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Posted: 2022-12-07 22:26:58

As Australia basks in the afterglow of the Socceroos' miraculous World Cup campaign, thoughts are now turning to how the domestic game can capitalise on this white-hot moment and create a legacy that lasts longer than the fleeting feelings of belief and inspiration its players have sparked.

Australian football is familiar with the boom-and-bust cycle sparked by major tournaments, where the game crashes through the ceiling of mainstream public consciousness only to watch that enthusiasm slowly ebb away as different parts of the ecosystem fail to strike the glowing iron (hello, 2015 Asian Cup win).

Throughout it all, the golden question has remained: how do you translate the massive (if irregular) exposure created by the national teams into sustainable bums-on-seats support for the leagues that developed them?

Melbourne City players celebrate
The A-League Men has been the greenhouse for the Socceroos' 'generation next'. How will the league capture this new wave of interest?(Getty Images: Quinn Rooney)

The last time there was a clear line drawn between a successful Socceroos World Cup run and a sustained surge of interest in the domestic competition was, unsurprisingly, back in 2006.

While most of the 'golden generation' of players who qualified for the World Cup in Germany that year played overseas, almost all of them began their careers right here in Australia, emerging through the old National Soccer League that, just a year earlier, had been relaunched as the A-League: a glittering new enterprise designed to appeal to the general sports-watching masses.

Several Socceroos, including John Aloisi, Tony Vidmar, Archie Thompson, Paul Okon and Ned Zelic, became marquee players for these new A-League clubs, with their World Cup success spilling over into the fledgling competition and providing an almost immediate and mainstream popularity.

A new broadcast deal, major sponsorships, widespread media coverage, and a whole new cohort of fans all coalesced in the perfect moment, providing rocket fuel to this new competition that became one of the biggest and most exciting for the better part of the following decade.

The historic achievements of 'generation next' in Qatar, becoming the first Socceroos team to win two group games, keep two clean sheets, and score in every game provides an opportunity for the A-Leagues to do the same.

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