The 1962 NSW Federation of Soccer Clubs (NSWSF) season was the sixth season of football in New South Wales under the administration of the federation since its breakaway from the NSW Soccer Football Association in January 1957. The season included three cup tournaments, including a new pre-season Wollongong Festival of Sport held in February, as well as the usual floodlight Ampol Cup pre-season night series tournament and the post-season Federation Cup (now called the Craven A Cup for sponsorship reasons). The home and away league season began in April with twelve teams, culminating with the grand final held in September. Winners of the tournaments for the season were South Coast United in the Wollongong Festival of Sport, Prague in the Ampol Cup, APIA Leichhardt FC in the Craven A Cup, and in the league Budapest were the premiers and Hakoah were the grand final winners.

NSW Federation of Soccer Clubs
Season1962
ChampionsHakoah
PremiersBudapest
Best PlayerAngelo Mavro
Top goalscorerVernon Wentzel (28)
1961
1963

Teams from the Federation also participated in the newly formed Australia Cup, in which clubs would participate against teams from other federations in the country. New South Wales club, SSC Yugal would win this inaugural competition.

Also in the post-season, players would get the chance to represent the federation in the Australian Interstate Championships, with this season being the first sponsored by the Australian Soccer Federation. New South Wales would win this tournament.

Clubs

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Changes from last season:

Club Ground Colours Year formed App
A.P.I.A. Lambert Park, Leichhardt Maroon shirts, white shorts 1954 6th
Auburn Mona Park, Auburn Green and gold shirts, white shorts 1957 6th
Bankstown Bankstown Oval, Bankstown Gold and green trim shirts, white shorts 1944 6th
Budapest Sydney Athletics Field, Moore Park Red shirts, white shorts 1957 4th
Canterbury-Marrickville Arlington Oval, Dulwich Hill Blue and gold trim shirts, white shorts 1896, reformed in 1943 and 1951 6th
Gladesville-Ryde Gladesville Sports Ground, Gladesville 1919 6th
Hakoah Wentworth Park, Glebe Sky blue shirts, white shorts 1939 6th
Pan Hellenic Wentworth Park, Glebe Blue and white striped shirts, white shorts 1957 2nd
Polonia-North Side Drummoyne Oval, Drummoyne Gold shirts, white shorts 1960 2nd
Prague Sydney Athletics Field, Moore Park All-black outfit with red-white and blue sash 1950 6th
South Coast United Woonona Oval, Woonona Blue with red and white trim shirts, white with red and blue trim shorts 1960 2nd
Yugal no fixed ground Blue shirts, white shorts 1961 1st

Table and results

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Budapest 22 13 4 5 61 45 +16 30 Qualification for Finals series
2 Hakoah 22 13 3 6 47 26 +21 29
3 A.P.I.A. 22 13 3 6 65 38 +27 29
4 Yugal 22 12 4 6 55 53 +2 28
5 Prague 22 10 6 6 55 46 +9 26
6 Bankstown 22 11 2 9 45 36 +9 24
7 Pan Hellenic 22 10 2 10 46 42 +4 22
8 South Coast United 22 10 2 10 41 43 −2 22
9 Auburn 22 7 2 13 40 55 −15 16
10 Gladesville 22 5 4 13 23 48 −25 14
11 Canterbury 22 4 5 13 44 55 −11 13
12 Polonia–North Side 22 3 5 14 32 67 −35 11 Relegated to Second Division
Source: [1][2]

Results

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Home \ Away API AUB BAN BUD CAN GLR HAK HEL PNS PRA SCU YUG
APIA 5–0 2–4 2–5 5–1 2–1 3–0 5–0 4–1 1–4 5–0 5–1
Auburn 2–5 2–0 2–3 4–2 2–1 2–3 0–2 3–5 2–3 3–1 2–2
Bankstown 0–1 5–2 0–0 1–0 1–0 1–3 0–2 5–1 2–2 4–3 1–3
Budapest 2–1 0–1 2–3 6–2 5–3 2–1 1–3 5–3 3–3 3–1 3–4
Canterbury-Marrickville 2–2 5–2 1–5 1–1 0–1 0–2 0–3 3–3 2–2 1–1 1–2
Gladesville-Ryde 2–2 2–2 0–2 0–2 0–5 1–0 2–1 0–0 0–4 1–1 1–3
Hakoah 6–2 3–0 1–0 3–0 2–1 4–1 0–2 0–0 0–0 3–0 6–3
Pan Hellenic 2–2 1–2 0–2 2–3 3–7 1–2 2–0 6–2 3–0 2–0 0–3
Polonia-North Side 2–6 1–3 3–1 1–3 1–5 3–1 1–3 1–1 1–3 0–4 1–3
Prague 1–2 3–2 3–2 2–4 4–3 4–0 1–1 5–4 4–0 1–5 1–3
South Coast United 1–3 1–0 4–1 1–3 2–0 2–1 0–3 4–2 2–1 2–1 0–2
SSC Yugal 1–0 3–2 1–4 4–4 3–2 2–3 4–3 5–0 1–1 4–4 2–4
Source: www.socceraust.co.uk[3]
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Finals series

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Semi-finals
8–9 September
Final (replay)
16 & 19 September
Grand final
23 September
1Budapest22Hakoah4
2Hakoah51Budapest2
1Budapest1(3)
4SSC Yugal1(2)
3A.P.I.A.2
4SSC Yugal3

Semi-finals

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8 September 1962 Minor semi-final SSC Yugal 3–2 APIA Leichhardt Moore Park, Sydney
  • H. Ringhoff  
  • I. Milankovic  
  • A. Nincevic  
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 12,000
Referee: R. Pearce
9 September 1962 Major semi-final Hakoah 5–2 Budapest Moore Park, Sydney
  • Galambos   ?'
  • Massey   ?'
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 12,300
Referee: Frank Sbisa

Preliminary final

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16 September 1962 Budapest 1–1 SSC Yugal Moore Park, Sydney
  • E. Massey   68' (pen.)
Report[4]
  • S. Pacanin   44'
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 15,752
Referee: Frank Sbisa
19 September 1962 Replay Budapest 3–2 SSC Yugal Moore Park, Sydney
  • J. Pompor   24' (pen.), 85'
  • J. Vasvary   58'
Report[5]
  • S. Pacanin   42'
  • A. Nincevic   79'
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 9,800
Referee: Roy Pearce

Grand Final

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Hakoah4–2Budapest
Report[6]
Attendance: 26,770
Referee: Roy Pearce
NSWSF First Division
1962 Champions
 
Hakoah
Second Title

Statistics

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Hakoah Budapest
Attempts at goal 17 14
Attempts on target 9 5
Attempts off target 4 9
Attempts - Woodwork 2 0
Corners 6 13
Fouls committed 23 23
Offsides 5 2

Statistics and awards

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Stars of 1962

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Soccer World reporters awarded stars out of six to players throughout the 22 rounds. The player with the highest stars was Angelo Mavro with 4.440. Overall APIA Leichhardt, Budapest, Prague and SSC Yugal all had 2 players top-rated for their position. Auburn, Pan Hellenic, Canterbury-Marrickville, Hakoah and Bankstown all had one player top-rated for their position. Below is a list of the top rated players per position:[1]

Position Player (Team) Rating
Goalkeeper E. Grosz (Budapest) 4.227
Right fullback V. Mach (Hakoah) 4.000
Left fullback G. Nuttall (Canterbury-Marrickville) 3.909
Right half A. Mavro (Pan Hellenic) 4.440
Centre half J. Marston (APIA Leichhardt)
F. Van Gaalen (Auburn)
4.363
Left half F. Dunaj (SSC Yugal) 4.333
Outside right N. Stiffle (Bankstown) 3.895
Inside right E. Schwarz (SSC Yugal)
V. Wentzel (APIA Leichhardt)
3.900
Centre forward E. Massey (Budapest) 4.227
Inside left L. Scheinflug (Prague) 3.954
Outside left A. Jeffrey (Prague) 4.000

Top scorers

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Vernon Wentzel was the recipient of the Marcel Nagy Trophy for the season's leading goalscorer. Below is a list of the top five goalscorers for the season:[1]

Player Team Goals
Vernon Wentzel APIA Leichhardt 28
Wim van der Gaag Prague 21
Joe Galambos Budapest 20
Tiko Jelisavcic SSC Yugal 19
Leo Baumgartner APIA Leichhardt 16
Tony Nincevich SSC Yugal

Attendances

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Below is a list of attendances by club:[1]

Rank Club Attendance
1 APIA Leichhardt 126,000
2 Pan Hellenic 100,000
3 Hakoah 96,000
4 Prague 86,500
5 Budapest 78,500
6 South Coast United 64,500
7 SSC Yugal 63,000
8 Canterbury-Marrickville 56,500
9 Bankstown 50,500
10 Auburn 38,000
11 Gladesville-Ryde 32,500
12 Polonia-North Side 30,500

Other competitions

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Wollongong Festival of Sport

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The season began with the Wollongong Soccer Carnival in February at the Wollongong Showground, attracting 15,000 fans over three days. South Coast United beat teams from Sydney and Melbourne to become inaugural champions of this event, winning the £1000 first place prize.

Round Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Attendance
First Round 23 February 1962 Canterbury-Marrickville 2–0 Budapest (Sydney) 4,600
South Coast United 2–0 Hakoah (Sydney)
Semi-finals 24 February 1962 South Coast United 2–0 Pan Hellenic (Sydney) 5,000
Canterbury-Marrickville 4–0 Polonia (Melbourne)
Third place playoff 25 February 1962 Pan Hellenic (Sydney) 9–3 Polonia (Melbourne) 5,200
Final South Coast United 6–0 Canterbury-Marrickville

Ampol Cup

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The season began with the sixth edition of the floodlight pre-season night series (fifth as the Ampol Cup) on 14 February 1962, culminating with the double-header third place playoff and Final on 30 March 1962 at the Sydney Sports Ground in front of 12,600 spectators. The tournament was played across various grounds throughout Sydney, including Sydney Athletics Field, Redfern Oval, Wentworth Park and Sydney Sports Ground.

First Round

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Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Location Attendance
14 February 1962 Budapest 0–0 Bankstown Sydney Athletics Field 2,400
Canterbury-Marrickville 3–1 Polonia-North Side
2 March 1962 SSC Yugal 2–1 Pan Hellenic Sydney Athletics Field 4,000
Gladesville-Ryde 2–1 South Coast United
5 March 1962 (‡) Budapest 3–2 Bankstown Redfern Oval 1,300

* (‡) = Match replayed

Finals series

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Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals
      
Canterbury 1
Hakoah 0
Canterbury 5
A.P.I.A. 1
A.P.I.A. 2
Budapest 0
Canterbury 2
Prague 3
SSC Yugal 4
Auburn 3
SSC Yugal 4(2) Third place playoff
Prague 4(4)
Prague 2 A.P.I.A. 3
Gladesville-Ryde 0 SSC Yugal 0

Semi-finals

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23 March 1962 Semi-final Prague 4–4 Yugal Moore Park, Sydney
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 11,800
Referee: Roy Pearce
23 March 1962 Semi-final Canterbury-Marrickville 5–1APIA LeichhardtMoore Park, Sydney
Morrow   Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 11,800
Referee: Frank Sbisa
25 March 1962 Semi-final (replay) Prague 4–2YugalGlebe, Sydney
Stadium: Wentworth Park
Attendance: 6,200
Referee: Frank Sbisa

Finals

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30 March 2023 Third place playoff APIA Leichhardt 3–0YugalMoore Park, Sydney
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 12,600
Referee: Roy Pearce
30 March 2023 Grand final Prague 3–2Canterbury-MarrickvilleMoore Park, Sydney
Stadium: Sydney Sports Ground
Attendance: 12,600
Referee: Frank Sbisa

Craven A Federation Cup

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Finals

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Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Budapest 3
Yugal 0
Budapest 1
A.P.I.A. 3
A.P.I.A. 4
Bankstown 1
A.P.I.A. 5
Canterbury-Marrickville 1
Gladesville-Ryde 3
Prague 0
Gladesville-Ryde 2 Third place
Canterbury-Marrickville 4
Canterbury-Marrickville 3 Budapest 1
South Coast Utd 2 Gladesville-Ryde 5
Final
APIA Leichhardt5–1Canterbury-Marrickville
Attendance: 8,600
Referee: Frank Sbisa

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Soccer World Annual 1963". Soccer World. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Final Tables 1961-1976 (1962)". www.rsssf.org. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  3. ^ "1962 NSW Div1 Matrix". www.socceraust.co.uk. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  4. ^ "Soccer World, Vol. 05, No.34". Soccer World. 21 September 1962. p. 5. Retrieved 27 June 2024.
  5. ^ "Soccer World, Vol. 05, No. 35". Soccer World. 28 September 1962. p. 7. Retrieved 27 June 2024.
  6. ^ "Soccer World Vol.05, No.35". Soccer World. 28 September 1962. p. 5. Retrieved 27 June 2024.