An Aussie is about to own Swindon and use it as a pathway for Aussie players


An Aussie is about to own Swindon and use it as a pathway for Aussie...

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New Swindon Town owner and chairman Clem Morfuni says Robins fans "have got their club back" as his takeover of the League Two club nears completion.

The Australian businessman has appointed Ben Garner as head coach and Ben Chorley as director of football.

Garner, 41, was boss of Bristol Rovers from December 2019 until November 2020.

Morfuni, who had a minority stake in the Wiltshire club, is in the process of acquiring shares from outgoing chairman Lee Power.

"I want to thank every supporter who fought for their club and helped me to gain control," Morfuni said.

"I will work hard to make this club a club all our fans can be proud of."

Morfuni has been involved in a High Court legal battle with Power over the ownership of Swindon, with Power ordered to sell the club to Morfuni's plumbing company, Axis.

On Tuesday, the English Football League confirmed it had granted Morfuni consent to acquire additional shares, after he passed the league's owners' and directors' test.

Swindon, who had been without a manager since John McGreal resigned in June after just a month in charge, face a series of challenges off the pitch.
They are 
under a transfer embargo, having paid players and staff just 60% of their June wages, and the local council, who own the stadium, have taken legal action against the club for not paying rent since April 2020.

Morfuni 'fully aware' of 'difficult situation'

In a statement on the Swindon website, Morfuni described himself as "the biggest football fan in the world".

He said he will invest his "money and time" in the club and "provide full transparency of the financial position of the club at all times".

"I also want to make it clear that I am fully aware of how difficult the situation that I am inheriting is," he added.

"What a challenge we all have on our hands to turn this great club around.

"It's going to take good strategic planning, a considerable amount of finance in the short term but above all it is going to take unity.

"If we all pull together and we stay united we can turn this club around and take it back to where it belongs."

Garner 'an extremely respected coach'

Morfuni says he has chosen the director of football and head coach model rather than a manager as he wants "continuity to run through the club".

"I want a young, forward-thinking, vibrant club," he told the club website.

"Ben Chorley is incredibly knowledgeable about football.

"I have full faith that, given time and support, he will be able to build the correct infrastructure at the club and make the correct acquisitions to implement my vision.

"Ben Garner has over 20 years coaching experience at every level of the game and is an extremely respected coach within the game.

"I have complete faith that they are people to take this club forward but they're going to need patience and time because they inherit an extremely difficult set of circumstances."

Garner will be assisted by Scott Marshall and Scott Lindsey, while goalkeeping coach Steve Mildenhall - who had taken charge of first-team affairs following McGreal's departure - will remain a the club.

Morfuni wants 'sustainable Championship club'

Morfuni has also laid out some objectives for the future.

These include; building "a sustainable Championship club", owning the County Ground alongside supporters, to "significantly improve and fully modernise" the stadium and building a new training ground.

"I know that is a million miles away from where we are now and it's going to take a great deal of work, resources, vision and effort," he said.

"But if we pull together, we can and we will do it.

"We will have lots of issues to uncover and resolve in the coming days, and there will be many urgent problems to deal with."

Swindon and Power are still the subject of Football Association charges regarding the ownership and funding of the club.

In April, Power, along with sports agency First Touch Pro Management and its company director Michael Standing, were charged with breaching FA rules on ownership.

Standing, a former Aston Villa trainee who had spells at Bradford and Walsall, had previously stated that he had acquired 50% of Swindon's holding company when Power bought the Robins in 2013.

But, under FA regulations, agents are not allowed to own clubs because of potential conflicts of interest.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57920562#:~:text=Swindon%20Town-,Clem%20Morfuni%20says%20Swindon%20Town%20fans%20'have%20club%20back'%20as,as%20his%20takeover%20of%20the

Clem Morfuni wants to use his platform as Swindon Town non-executive vice-chairman to fix what he describes as a "pathetic" pathway for Australian kids to play professional football.

The Sydney native is the founder of Axis Group, a multi-national building services contractor that was involved in the construction of new Wembley and the new Tottenham Hotspur stadium.

Morfuni has sponsored the League Two club since 2015 and was handed a position on the board by owner Lee Power in July last year.

Australian businesses have begun to make their mark in English football recently, with a consortium reportedly favourites to purchase League One club Charlton Athletic.

Speaking to Tribal Football, Morfuni says he plans to use his own standing at Swindon to provide new opportunities for aspiring footballers in Australia.

"We've employed a talent scout who is coming out to Australia in November," revealed Morfuni.

"So we're looking for kids and we want to develop a pathway for kids in Australia to go to English and European football and the best way to have it is to have someone in that level that can pull a proper pathway for kids because I think the pathway in Australia is pathetic.

"And now that people know that I'm Swindon vice-chairman. And there's a couple of other things that I'm trying to do that I can't really announce yet. But we're trying to get that pathway where we're generating really good kids from Australia who can go and play football."

Morfuni does not state whether the idea would evolve in the form of an academy or direct trials at Swindon, but his argument that Australia needs a different platform for their young footballers is a strong one.

The A-League, which commenced in 2005, is one of the few professional domestic leagues in world football that does not have a relegation system.

The National Premier League (NPL), competitions that are based in each Australian state, and the subsequent state leagues, essentially serve as the equivalent to the English football pyramid for Australian football, with the A-League at its apex.

Over the past two seasons, however, only seven players have been recruited from NPL competitions who were under 23, Australian and had no previous A-League experience.

Despite the league expanding to twelve franchises in 2019/2020, Morfuni argues that A-League clubs have no interest in developing youth.

"No disrespect to the A-League, I've been involved in the A-League. But there is no pathway. They just want to win their competition," Morfuni continued.

"They've got a lot of older players in that league and there is probably 10,000 Australian kids that want to play football and the A-League has 10 teams and none of these young kids have an opportunity to get in.

"Hopefully this works so there might be an opportunity for our national league to get even better.

"It's good for Australia because it gives us an opportunity and I'm over there enough to be heavily involved in it."

Morfuni's plans for young Australian footballers makes up a small fraction of his work at Swindon.

Due to his vast experience in the construction industry, Morfuni has become an instrumental figure in negotiations over a proposed purchase of the club's 122-year-old stadium, the County Ground.

Swindon hopes they can buy the 15,728 capacity stadium off the local council and split the ownership 50-50 with two supporter groups, Trust STFC and STFC Supporters Club.

The stadium purchase has long been a topic of debate in Swindon, but Morfuni believes it will pay off in the long-term as Town aims to climb the rungs of the Football League.

"The football club started in 1879 so there's a lot of passion there. We've been in the Premier League before in 1993/94. We were up there for one season but we've been hovering around League One and League Two in the Football League.

"There's absolutely a lot of passion. It doesn't matter what club you support in English football, there's always passion over there. We're in League Two at the moment and we're trying to get promotion.

"We think we should be a Championship club. There's a big enough catchment, I think if we develop the ground it will be a lot better we'll get better income outside the pitch so we can put more money inside the pitch so that's what we're trying to do.

"Lee Power and I have been talking about it making it and that's our goal. To get them in the Championship minimum."

It wouldn't be the first time Swindon find themselves in the upper echelon of British football. The town might be famous for its railway history, but many nostalgic football fans will remember their ill-fated and solitary Premier League season in 1993/94.

Player-manager Glenn Hoddle departed for Chelsea before the season and the Robins would eventually finish bottom with five wins from 42 games.

Significant investment would be needed for a top-flight return, but given the emergence of other smaller clubs in recent years, such as Bournemouth, Brighton and Huddersfield, Morfuni hasn't given up hope.

"I always say we'd love to be in the top-flight but to be in the top-flight you need a couple of hundred million quid.

"If we can get in the Championship it'll be an accomplishment especially if we can purchase the ground with the supporters groups, it will be a good feat.

"You never know, you might get one freak season where you'll get in the Premier League. You got to think eight years ago, Brighton were in our division. But it's going to take time."

 

https://www.tribalfootball.com/articles/exclusive-clem-morfuni-using-swindon-board-role-to-fix-pathetic-australian-pathway-4252836



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jaymz - 23 Jul 2021 11:31 AM

New Swindon Town owner and chairman Clem Morfuni says Robins fans "have got their club back" as his takeover of the League Two club nears completion.

The Australian businessman has appointed Ben Garner as head coach and Ben Chorley as director of football.

Garner, 41, was boss of Bristol Rovers from December 2019 until November 2020.

Morfuni, who had a minority stake in the Wiltshire club, is in the process of acquiring shares from outgoing chairman Lee Power.

"I want to thank every supporter who fought for their club and helped me to gain control," Morfuni said.

"I will work hard to make this club a club all our fans can be proud of."

Morfuni has been involved in a High Court legal battle with Power over the ownership of Swindon, with Power ordered to sell the club to Morfuni's plumbing company, Axis.

On Tuesday, the English Football League confirmed it had granted Morfuni consent to acquire additional shares, after he passed the league's owners' and directors' test.

Swindon, who had been without a manager since John McGreal resigned in June after just a month in charge, face a series of challenges off the pitch.
They are 
under a transfer embargo, having paid players and staff just 60% of their June wages, and the local council, who own the stadium, have taken legal action against the club for not paying rent since April 2020.

Morfuni 'fully aware' of 'difficult situation'

In a statement on the Swindon website, Morfuni described himself as "the biggest football fan in the world".

He said he will invest his "money and time" in the club and "provide full transparency of the financial position of the club at all times".

"I also want to make it clear that I am fully aware of how difficult the situation that I am inheriting is," he added.

"What a challenge we all have on our hands to turn this great club around.

"It's going to take good strategic planning, a considerable amount of finance in the short term but above all it is going to take unity.

"If we all pull together and we stay united we can turn this club around and take it back to where it belongs."

Garner 'an extremely respected coach'

Morfuni says he has chosen the director of football and head coach model rather than a manager as he wants "continuity to run through the club".

"I want a young, forward-thinking, vibrant club," he told the club website.

"Ben Chorley is incredibly knowledgeable about football.

"I have full faith that, given time and support, he will be able to build the correct infrastructure at the club and make the correct acquisitions to implement my vision.

"Ben Garner has over 20 years coaching experience at every level of the game and is an extremely respected coach within the game.

"I have complete faith that they are people to take this club forward but they're going to need patience and time because they inherit an extremely difficult set of circumstances."

Garner will be assisted by Scott Marshall and Scott Lindsey, while goalkeeping coach Steve Mildenhall - who had taken charge of first-team affairs following McGreal's departure - will remain a the club.

Morfuni wants 'sustainable Championship club'

Morfuni has also laid out some objectives for the future.

These include; building "a sustainable Championship club", owning the County Ground alongside supporters, to "significantly improve and fully modernise" the stadium and building a new training ground.

"I know that is a million miles away from where we are now and it's going to take a great deal of work, resources, vision and effort," he said.

"But if we pull together, we can and we will do it.

"We will have lots of issues to uncover and resolve in the coming days, and there will be many urgent problems to deal with."

Swindon and Power are still the subject of Football Association charges regarding the ownership and funding of the club.

In April, Power, along with sports agency First Touch Pro Management and its company director Michael Standing, were charged with breaching FA rules on ownership.

Standing, a former Aston Villa trainee who had spells at Bradford and Walsall, had previously stated that he had acquired 50% of Swindon's holding company when Power bought the Robins in 2013.

But, under FA regulations, agents are not allowed to own clubs because of potential conflicts of interest.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57920562#:~:text=Swindon%20Town-,Clem%20Morfuni%20says%20Swindon%20Town%20fans%20'have%20club%20back'%20as,as%20his%20takeover%20of%20the

Clem Morfuni wants to use his platform as Swindon Town non-executive vice-chairman to fix what he describes as a "pathetic" pathway for Australian kids to play professional football.

The Sydney native is the founder of Axis Group, a multi-national building services contractor that was involved in the construction of new Wembley and the new Tottenham Hotspur stadium.

Morfuni has sponsored the League Two club since 2015 and was handed a position on the board by owner Lee Power in July last year.

Australian businesses have begun to make their mark in English football recently, with a consortium reportedly favourites to purchase League One club Charlton Athletic.

Speaking to Tribal Football, Morfuni says he plans to use his own standing at Swindon to provide new opportunities for aspiring footballers in Australia.

"We've employed a talent scout who is coming out to Australia in November," revealed Morfuni.

"So we're looking for kids and we want to develop a pathway for kids in Australia to go to English and European football and the best way to have it is to have someone in that level that can pull a proper pathway for kids because I think the pathway in Australia is pathetic.

"And now that people know that I'm Swindon vice-chairman. And there's a couple of other things that I'm trying to do that I can't really announce yet. But we're trying to get that pathway where we're generating really good kids from Australia who can go and play football."

Morfuni does not state whether the idea would evolve in the form of an academy or direct trials at Swindon, but his argument that Australia needs a different platform for their young footballers is a strong one.

The A-League, which commenced in 2005, is one of the few professional domestic leagues in world football that does not have a relegation system.

The National Premier League (NPL), competitions that are based in each Australian state, and the subsequent state leagues, essentially serve as the equivalent to the English football pyramid for Australian football, with the A-League at its apex.

Over the past two seasons, however, only seven players have been recruited from NPL competitions who were under 23, Australian and had no previous A-League experience.

Despite the league expanding to twelve franchises in 2019/2020, Morfuni argues that A-League clubs have no interest in developing youth.

"No disrespect to the A-League, I've been involved in the A-League. But there is no pathway. They just want to win their competition," Morfuni continued.

"They've got a lot of older players in that league and there is probably 10,000 Australian kids that want to play football and the A-League has 10 teams and none of these young kids have an opportunity to get in.

"Hopefully this works so there might be an opportunity for our national league to get even better.

"It's good for Australia because it gives us an opportunity and I'm over there enough to be heavily involved in it."

Morfuni's plans for young Australian footballers makes up a small fraction of his work at Swindon.

Due to his vast experience in the construction industry, Morfuni has become an instrumental figure in negotiations over a proposed purchase of the club's 122-year-old stadium, the County Ground.

Swindon hopes they can buy the 15,728 capacity stadium off the local council and split the ownership 50-50 with two supporter groups, Trust STFC and STFC Supporters Club.

The stadium purchase has long been a topic of debate in Swindon, but Morfuni believes it will pay off in the long-term as Town aims to climb the rungs of the Football League.

"The football club started in 1879 so there's a lot of passion there. We've been in the Premier League before in 1993/94. We were up there for one season but we've been hovering around League One and League Two in the Football League.

"There's absolutely a lot of passion. It doesn't matter what club you support in English football, there's always passion over there. We're in League Two at the moment and we're trying to get promotion.

"We think we should be a Championship club. There's a big enough catchment, I think if we develop the ground it will be a lot better we'll get better income outside the pitch so we can put more money inside the pitch so that's what we're trying to do.

"Lee Power and I have been talking about it making it and that's our goal. To get them in the Championship minimum."

It wouldn't be the first time Swindon find themselves in the upper echelon of British football. The town might be famous for its railway history, but many nostalgic football fans will remember their ill-fated and solitary Premier League season in 1993/94.

Player-manager Glenn Hoddle departed for Chelsea before the season and the Robins would eventually finish bottom with five wins from 42 games.

Significant investment would be needed for a top-flight return, but given the emergence of other smaller clubs in recent years, such as Bournemouth, Brighton and Huddersfield, Morfuni hasn't given up hope.

"I always say we'd love to be in the top-flight but to be in the top-flight you need a couple of hundred million quid.

"If we can get in the Championship it'll be an accomplishment especially if we can purchase the ground with the supporters groups, it will be a good feat.

"You never know, you might get one freak season where you'll get in the Premier League. You got to think eight years ago, Brighton were in our division. But it's going to take time."

 

https://www.tribalfootball.com/articles/exclusive-clem-morfuni-using-swindon-board-role-to-fix-pathetic-australian-pathway-4252836


This is exactly what I always used to do when playing FIFA career mode. Take a lower league English league club and build it up with Australian youth.
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Neanderthal - 23 Jul 2021 11:14 PM
jaymz - 23 Jul 2021 11:31 AM

This is exactly what I always used to do when playing FIFA career mode. Take a lower league English league club and build it up with Australian youth.

Any good stories? That’s a good idea I never thought of 
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