Sky Blues star backs A-League

Sydney FC star Joe Lolley has no considerations concerning the A-League’s future, believing the competitors will rebound from the monetary disaster that has engulfed the game.

Lolley, who signed a marquee deal understood to value greater than $1 million per season when he joined the Sky Blues in 2022, has put pen to paper on a brand new two-year deal that may hold him with Sydney till not less than 2026.

While the Western Sydney Wanderers and Melbourne Victory have been believed to have provided the 31-year-old winger more cash to depart the Sky Blues, Lolley was more than pleased to stay with Sydney FC.

“Once I knew the club wanted to keep me for the longer term I wanted to make sure I go it done as soon as possible,” he mentioned.

“You feel like you always have to listen to what’s out there. You don’t want just close all your options because a football career’s only short, but deep down I always wanted to stay at Sydney and I think it would have taken something pretty extraordinary to tempt me away.

“I’m very confident and very happy that I wanted to stay here.”

Lolley was simply as content material to stay within the A-League regardless of the competitors’s disastrous present monetary state.

The Australian Professional Leagues, which runs the A-League’s males’s and ladies’s competitions, this week made near 50 per cent of its workers redundant, with cost-cutting measures together with the shutting down of KeepUp, its digital platform that sucked up $40 million in bills.

It’s a part of a “strategic and commercial review” the APL has undertaken to “create efficiencies through consolidation”.

“It’s a chance for the A-League to reset itself and grow in the future,” Lolley mentioned.

“The A-League’s really good. Players are developing really well here … and we get a pretty good crowd here every week at Sydney. In an ideal world we’ll keep growing and improving those crowds.”

Originally printed as Joe Lolley extends his stick with Sydney FC regardless of A-League’s monetary woes

Source: www.dailytelegraph.com.au