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    Normally I am loathe to watch or even discuss the Australian Modified Gaelic Football League and the newest club, the Greater Wagga-Wagga Canberra Western Sydney Breakfast Point Giants. Today I am over-turning that self-imposed ban due to the comments of Kevin Sheedy at the press-conference following his team's abysmal 135 point loss. I did not watch the game, knowing that even if I were to enjoy AMGFL in the slightest that this match would not be a contest whatsoever. The match attracted a laughably inflated 'official' crowd of 5,830. I can only assume this included the players and coaches for both teams, the staff selling food and drinks to patrons, the face painter out the front of the stadium and the commentators and broadcast staff, and then the AFL decided to double the figure. Perhaps their membership base of 12,052 contains far more cats, dogs, pigs and infant children than we would otherwise suspect.

    After discussing the team and their woeful ability on the field, the topic turned to the way the club had gone about the business of attracting people and building a support base. Kevin Sheedy then made a comment I found incredibly offensive, one that shows that the days of the 'Sheilas, Wogs and Poofters' branding of football in this country are not yet over.
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    "We don't have the recruiting officer called the immigration department, recruiting fans for the West Sydney Wanderers. We have to find fans, because that's what happens when you channel a lot of people into a country, put them in Western Sydney, build a club in one year and they've suddenly got 10,000 fans and 20,000 going to a game."

    What a staggering stupid, and arguably racist comment. It is one that shows yet again what complete ignorance the AMGFL leadership have of the people they supposedly want to support their new club.

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    I hardly know where to begin dissecting the failure of the GWS Giants.

    Firstly, I remind all that the AFL have repeatedly talked about having a $200 million dollar 'war chest' for the Giants. So my first question, is why has any Government spent any money on this failure of a club?

    I will start with the AFL scamming $27 million dollars from various parts of NSW Government to build a ground at the Blacktown Olympic Park, only to see them abandon the facility in order to waste another $45 million of taxpayer funds on redeveloping the Sydney Showground. Skoda Stadium as it is now known, has only once attracted more than the 10,000 that the Blacktown AFL stadium can hold.

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    I could also start with how the ACT Government has gifted GWS with $2.35 million a year for 10 years to play matches at Manuka Oval. And here I was thinking this was a Western Sydney team. What I find most aggravating for this in regards to football, is that the Canberra A-League bid failed due to a lack of funding, even though $2.35 million a year would be enough to cover any losses of a real ACT team playing in Canberra for every match of the A-League season!

    Sheedy and his comment today proved to me without a shadow of a doubt that the AFL & GWS have no clue about the people they want to market their sport and club at.

    If they think that the Western Sydney Wanderers success is solely down to of 'immigrants' coming over to Australia that are 'channeled' into Western Sydney by the Government, bringing their immigrant sport that just happens to be what the Wanderers play thus setting the scene for sold-out crowds and a Grand Final with over 40,000 people at it then they are dead wrong.

    It is another comment in the litany of AFL supporters who brand Football as anti-Australia, as a foreign xenophobic sport not fit for a 'true Australian' to play. It is an statement that football is "Un-Australian".

    This is a sport which is so intent on forcefully branding itself as a true Australian 'legend'. From attempts to takeover Anzac Day, to claiming that AFL is the 'indigenous' game despite said game being a combination of rugby & Gaelic football (Sheedy should look up what country Association Football came from), and the deception of calling it "Australia's Game", despite football being a far more popular participation sport for males, swimming being popular with both male and female and netball being most popular with females.

    Never mind the tiny little fact that half the country prefers Rugby or Rugby Union, and the entire country supports Cricket in various forms, the AFL has grown complacent in having the narratives and marketing spiel replicated word for word across the mainstream media. It has grown so confident that it now has it's own propaganda empire operating under the guise of 'AFL.Com News'.

    Sheedy has bought into the AFL hype about being the true Australian sport. To him and the rest of the stooges at AFL Headquarters, the success of the Wanderers can only be explained away by declaring those Wanderers supporters as immigrants, not truly Australian. They can't possible be real Australian men and women, because they'd be Giants supporters otherwise. The Giants see their job as preaching the Australian gospel of AFL to those immigrant football heathens. That AFL is the one true Australian sport, and we'd best come along and support his team if we want really be Australian.

    Whichever way his comment is sliced it is offensive. His suggestion that because I'm a Wanderers supporter I must be an immigrant is just one way I find it offensive. That being born in Western Sydney, with my parents being born in Western Sydney and my grandparents as well, that supporting the Wanderers and not supporting GWS makes me an un-Australian immigrant.

    The alternative? That people who immigrate to Australia and love football aren't really Australian yet, or that they are invading Australia and latching on to the Wanderers because they haven't yet found out they should love AFL.

    Bullshit.

    Kevin Sheedy your comments are a disgrace not only to Western Sydney but to modern Australian culture as a whole. This country is built on immigration, and people come to Australia to live and learn and be free, they can love or hate whatever sport they like and liking one sport or another has nothing to do with how 'Australian' they are.

    The Wanderers have built their success and fan base not from 'immigration', but from passion for football, and getting our chance to support a club that truly represents Western Sydney in the A-League. No-one in the Wanderers club or support base cares how long ago you moved to Australia, or even if you were born in Australia, or if it was 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 or more generations ago that your family first came to Australia, or if you're from Eastern Europe, or South America, or New Zealand or England or Greece or Spain or Aboriginal or any other country or nationality or ethnicity on the planet.

    Nationality or ethnicity isn't what unites the Wanderers. It has nothing to do with our immigration or non-immigration status.

    What unites the Wanderers is being proud of Western Sydney.

    If Kevin Sheedy and the AFL can't understand that they can take the entire Giants organisation on the next XPT to Canberra and relocate the entire box and dice to a location that appears to actually want an AFL team.

    Update:
    I have obtained a statement from the GWS organisation, signed by chairman Tony Shepherd.

    I first note that to GWS, if you want to be taken seriously, you should adopt local convention and start calling our sport "Football", while you use the common term "AFL". Football in Western Sydney is Football. I've also noticed a tendency to call both forms of Rugby solely "Rugby", instead of Rugby Union and Rugby League. Differentiating those two codes would be appreciated also.

    Our sport is Football, and it is run by Football Federation Australia.

    Please pass this on to your colleagues in Melbourne.

    After filtering out marketing spiel, it contains only one paragraph that refers to his comments:

    His comments were not new. It is something he has expressed a number of times but unfortunately on this occasion they were taken out of context and he has been unfairly subjected to criticism by some people who may not be aware of Kevin's enormous contribution to the community.

    I care about his recent statement, his xenophobic comments that the Immigration Department is recruiting for the Wanderers. Not any 'enormous' contribution to the community in the past. It has nothing to do with his current statement and the current issue of GWS and their views on the 'immigrants' in Western Sydney.

    I care about the implication that those who support the Wanderers are all immigrants and thus un-Australian, as well as labelling this entire region as 'immigrants', despite knowing that all but those of Aboriginal heritage were immigrants at one stage.

    I care about the implications of this statement as they are yet another in a long line of xenophobic comments to come out of the Melbourne AFL establishment that seek to denigrate Football and relegate it as a sport unfit for 'True Australians'.

    GWS were unable to sweep this comments under the carpet because they had been noted on several previous occasions, and from that point, they can only be considered pre-meditated. Craig Foster has also written about a statement of Sheedy's, where he referred to supporters of Football as 'boat people'. These are not off-handstatements, but represent his true views on Football as a sport and the people in Western Sydney.

    Standing by these comments shows a complete lack of empathy or awareness of the people of Western Sydney. It confirms the viewpoint that the AFL sees Western Sydney as heathens to be converted to the church of AFL, and to bring them into what the AFL sees as the "True Australian" sport.

    What 'context' has his words been taken out of? His words were reflected honestly across the media. The only context provided is his own. His 'context' is exactly what he said, "We don't have the recruiting officer called the immigration department, recruiting fans for the West Sydney Wanderers."

    Their refusal to accept that the statement was offensive, xenophobic and out of step with not only Western Sydney but modern Australia as a whole is another example of the AFL Bubble effect. If the AFL and GWS cannot step out of this bubble they will fail even harder than they are already.

    I for one will never support GWS or the AFL, what little chance they had died with Sheedy's comments and his refusal to step up and apologise for them. I am certain I am not the only person to have this viewpoint.

    The WestSydneyFootball.Com Supporters Player Of The Year Award has been tallied and the results are in.

     

    A system of 3-2-1 Voting took place for every round this season, from our Round 1 clash against the Central Coast Mariners, all the way through to the Grand Final, yet again against the Central Coast Mariners.

    WestSydneyFootball.Com Supporters Player Of The Year Award

    Youssouf Hersi

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    During a stellar first season this gifted winger blitzed the opposition time and time again, carrying 53 more votes than the next highest Wanderer. Making 25 appearances, scoring 5 goals and getting two red cards, Hersi was key to the winning of the Premiership in the Wanderers inaugural season. Playing as an outlet for the Wanderers midfield and defence, his creativity and trickery caused havoc across the league.

     

    Notable highlights include providing the cross for the first ever goal by Mark Bridge in Round 4, receiving the first ever red card for the Wanderers in a match against Perth Glory in Round 7, scoring the first ever Sydney Derby goal for the Wanderers in Round 11, a mazy run that resulted in the Wanderers taking the lead against Brisbane Roar in Round 17 and winning the penalty that won the match for the 10 man Wanderers against Melbourne Heart in Round 18.

     

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    Defender Of The Year

    Picking up 2nd place in the voting, as well as the Defender of the Year award, is ball clearing legend Nikolai Topor-Stanley. A beast mode central defender who played every game this season for Western Sydney his role in defence was storming forward to clear any threat aerial or on the ground, and booting it into Row Z like Popa wanted.

     

    In addition to his defensive prowess he also picked up a goal with a glorious diving header in Round 16 against the Wellington Phoenix. There's not much more to say about Topor than his performance was the equal of any defender in the history of the A-League so far and is one that could see him pull on a Socceroos shirt in the future should he keep up his level of play.

     

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    Midfielder Of The Year

    Picking up 3rd place in overall voting, as well as the Midfielder of the Year award, is up and coming central midfielder Aaron Mooy. While Shinji Ono took acclaim playing at attacking midfield, Mooy worked tirelessly as a deeper creative play maker, contributing effective to the offensive and defensive structure of the Wanderers formation. His quality of play earned a call-up to the Socceroos where Mooy made his debut against Guam on the 7th of December 2012. In both this match and his second match against Taiwan he put his name on the score sheet with well taken free kicks.

     

    Making 23 appearances over the course of the season, Mooy picked up his long awaited first goal for the Wanderers with the match winner against Perth Glory in Round 22.

     

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    Forward Of The Year

    Fourth place overall, but winning the Forward of the Year award, is resurgent wing-forward Mark Bridge. After a toxic culture at Sydney FC destroyed his confidence and management left him to rot, Tony Popovic rebuilt the man who eventually played 27 matches for the Wanderers and scored 11 goals, taking out the Wanderers Golden Boot for the season.

     

    Bridge became the first ever player to score a goal in the A-League for Western Sydney, a glancing header against Brisbane Roar in Round 4. The very next week he scored the first goal at Parramatta Stadium for Western Sydney. His best moment of the season coming when scoring his a hat-trick during the 6-1 thrashing of Adelaide United in Round 12.

     

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    Goalkeeper Of The Year

    How could it be anyone but Ante Covic? A colossus guarding his penalty area, Covic turned rejection from Melbourne Victory into a Premiership, Grand Final appearance and the winning of the A-League Goalkeeper of the Year award. Not a single regular season penalty went past Covic, even Del Piero needed a second bite after having his shot saved by the giant stopper. Even when the Mariners sent down Mat Ryan, a fellow goalkeeper, to take a penalty Covic was unfazed and produced a magnificent stop with his feet that kept the game scoreless.

     

    My own personal highlight for Covic was his performance against Melbourne Heart in Round 18 on Australia Day. When disaster struck in the 12th minute after Jerome Polenz was red carded for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity, it was Covic who stared down Josip Tadic and punched the penalty away. After Ono had scored a penalty of his own late in the match it was Covic who kept the win secure, the final seconds of the match involving a break by Heart, Topor-Stanley deflecting a shot that Covic miraculously kept out, then picked himself up to smother the ball as Tadic looked certain to knock the rebound in for an equaliser.

     

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    Impact Player Of The Year

    While Tony Popovic rotated his squad magnificently, there are always going to be players in a team who get limited game time either off the bench or rotating to allow first eleven players to have a rest. Out of those players who stood in this rotational role, it was Labinot Haliti who made the biggest impact, picking up the most amount of votes for those players. Haliti worked tirelessly to keep himself ready to step in across the front line of the Western Sydney attack.

     

    Haliti was the joint 3rd highest goal scorer with 5 goals from 19 matches, the first of which came against Perth Glory in Round 13. The biggest impact of the season was unquestionably his effort against the Central Coast Mariners in Round 23, his 80th minute goal saw the Wanderers leap to the top of the table, setting the stage for their inaugural season Premiership victory.

     

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    Goal Of The Year

    Against Melbourne Victory at Parramatta Stadium in Round 14, Shinji Ono plucked a clearance from Topor-Stanley out of the air with his right foot, flicked it up again then with his left foot, blasted a volley through the legs of Adrian Leijer to find the far bottom corner. Not only was the goal of the season for Western Sydney, it was one of the best goals in the history of the A-League. Many players would not have even had the technical ability to keep the ball up twice, to take control of the ball in the first place or the audacity to even attempt the double flick and nutmeg shot.

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    Community Award

    Every football club in every code in Australia espouses the benefits of 'Community Engagement', but not every club follows through on their ideals. True community engagement is achieved by living as part of the community, and inspiring members of that community as the players and club interact with them. While Wanderer players participate in school skills sessions, meetings for charity and government, it is Jerrad Tyson who took those duties as a player and member of the community to another level.

     

    He spent many days visiting young fans in hospital (in one particular visit, he spent 5 hours playing FIFA with a young Wanderer), visiting schools. He was also the brains behind the creation of Wynston The Wanderer, an unofficial mascot for the team that can be seen on Facebook. He is to the best of my knowledge, the only A-League player to ever bake a cake for his club's Active Supporter Group, in this case the RBB. All who meet him come away with an impression of a humble but hard working man who loves his job and club. The final point that I feel cements why he should be recognised, is that he is a Western Sydney Wanderer who isn't from Western Sydney. Born in Tasmania, and having played his career up to this point in Queensland, he has embraced the community and the lifestyle and values of Western Sydney. Which is what we all wanted from our players from the first ever community meetings prior to the club kicking off.

     

    So there you have it. These are the votes of the community in action, and I thank you all for your continued support of the website. I hope we get just as many, if not more, votes in the awards for next season!



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