logo
Sydney FC in shock swoop for Bayern Munich legend Thomas Müller

Sydney FC in shock swoop for Bayern Munich legend Thomas Müller

Sydney FC are in talks to sign former Bayern Munich legend Thomas Müller in what could be one of the greatest marquee coups in A-League history.
Müller, 35, is a free agent after departing Bayern, the only club he has ever played for, at the end of the recent FIFA Club World Cup after more than 500 games across nearly two decades, and is seeking a new experience to round out his career.
Though reports have linked him to Major League Soccer in the United States – and some have gone as far as to say he has already made up his mind – this masthead can reveal that the Sky Blues have been in discussions with Müller and his representatives for several weeks about an A-League switch, and that they remain an outside chance of convincing him.
An answer either way is expected within the next week or so, with the club recently informed that they are one of the final two options he is considering. The other is in MLS, and that is believed to be his favoured option, but Sydney are still in with a shot.
Sources with knowledge of negotiations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Müller – a 13-time Bundesliga winner, two-time UEFA Champions League winner, and part of the Germany squad that won the 2014 World Cup – had been impressed with the pitch made to him by Sydney FC.
Two of his former teammates are already at the club: Brazilian star Douglas Costa, who he played with between 2015 and 2017 at Bayern Munich, and the retired Alexander Baumjohann, Sydney's head of player management who spent a year on the books at Germany's biggest club and is believed to be spearheading the attempt to sign him.
His recruitment would be an enormous boon for the financially stricken A-League and for Sydney FC, whose board has undergone an off-season restructure with the departure of long-time chairman Scott Barlow. Jan Voss, a German-Australian business executive and president of Ferrari Australasia, has replaced Barlow as chairman, while the club's foundation chairman Walter Bugno – hugely influential in their 'Bling FC' era – is back on the board as a director.
No A-League club – not even the Sky Blues – can compete with the wages that Müller would be able to attract in the US or elsewhere; like any high-profile player who decides to move to Australia, it would involve him prioritising the low-key lifestyle he would be able to enjoy in Sydney over money.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trainer Allan Kehoe aiming high with exciting youngster Shaggy in the spring
Trainer Allan Kehoe aiming high with exciting youngster Shaggy in the spring

News.com.au

time27 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Trainer Allan Kehoe aiming high with exciting youngster Shaggy in the spring

Trainer Allan Kehoe is confident stable star Shaggy is ready to make the transition from one-time Golden Slipper wildcard to bona fide spring stakes contender when he returns at Royal Randwick on Saturday. Kehoe is eager to aim high with his lightly-raced talent, which impressively won three of his four starts during a memorable debut preparation during the autumn. At one stage he was on the second line of betting for the Slipper despite not being nominated for the two-year-old main event. Kehoe would have given serious consideration to paying the Slipper late entry had Shaggy won the Group 2 Skyline Stakes but eventually sent him for a spell when the gelding finished fifth in the lead-up event. Shaggy will be back at the races in the Keeneland September Yearling Sale 2YO Handicap (1100m). 'He looks like a bull now,' Kehoe said. 'He didn't grow much in height but he put on 20-25kg. 'It's really noticeable. He is really chunky, he's a big boy. 'He didn't grow any higher, just wider and he feels so much stronger underneath you.' Zoinks! Shaggy leads all the way to win the Pierro Plate and races into TAB Golden Slipper contention for Allan Kehoe! @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) February 15, 2025 A three-start stakes run will be on the agenda if he can run well in his return, starting with the Listed $200,000 The Rosebud (1100m) at Rosehill Gardens on August 16. It will be followed by starts in Group 3 $250,000 San Domenico Stakes (1100m) at Rosehill Gardens on August 30 and Group 2 $300,000 Run To The Rose (1200m) on September 13 at the same venue. 'If he performs really well in those and holds his own, he will go back to the water walker or something and come back and look to Melbourne at the Coolmore,' Kehoe said. 'We won't go down a Golden Rose path with him or anything at this stage, we will keep him over the short trips.' Shaggy was given the top weight of 60.5kg in his return but Kehoe will make the most of apprentice William Stanley 's 3kg claim. The son of Sandbar has trialled up well in the lead-up, winning his most recent effort over 800m on the Beaumont track at Newcastle, and has continued to impress around the stable. 'He is ready to go,' Kehoe said. 'We just do short sharp stuff with him but he's a very easy horse to train. 'He is keen to get out there, of an afternoon you would think he still a colt because he ends up on his back heels and legs flying everywhere. 'He is very happy and well and you would think it's the middle of summer with his coat.'

Capital comeback: Australia's four-year house price trend comes to an end
Capital comeback: Australia's four-year house price trend comes to an end

SBS Australia

timean hour ago

  • SBS Australia

Capital comeback: Australia's four-year house price trend comes to an end

According to the latest Domain House Price Report, the price of houses and units in every capital city increased in the three months to June. Domain's chief of research and economics, Dr Nicola Powell, said "Australia's housing upswing has broadened". "This is the first time in four years that all capital cities have seen house price growth at the same time. For units, it's the first time in two years." Sydney and Melbourne lead the charge House prices in Sydney and Melbourne have experienced their fastest quarterly growth in years. Sydney's median house price jumped 2.6 per cent over the June quarter to hit a new record of $1.7 million, its biggest increase in two years. In Melbourne, median house prices rose 2.3 per cent to reach just over $1 million, marking a three-year high. "These results reflect a turnaround in momentum. Melbourne's recovery puts it on track to reclaim record territory by mid-2026," Powell said. Prices in other capitals also increased. Canberra's median house price rose to a 15-month high, while Hobart's median house price was the highest it has been in more than three years. Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth hit new record highs, with median house prices in Perth (currently $955,000) expected to reach the $1 million mark later this year. Unit prices surge as buyers seek affordability As owning a house pushes further out of reach for many, attention is turning to the unit market. According to the Domain report, national unit prices saw the strongest quarterly growth in two years, rising to a new high of $689,588. Units in Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth all reached record prices. "Affordability constraints, high interest rates and rising investor activity are turning the spotlight on units. In many markets, they're now outperforming houses," Powell said. Darwin and Canberra led unit price growth this quarter, with median unit prices in Darwin jumping 5.6 per cent to an eight-year high of $388,169. Median unit prices in Canberra increased 4.6 per cent to $610,752 — their highest value in nearly two years. Brisbane is experiencing its longest stretch of unit price growth in history, while Adelaide has posted nine straight quarters of price gains. What's driving the comeback? Powell said a key catalyst has been improved borrowing capacity, which is up around 5 per cent since the start of the year. She said the RBA's shift towards rate cuts has unlocked fresh demand, meeting still-tight listing volumes and pushing prices higher. "Lower interest rates have given buyers more firepower, but we're still not seeing enough new homes being built," she said. The combination of rising demand and limited supply has intensified competition, particularly in east coast capitals where population growth remains strong. What's next? While the current upswing has defied expectations, Powell says the path ahead may be less predictable and the RBA's next move, after its August meeting, will be crucial. "If we see another rate cut, it could boost demand further just ahead of the spring selling season," she said. "But regulators are watching investor activity closely; they may step in if things accelerate too quickly." Longer-term, supply remains the biggest concern. "National dwelling completions are expected to stay well below what's needed to match population growth," she said. "Without a meaningful boost in new construction, we're likely to see continued price pressure — especially for well-located homes." For now, buyers and investors are being urged to act quickly, particularly in cities such as Perth, where house prices remain just below the $1 million mark. "Value still exists, but it may not last long, this market is shifting, and quickly."

Rental price growth slows in Australian capital cities, Cotality data shows
Rental price growth slows in Australian capital cities, Cotality data shows

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Rental price growth slows in Australian capital cities, Cotality data shows

There is new evidence that rental price growth is easing, potentially putting downward pressure on inflation and interest rates. The increase in national rental values over the three months to June was the slowest second-quarter increase since 2020, according to Cotality's latest Quarterly Rental Review. Its research also showed the annual change in Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney dwelling rents came in below their pre-COVID decade averages in June, at 1.2 per cent, 1.6 per cent and 1.9 per cent, respectively. Annual rental growth was higher in Perth, at 4.9 per cent, and Adelaide, at 4.7 per cent, but eased over the quarter. However, Brisbane's annual rental growth trend accelerated from 3.1 per cent in March to 3.8 per cent in June. Darwin recorded the strongest annual increase in dwelling rents, up 6.2 per cent, followed by Hobart, up 5.3 per cent, with both cities seeing a notable acceleration in rents compared to this time last year. The median rental price increase in Australia is now about $22 a week, or $1,134 a year, Cotality noted in its report. Hobart is Australia's most affordable city to rent. It is the only capital city with a rental value under $600, at $581 a week, although the typical income in Tasmania is also lower than across most of the mainland. The property research firm, formerly known as CoreLogic, said rental price growth was easing despite a chronic demand and supply imbalance, with rental supply remaining "exceptionally low". Cotality economist Kaytlin Ezzy said there were 100,000 rental listings nationally over the four weeks to June 29, which was about 23 per cent below the previous five-year average, or about 29,000 fewer listings than usual at this time of year. AMP deputy chief economist Diana Mousina said slower inflation and a reduction in interest rates were helping to ease rental price growth, which peaked in early 2024. She said some renters also appeared to have a little more power in their negotiations with landlords. "Recent government changes in states like New South Wales have strengthened tenancy law, which should be a positive for renters," she said. Ms Ezzy said lower rental price growth was also due to lower demand for rental accommodation, caused by the "normalisation of net overseas migration" and a "rise in average household size". Independent economist Saul Eslake said lower rental price growth could lead to a reduction in inflation, which would support the case for an August Reserve Bank interest rate cut. "Rents have been one of the most significant contributors to inflation, and in particular to services inflation, over the past five years," he said. "So, evidence that rent inflation is declining is much to be welcomed as pointing to improved prospects of inflation staying within the RBA's 2 to 3 per cent target band, and hence increasing the prospects of further reductions in interest rates." Independent economist Sherman Chan said rents made up 6.6 per cent of the CPI basket and had been one of the key contributors to the increase in housing costs in recent quarters. "A slowdown in rental increase would be welcome news not just for tenants, but also for market watchers hoping to see inflation stay within the RBA target band," she said. Oxford Economics Australia lead economist Maree Kilroy said the latest rental price data also offered a silver lining for home owners with loans. "Given the lags involved, softer growth is anticipated, which, alongside other CPI components, will temper inflation, and we forecast two further cash rate cuts before the end of the year," she said. The disproportionate increase in rents compared to wages has seen the portion of pre-tax income directed to rental payments rise from about 26 per cent in June 2020 to just under 33 per cent in December 2024, according to Cotality.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store