07-16 21:23覽 5242
Former FIFA World Cup winner Christian Karembeu believes the new Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) Professional League is the critical next step to close the gap between Pacific football and the rest of the world. Karembeu stated that witnessing Auckland City's performance against Boca Juniors reinforced his view that introducing professional football across Oceania will be revolutionary for the region.
Karembeu highlighted the Pacific's abundance of natural athletic talent and argued that the new Pro League, with its professional coaches and managers, can rapidly develop amateur players into world-class competitors. He cited the success of the All Blacks rugby team in developing talent from Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji as a model, showing how raw talent can be transformed into superstars within a professional environment.
Pointing to his own career, Tim Cahill's, and Marko Stamenic's as examples of players with Pacific heritage excelling at the highest level, Karembeu stated that Pacific players have always possessed talent but lacked the necessary professional guidance. He emphasized that the new league will educate players on essential professional aspects: how to train, recover, eat, understand intensity and quality, and maintain discipline regarding routines and lifestyle choices.
Karembeu stressed that the new league requires quality managers, coaches, and experts across all areas of a professional sports organization (HR, accommodation, transport). He explained the fundamental shift from amateurism, where players "can do whatever they want," to professionalism, which demands specific behaviours and sacrifices; those unwilling to make these sacrifices "do not belong."
He concluded by noting that the respectful and humble nature of Pacific players will aid their transition into professional football. Additionally, he asserted they "will also not be intimidated, because in the islands we are all warriors."
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