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The Australians on cusp of reaching big leagues in Europe

It has been a while since any Aussies played regularly in the Premier League, Spain’s La Liga, Italy’s Serie A, the German Bundesliga or France’s Ligue 1. There are exactly zero Socceroos doing so – but if things go well, there could be a few next season.

Just as Yengi and Portsmouth arrive in the Championship, three Australians are vying for the exit. Socceroos defender Cameron Burgess and midfielder Massimo Luongo, who recently retired from international duty, are part of an Ipswich Town side that has led the division for most of the season. With three games left to play they are locked in a four-way battle for the two automatic promotion spots, along with Leicester City (where Burgess’ occasional centre-back partner for Australia, Harry Souttar, has been frozen out of first-team action for months), Leeds United and Southampton.

Jackson Irvine, who plays with fellow Socceroo Connor Metcalfe at St Pauli, is desperate for a chance to play in Germany’s top flight.

Jackson Irvine, who plays with fellow Socceroo Connor Metcalfe at St Pauli, is desperate for a chance to play in Germany’s top flight.Credit: Getty

In the 2.Bundesliga, Jackson Irvine and Connor Metcalfe are on track for automatic promotion with St Pauli, provided there are no major slip-ups on their run home. Irvine, the club’s captain, has never played top-division football outside Scotland, and was reluctant to jinx the prospect of finally reaching the top flight by talking about it out loud after near misses in recent years.

“No one wants to play second league football,” he said. “You play second league football for that opportunity to push yourself into the highest level, to test yourself every week against the very best, and I’ve been lucky enough to do it in international football, but I’ve never had that chance to do it domestically. It would mean the world to me to have that opportunity.”

In Serie B, there’s Alessandro Circati at Parma, for whom the title is theirs to lose – and thus a place among Italy’s elite clubs, even as Cristian Volpato’s Sassuolo look likely to head in the opposite direction.

And then there are some sub-categories. Nestory Irankunda, for instance, is joining Bayern Munich next season, and despite his publicly debated shortcomings, it is not inconceivable that he could be playing alongside the likes of Harry Kane and Leroy Sane in months, if not weeks, from now.

Alessandro Circati in action with Parma, who are on track to be promoted to Italy’s top tier.

Alessandro Circati in action with Parma, who are on track to be promoted to Italy’s top tier.Credit: Getty

There are also some incumbents already on the books of clubs in those major competitions but whose careers exist on the first-team margins: such as Joe Gauci, the third-choice goalkeeper at Aston Villa, or Brighton and Hove Albion’s Cameron Peupion, who has made two FA Cup appearances this season and is also still developing. Denis Genreau, who has been at Ligue 1 side Toulouse for three years, has had stints of regular football in France’s top tier but has been consistently derailed by injury.

Young guns Alex Robertson (Manchester City) and Garang Kuol (Newcastle United) are contracted to high-profile clubs, but have spent this season out on loan, to varied success. Kuol’s struggles at Volendam have been largely the consequence of external factors, while Robertson has been playing with Yengi at Portsmouth and had established himself as one of League One’s top midfielders before a hamstring injury ended his season. While Kuol will probably be loaned out again, sources close to Robertson say he is likely to seek a permanent move away from City this summer in search of senior minutes – probably to a team in the Championship, and quite possibly to Portsmouth.

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Irvine is fully aware of what this raft of possible promotions could do for the Socceroos in the short term, exposing players like himself to a higher level – as well as how individual successes in club football can change how the Australian game is seen, at home and abroad, having grown up in an era when the country probably took for granted the luxury of seeing Socceroos everywhere in Europe.

“What it would mean for Australian football, to see guys competing at the very top level again – there’s no denying that that pushes us,” he said.

“Just in the way you’re perceived … it changes everything completely. We just want that individual success for each other as well – especially players like myself and Cam [Burgess], who have spent most of our careers at a certain level, and Mass [Luongo] as well, and looking at having that opportunity to finally break that ceiling is obviously really exciting.”

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