) as a pathway for them also. And I'm sure if their inclusion would seal a 10 year extension, Welnix would do it.

But I think the main sticking point is still around the broadcast money and the what each side thinks it's for. As long as the FFA see it as their money being used for developing football in another country/confederation, Welnix will have issues arguing the Phoenix's case no matter how stable the club is, or how good the academy system is.


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bulio wrote:
Bullion wrote:
bulio wrote:
RyanM wrote:
It's this sort of investment which makes the FFA and WelNix stalemate so bizarre, The Phoenix are clearly investing heavily in the future, the programme is young but is already getting results.


Investing heavily in the youth of the wrong nationality in the FFA's eyes. I think the sooner the A-League becomes independent of the FFA the better.

They do have players from around the world at the academy. I think there is one currently there from Mexico even. Promising young Australians should seriously look at it as an option - hey if the FFA want I'm sure that the Welnix group would be happy to have a couple of talented Australians on a full scholarship at the academy if at least a 10yr licence can be agreed upon.

It would be great to have Australian kids looking at the Academy (which I do think is great for football here btw) as a pathway for them also. And I'm sure if their inclusion would seal a 10 year extension, Welnix would do it.

But I think the main sticking point is still around the broadcast money and the what each side thinks it's for. As long as the FFA see it as their money being used for developing football in another country/confederation, Welnix will have issues arguing the Phoenix's case no matter how stable the club is, or how good the academy system is.

I know, I have long been an advocate of separating the HAL from the FFA also.
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Link2588 wrote:
Whats the starting XI and formation looking like atm ?

Would expect something like this to start with:

Moss
Fenton Sigmund Durante Muscat
Riera Lia Bonevacia
Krishna Sarpong McGlinchey

Siggy is struggling with injury atm it sounds, so Rodriguez might fill in there.
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Why New Zealand football needs Wellington Phoenix to succeed this season
New Zealand needs a strong Phoenix team

Connor Clements
Follow @ConnorJClements

October 5, 2015

For years the Phoenix have provided New Zealand (NZ) Football with a professional team, playing in an international competition, in a worthy arena, and providing consistent and high-quality playing time for youth and senior players in the New Zealand squads.

This season (the clubs ninth in Australia’s top league) could be the Nix’s last if Football Federation Australia decides against renewing the club’s A-League licence. If this happens, it would not only be a catastrophe for the Phoenix, it would also cost this country a highly beneficial youth system, the most passionate supporters group in the country (if not the league) and a consistent high-level of matches and players for the nation’s capital city. Wellington would lose one of its most significant sporting drawcards and NZ Football would pay the price of not being involved enough in the process.

As more and more New Zealand All Whites, under-23, under-20 and under-17 players become Phoenix players and vice versa, the relationship between the two organisations becomes even more significant. Over half of the current team has represented New Zealand at one of the aforementioned levels and this is indicative of how crucial the Phoenix are to talent development in New Zealand at the moment.

Take Marco Rojas as an example. In 2009 he was awarded the prestigious ‘Retro Ricki Youth Scholarship’ by the Wellington Phoenix. In 21 appearances, across two seasons for the Nix, he dazzled with his skills and was awarded Young Player of the Year award before leaving for Melbourne Victory in 2011. Rojas is now a regular for the All Whites following his explosive 2012-13 season, in which he scored 15 goals and recorded nine assists for the Victory, winning both the A-League Player of the Year and Young Player of the Year gongs. The Phoenix also provided All Whites regular Kosta Barbarouses with his first A-League experience. Like Rojas, Barbarouses made 21 appearances for the Wellington club before eventually moving to the Brisbane Roar and then the Victory, winning A-League championship and premiership titles with both clubs in the 2010-11 and 2014-15 seasons respectively.

NZ Football needs the Phoenix to succeed this year, because success breeds support and good performances would see the club remain in the A-League. Poor performance have cost the Phoenix when it has mattered, resulting in below average stadium attendance figures and Sky TV viewership. However, if the Phoenix were to mount a serious title challenge this season, or go on a winning run, the New Zealand public will get behind their one and only A-League representative.

This is where NZ Football needs to take note, because if it does not get involved soon it might be too late. As Phoenix chairman Rob Morrison put it, in an interview for Fox sports: “unquestionably, NZ Football is a beneficiary of Phoenix’s performance and our private investment into the club and the game. So, our view is they should be contributing, and I think we are on the same page as the FFA on that one. The better the A-League is, the better it’s going to be for NZ Football.”

So why aren’t NZ Football and the Phoenix joined at the hip? Is it because of the Auckland–Wellington split, with NZ Football located at Albany stadium in Auckland? Is there competition between the two for funding streams? Or are there issues in terms of player control and development? Whatever the issues are, they need to be resolved, for the good of football in this country.

If the Phoenix do not succeed this season, then NZ Football loses a crucial talent pool and an integral part of sport in this country. The fans lose their only real tenuous link to the professional footballing world. The players lose a chance to play at a high level in their own backyard.

The only logical outcome for all involved is for NZ Football and the Phoenix to work closely together to ensure the FFA grant the Phoenix the licence they deserve. This is the licence that NZ football fans and football in New Zealand desperately needs. That, and the Phoenix need to play well this season.

http://outside90.com/why-nz-football-needs-the-phoenix-to-succeed-this-season-717/
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http://www.wellingtonphoenix.com/article/phoenix-sign-young-australian-defender/16re69hlgqkdx1pwepqhzo2gp1
Quote:
Phoenix sign young Australian defender


Monday, 12 October 2015 -

The Wellington Phoenix have signed 21-year-old central defender Dylan Fox from New South Wales NPL champions Bonnyrigg White Eagles.

Fox has been trialling with the Phoenix for the past 10 days and head coach Ernie Merrick saw enough during that time to offer him a two-year contract.

“For a 21-year-old Dylan impressed me as a very mature centre back type of player,” Merrick said.

“He is 186cm tall, fast, technically good and knows how to tackle.

“Bonnyrigg coach Brian ‘bomber’ Brown recommended him to me and while trialling with us Dylan improved every day.

“He demonstrated to me that he would be a very good back up for Dura and Siggy.

“For a big lad he is surprisingly quick and will have no problem adjusting to the demands of the A-League.”
Fox, who played his junior football with the Sutherland Sharks before having two seasons at Bonnyrigg described the move as a dream come true.

“I was on holiday in Melbourne with my girlfriend Sophie when I got the call offering me a trial,” Fox said. “It took me by surprise and I was a bit nervous when I got to Wellington, but I needn’t have worried as the Phoenix boys were really welcoming.”

Asked how he saw his job as a central defender Fox said he liked to “keep it simple and just do my job”.


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It's obviously written from a NZ perspective, the Phoenix do plenty for Australia - more than most teams the last few seasons. Look at the amount of players that the nix sign from the lower leagues in Australia, that must be good for Australia, we don't sign journeymen any more we try and develop the next generation of Australian and Kiwi players. But that argument is moot. The A League is not some development league for Australia or New Zealand. The more I read these stories and have these arguments the more I realise that the only way to solve the situation is for the A-League to be independent from the FFA.

Edited by ryanm: 12/10/2015 04:34:19 PM
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Bullion wrote:
http://www.wellingtonphoenix.com/article/phoenix-sign-young-australian-defender/16re69hlgqkdx1pwepqhzo2gp1
Quote:
Phoenix sign young Australian defender


Monday, 12 October 2015 -

The Wellington Phoenix have signed 21-year-old central defender Dylan Fox from New South Wales NPL champions Bonnyrigg White Eagles.

Fox has been trialling with the Phoenix for the past 10 days and head coach Ernie Merrick saw enough during that time to offer him a two-year contract.

“For a 21-year-old Dylan impressed me as a very mature centre back type of player,” Merrick said.

“He is 186cm tall, fast, technically good and knows how to tackle.

“Bonnyrigg coach Brian ‘bomber’ Brown recommended him to me and while trialling with us Dylan improved every day.

“He demonstrated to me that he would be a very good back up for Dura and Siggy.

“For a big lad he is surprisingly quick and will have no problem adjusting to the demands of the A-League.”
Fox, who played his junior football with the Sutherland Sharks before having two seasons at Bonnyrigg described the move as a dream come true.

“I was on holiday in Melbourne with my girlfriend Sophie when I got the call offering me a trial,” Fox said. “It took me by surprise and I was a bit nervous when I got to Wellington, but I needn’t have worried as the Phoenix boys were really welcoming.”

Asked how he saw his job as a central defender Fox said he liked to “keep it simple and just do my job”.



Why now and not 3 months ago ?
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I'm not trying to create spin or sell anything. Just stating the facts, I couldn't give a shit if you believe them or not, in fact I know you and your ilk are too prejudiced and xenophobic to actually listen to sense. Just be thankful that there are still some people who are willing to state the contrarian (and correct) view, most Phoenix supporters really can't give a fuck about this forum, to its loss.
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lukerobinho wrote:
Bullion wrote:
http://www.wellingtonphoenix.com/article/phoenix-sign-young-australian-defender/16re69hlgqkdx1pwepqhzo2gp1
Quote:
Phoenix sign young Australian defender


Monday, 12 October 2015 -

The Wellington Phoenix have signed 21-year-old central defender Dylan Fox from New South Wales NPL champions Bonnyrigg White Eagles.

Fox has been trialling with the Phoenix for the past 10 days and head coach Ernie Merrick saw enough during that time to offer him a two-year contract.

“For a 21-year-old Dylan impressed me as a very mature centre back type of player,” Merrick said.

“He is 186cm tall, fast, technically good and knows how to tackle.

“Bonnyrigg coach Brian ‘bomber’ Brown recommended him to me and while trialling with us Dylan improved every day.

“He demonstrated to me that he would be a very good back up for Dura and Siggy.

“For a big lad he is surprisingly quick and will have no problem adjusting to the demands of the A-League.”
Fox, who played his junior football with the Sutherland Sharks before having two seasons at Bonnyrigg described the move as a dream come true.

“I was on holiday in Melbourne with my girlfriend Sophie when I got the call offering me a trial,” Fox said. “It took me by surprise and I was a bit nervous when I got to Wellington, but I needn’t have worried as the Phoenix boys were really welcoming.”

Asked how he saw his job as a central defender Fox said he liked to “keep it simple and just do my job”.



Why now and not 3 months ago ?
ask Ernie. Maybe they were waiting for some mythical cb to be available or overestimated their cd depth. Dura and Siggy both with recent/current niggles.
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Quote:
Why are our young players going to New Zealand? Because the programme there is better than the majority of our clubs offer, because they can get an A-League chance there. This year the Phoenix have seven players in the first team squad who have come through this system as it develops, and along with the three players they have signed from the Australian State Leagues have the strongest commitment to player development of any side in the A-League.

I guess the question out of this is why a club in New Zealand can achieve this but the clubs in Australia can’t? Certainly the Phoenix have a stable ownership group and driven people behind the scenes but - despite the FFAs best attempts - so do many of the other clubs in the A-League. Maybe it’s just that the Phoenix understand what sustainable means unlike the decision makers in Oxford Street who make all the right noises but did nothing to enforce the development rules they established.

http://fiveyearstops.blogspot.com.au/
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Quote:
Yellow Fever wants to give Wellington Phoenix season passes to charitable organisations to use to say thanks to their volunteers.

https://givealittle.co.nz/cause/savethenix/
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This is a good blog post:

fiveyearstops.blogspot.com/2015/10/wont-someone-think-of-children.html

The lady who's writing the blog originally was going to write a blog about how FFA is failing player development and is prioritising money over the football. It just so happened that everything that the FFA is doing wrong the Nix are doing right so it turned into a pro nix blog post - but its by an Australian lady who is writing these posts in order to get information out about how the FFA should serve the best interests of Football. She is not a Phoenix supporter.

Basically the Phoenix now have the best accademy system in the league with multiple levels of teams and year round football at a high level. The nix have a ton of young players, and while the Aussies who lost 6-0 to Nigeria in the Ausy under 17 team had 4 players from the A-League the nix had 5 players in the NZ Team that lost 1-0 to Brazil in injury time.

The Phoenix academy system is so good that Australian players are going through it with more expected to come.
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RyanM wrote:
This is a good blog post:

fiveyearstops.blogspot.com/2015/10/wont-someone-think-of-children.html

The lady who's writing the blog originally was going to write a blog about how FFA is failing player development and is prioritising money over the football. It just so happened that everything that the FFA is doing wrong the Nix are doing right so it turned into a pro nix blog post - but its by an Australian lady who is writing these posts in order to get information out about how the FFA should serve the best interests of Football. She is not a Phoenix supporter.

Basically the Phoenix now have the best accademy system in the league with multiple levels of teams and year round football at a high level. The nix have a ton of young players, and while the Aussies who lost 6-0 to Nigeria in the Ausy under 17 team had 4 players from the A-League the nix had 5 players in the NZ Team that lost 1-0 to Brazil in injury time.

The Phoenix academy system is so good that Australian players are going through it with more expected to come.

No one gives a hoot RyanM - Its just more trolling in the name of the Nix's.
Were still under 3900 for membership which is LOL and our next home game will only get 8k - But what about the games after that? Back to 6k again. If people in NZ actual cared we would have hit 4k membership mark easy. Anyway I'm off to Melbourne to watch the Tards Vs Squatters game live.

Edited by nomates: 31/10/2015 01:23:04 PM

Wellington Phoenix FC

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This isn't the save the nix thread, this is the nix supporters thread. So go and troll elsewhere.

Membership is not a nz thing. And shouldn't be an FFA metric. Crowds for a city the size of Wellington are fine. There are teams in the eredivisie who get the same crowds as us, we should not be reliant on getting more than eight or nine k on average. Getting more vewership and money out of sky should be the priority for the FFA.

Anyway one of the arguments is that the nix dies nothing for Australian player development and this article says otherwise. Instead of being kicked out of the league the nix should be looked at as an example for the rest of the league to emulate.
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RyanM wrote:
This isn't the save the nix thread, this is the nix supporters thread. So go and troll elsewhere.

Membership is not a nz thing. And shouldn't be an FFA metric. Crowds for a city the size of Wellington are fine. There are teams in the eredivisie who get the same crowds as us, we should not be reliant on getting more than eight or nine k on average. Getting more vewership and money out of sky should be the priority for the FFA.

Anyway one of the arguments is that the nix dies nothing for Australian player development and this article says otherwise. Instead of being kicked out of the league the nix should be looked at as an example for the rest of the league to emulate.


You serious bro? :lol:





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What's your team do? Throw a lot of money stealing other teams players. The nix are creating the players for you to steal. Without us you would have no Kosta or Marco.
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RyanM wrote:
What's your team do? Throw a lot of money stealing other teams players. The nix are creating the players for you to steal. Without us you would have no Kosta or Marco.


Don't be salty, just because they wanted to leave your tiny supporter less club and come to the best run club in the league. We made them who they are today.

#VictoryProducts





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The supporter numbers are fine as are the crowds. TV revenue needs to increase. You have to remember how small a city Wellington is. Anyway this is the Wellington supporters thread, go start a kick the Phoenix out thread.
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Just messing with you mate, ill stop.





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