Super, Super Tim... Super, Super Tim... Super, Super Tim, Super Timmy Cahill! These words would have been sung tens of thousands of times in Germany and in the years shortly after. I haven’t heard them for a while...
This different moral universe is a place where everyone is so self-centred and arrogant that those become the ethical underpinnings of existence. Normal relationships for example are almost impossible – partly because of the endless media scrutiny and constant temptations being thrown in their paths – but mainly because of the egocentric filter through which such uber-celebrities see the world. It owes them a living and the munchkins don’t matter.
This is the world Timmy joined as a 16-year-old in England and I say it’s affected him. He still clearly has great love and respect for his family, but his words and actions (sometimes) convey little respect for the wider Australian community.
I don’t just mean this latest incident – there have been plenty of previous occasions when he’s dropped clangers about the quality of the A-League or insufficient Vision etc. A person who’d spent enough time sucking up Aussie style before going overseas would never have said those things.
The timing was weird also. He says he’s gone looking for game time to ensure he’s on the plane to Russia, and one day after the new coach is unveiled at a press conference (at which he appeared not to endorse Timmy’s selection when given the opportunity) Timmy says something to make the coach question his training attitude and impact on the team.

And on top of that, half the footballing community in Australia will be saying: "Don’t pick him. We don’t care about the goals, we don’t care about the years of service…not if he doesn’t respect our league."
I have some sympathy for how he was forced out of Melbourne City (the circumstances of which I’ve promised not to disclose) but he’s definitely his own worst enemy sometimes. And I say that as a person who has always defended him in the past when people complain that he’s arrogant.
He’s making it hard for anyone to defend him, which is very sad, because his contribution to Australian football has been massive. His exploits deserve to go down in legend but he risks tainting his Legacy if he’s remembered as much for his thoughtless words as for his goals.
Adrian’s latest book The Fighting Man is in the shops right now or available through Booktopia. Adrian also wrote Mr Cleansheets.
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