Australia is very close,a big brother with a professional soccer league but no any single pacific island players play lo there how na ya? all tek lo Europe & other countries yet. chat sex anything government blo umi save duim for umi break tru after Henry Fa,arodo play for Perth Glory lo 2005?. This is a best league our players can play.
Mi tintin gogo no save nao man. nogud lo side blo decipline?
@Anonymous, firstly there are quota restrictions. Only a certain number of foreign players can play in the A-League. This is also true of many other leagues in the world. So to break into the A-League, our players would have to be exceptionally good. Judd Molea, a boy from Isabel have all tried with the Roar but both have never featured for Roar. I think the guy from Isabel at least played in the second team? Need to verify this. Our players are very skilled players but still not good enough to compete with a Brazilian etc for the limited places in the A-League. Another point in addition to this is, I have always stressed that this time teams are looking for the complete player, not only the skilled ones. So attitude hem play a huge part and this is one that our players clearly lack. secondly, the A-League is a business so visibility is important. If our players do not have the necessary exposure we will never get the break. Every player hires an agent who markets them to teams, our players and SIFF do not have this mechanism in place. When this fails, we will never break into the ranks of A-League franchises. In this way, the franchises instead "buy" fringe players from Brazil, Europe, Asia and Africa who can help them win while drawing the crowds. No crowd, no business. Another point, how recognizable and marketable are our players? Given the high number of people from other parts of the world, recruiting from these countries will make sense. I think the best thing SIFF can do is invest time and money in creating these kinds of players and when they are ready, export them to the best leagues in the world. Look at Brazil, the next best players seems to always come from there. Its not like a great player is born every second in Brazil, these players are molded, shaped - created to be that: a lethal striker, a resolute defender or a creative midfielder. Until we reach that state, our players can only thrive in the S-League, the NZ league, BOG, IDC, O-League.
"Simplicity is an art" | The views and opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of the people, institutions or organizations that I may or may not be related with unless stated explicitly.
Interesting clarification there. Now i know the processes, hey what about the state leagues in Aussie is there also restriction? I think the quality of State leagues were still better than NZFC, oleague & S-league. We can expose our players there. SIFF have lots to do then.
it all bogs down to SIFF. no rigorous marketing strategies and consultating experts to drive our boys thru any of these leagues.In fact. SIFF has been without a these kinds of plans since its establishment. there is no vision,no long term plans and so fort.Another issue is lack of discipline by our players. Solomon islanders are the best when it comes to U12, U16, or 'kurukuru' level but discipline starts to erode when 'kwaso' and 'show-off', 'big head type ia' like attitude starts creeping in. I guess its something that starts at club level. Our clubs only teaches technical tactics for the field, but nothing serious about football/sport ethics or player discipline for the 'off the field' level.Let alone public relations and public speaking for our players to show-cause examples and discipline to our school and home kids.
To be in the A-League is tough. For a team like Brisbane Roars or New Castle..There is lucrative market in both western and eastern europe,and latin america for the A-league. But for Asia-pacific region, barava nomoa na. Asian leagues have their own lucrative seasons....but pacific nomoa na. What is the way forward then? several of the many the answer are; (1)SIFF to be more robust, rigorous and aggressive in its maketing strategies, no wastem or coruptim seleni olobaot (2) teach more dsiciplines so our boys should have a proper mindset (3) train train train practice olowe and train, both physically and mentally (4) try for winim samfala games too lo top level..eg; melanesian cup, pacific games gold/cup, atleast have a go to represent oceania lo Confederation and worldcup campaign, (5) stoopem fastaem betel nut, simoka, beer and kwaso...
Yes, me but wonder tuya, but let's be real, hem hard tumas there's a brick wall! we don't belong to that category, we can if we prove ourselves, but I mean what are the odds, compare, kewell to any of our national player';
Kewell-
* basic training 6 hours x 6 days
* mentally fitness training
* techincaly training- off field-1 hour per week
* Gym training- 1hour per week
* Fitness training-5 hours per week
ating me stop nao!
its just hard!
how mekem own pacific league olsem A league (two teams from one country).
groupim nearest countries to save travel expenses.
one league olsem, png, si, vanuatu, nc. narawan, fiji, tonga, samoa etc.
incentives, sponsorship olsem.
okay me train small ones long basic soka moves!
S-LEAGUE FASTIME..UMI IMPROVUM...WESTERN UNITED $150,000 SPONSORSHIP, KEKEA LO PETER CON HAHAHA
YAHMAN! KEKEA LO PETER KON!me bata worry tumas lo every time hem appear!
Somehow mi think sapos level blo S-league hem gogo up ba umi save compete good lo international level given umi train good and also expose lo international friendlies.
Another encouraging news is staka over seas based players blo umi come home since S-league ehem start, what na ufala think abot this wan.
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