The 2018–19 A-League was the 42nd season of national level soccer in Australia, and the 14th since the establishment of the A-League in 2004. The regular season commenced on 19 October 2018 and concluded on 28 April 2019. The play-offs began on 3 May 2019 and ended with the Grand Final on 19 May 2019. Sydney FC defeated Perth Glory in the Grand Final.

A-League
Season2018–19
Dates19 October 2018 – 19 May 2019
ChampionsSydney FC (4th title)
PremiersPerth Glory (1st title)
Champions LeaguePerth Glory
Sydney FC
Melbourne Victory
Matches played135
Goals scored422 (3.13 per match)
Top goalscorerRoy Krishna (18 goals)
Biggest home winMelbourne City 5–0 Central Coast Mariners
(26 April 2019)
Perth Glory 5–0 Wellington Phoenix
(28 April 2019)
Biggest away winCentral Coast Mariners 2–8 Wellington Phoenix
(9 March 2019)
Highest scoringCentral Coast Mariners 2–8 Wellington Phoenix
(9 March 2019)
Highest attendance40,504
Melbourne Victory vs. Melbourne City
(20 October 2018)
Lowest attendance3,703
Central Coast Mariners vs. Wellington Phoenix
(9 March 2019)
Average attendance10,411 ( 260)

Clubs edit

Team City Home Ground Capacity
Adelaide United Adelaide Coopers Stadium 16,500
Brisbane Roar Brisbane Suncorp Stadium 52,500
Central Coast Mariners Gosford Central Coast Stadium 20,059
Melbourne City Melbourne AAMI Park 30,050
Melbourne Victory Melbourne Marvel Stadium
AAMI Park
GMHBA Stadium
56,347
30,050
36,000
Newcastle Jets Newcastle McDonald Jones Stadium 33,000
Perth Glory Perth HBF Park 20,500
Sydney FC Sydney Sydney Cricket Ground
Jubilee Oval
Leichhardt Oval
48,000
20,500
20,000
Wellington Phoenix Wellington Westpac Stadium 34,500
Western Sydney Wanderers Sydney ANZ Stadium
Spotless Stadium
84,000
24,000

Personnel and kits edit

Team Manager Captain Kit manufacturer Kit sponsor
Adelaide United   Marco Kurz   Isaías Macron[1] IGA
Brisbane Roar   Darren Davies (caretaker)   Matt McKay Umbro[2][3] Actron Air
Central Coast Mariners   Alen Stajcic (caretaker)   Matt Simon Umbro[4] Masterfoods & State Road Constructions
Melbourne City   Warren Joyce   Scott Jamieson Nike Etihad Airways
Melbourne Victory   Kevin Muscat   Carl Valeri Adidas[5] Metricon
Newcastle Jets   Ernie Merrick   Nigel Boogaard Viva Sports[6] Ledman Group
Perth Glory   Tony Popovic   Diego Castro Macron[7] QBE Insurance
Sydney FC   Steve Corica   Alex Brosque Puma The Star
Wellington Phoenix   Marko Rudan   Andrew Durante Adidas Huawei
Western Sydney Wanderers   Markus Babbel   Brendan Hamill Nike[8] Centuria

Managerial changes edit

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position on table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Sydney FC   Graham Arnold Signed by Australia[9] 8 March 2018 Pre-season   Steve Corica[10] 16 May 2018
Central Coast Mariners   Wayne O'Sullivan (caretaker) End of caretaker spell 14 April 2018   Mike Mulvey[11] July 2018
Western Sydney Wanderers   Josep Gombau Sacked[12] 19 April 2018   Markus Babbel[13] 19 May 2018
Perth Glory   Kenny Lowe Sacked[14] 20 April 2018   Tony Popovic[15] 11 May 2018
Wellington Phoenix   Chris Greenacre (caretaker) End of caretaker spell 30 May 2018   Marko Rudan[16] 30 May 2018
Brisbane Roar   John Aloisi Resigned 28 December 2018 9th   Darren Davies (caretaker)[17] 28 December 2018
Central Coast Mariners   Mike Mulvey Sacked[18] 9 March 2019 10th   Alen Stajcic (caretaker)[19] 12 March 2019

Foreign players edit

Club Visa 1 Visa 2 Visa 3 Visa 4 Visa 5 Non-Visa foreigner(s) Former player(s)
Adelaide United   Ken Ilsø   Michael Jakobsen   Mirko Boland   Jordy Thomassen   Baba Diawara   Isaías1
Brisbane Roar   Thomas Kristensen   Tobias Mikkelsen   Éric Bauthéac   Álex López   Henrique1
  Jamie Young2
  Dane Ingham2
  Jack Hingert2
  Avraam Papadopoulos2
Central Coast Mariners   Sam Graham   Stephen Mallon   Tom Hiariej   Michael McGlinchey   Jem Karacan   Kalifa Cissé
  Ross McCormack
Melbourne City   Ritchie De Laet   Shayon Harrison   Florin Berenguer   Bart Schenkeveld   Iacopo La Rocca1   Michael O'Halloran
  Bruno Fornaroli
Melbourne Victory   Georg Niedermeier   Keisuke Honda   Kosta Barbarouses   Raúl Baena   Ola Toivonen   Elvis Kamsoba2
  Jai Ingham2
  Storm Roux2
  Kenny Athiu2
Newcastle Jets   Jair   Roy O'Donovan   Matthew Ridenton   Ronald Vargas   Kaine Sheppard1
  Daniel Georgievski2
  Kwabena Appiah2
  Glen Moss2
Perth Glory   Andy Keogh   Diego Castro   Juande   Fábio Ferreira
Sydney FC   Adam Le Fondre   Reza Ghoochannejhad   Siem de Jong   Jop van der Linden   Miloš Ninković
Wellington Phoenix   Steven Taylor   Cillian Sheridan   Michał Kopczyński   Filip Kurto   Mandi   Roy Krishna1
Western Sydney Wanderers   Roly Bonevacia   Alexander Baumjohann   Patrick Ziegler   Raúl Llorente   Oriol Riera

The following do not fill a Visa position:
1Those players who were born and started their professional career abroad but have since gained Australian citizenship (and New Zealand citizenship, in the case of Wellington Phoenix);[20]
2Australian citizens (and New Zealand citizens, in the case of Wellington Phoenix) who have chosen to represent another national team;
3Injury Replacement Players, or National Team Replacement Players;
4Guest Players (eligible to play a maximum of fourteen games)

Salary cap exemptions and captains edit

Club First Marquee Second Marquee Captain Vice-Captain
Adelaide United   Baba Diawara[21] None   Isaías[22] None
Brisbane Roar   Éric Bauthéac[23] None   Matt McKay[24] None
Central Coast Mariners   Ross McCormack[25][note 1]   Daniel De Silva[27][note 2]   Matt Simon[30] None
Melbourne City   Ritchie de Laet[31][32]   Bruno Fornaroli[33][note 3]   Scott Jamieson[35] None
Melbourne Victory   Keisuke Honda[36][37]   James Troisi[38]   Carl Valeri[39]   Leigh Broxham[39]
Newcastle Jets   Ronald Vargas[40] None   Nigel Boogaard[41]   Nikolai Topor-Stanley[42]
Perth Glory   Diego Castro[43][44] None   Diego Castro[45] None
Sydney FC   Miloš Ninković[46]   Siem de Jong[47]   Alex Brosque[48]   Alex Wilkinson[49]
Wellington Phoenix None None   Andrew Durante[50] None
Western Sydney Wanderers   Oriol Riera[51] None   Brendan Hamill[52] None

Transfers edit

Regular season edit

League table edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Perth Glory 27 18 6 3 56 23 +33 60 Qualification for 2020 AFC Champions League group stage and Finals series[a]
2 Sydney FC (C) 27 16 4 7 43 29 +14 52
3 Melbourne Victory 27 15 5 7 50 32 +18 50 Qualification for 2020 AFC Champions League preliminary round 2 and Finals series[a]
4 Adelaide United 27 12 8 7 37 32 +5 44 Qualification for Finals series[a]
5 Melbourne City 27 11 7 9 39 32 +7 40
6 Wellington Phoenix[b] 27 11 7 9 46 43 +3 40
7 Newcastle Jets 27 10 5 12 40 36 +4 35
8 Western Sydney Wanderers 27 6 6 15 42 54 −12 24
9 Brisbane Roar 27 4 6 17 38 71 −33 18
10 Central Coast Mariners 27 3 4 20 31 70 −39 13
Source: A-Leagues
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c The top two teams enter the Finals series at the semi-finals, while the teams ranked third to sixth enter the Finals series at the elimination-finals.
  2. ^ Wellington Phoenix cannot qualify for the AFC Champions League as they are not recognised as an AFC club.

Results edit

Home \ Away ADE BRI CCM MCY MVC NEW PER SYD WEL WSW ADE BRI CCM MCY MVC NEW PER SYD WEL WSW
Adelaide United 2–1 2–1 0–2 2–0 1–1 0–2 1–1 0–0 2–2 4–3 1–0 0–2 3–1 1–3
Brisbane Roar 3–5 1–1 2–0 2–4 1–6 2–4 2–1 0–0 2–2 0–5 1–3 2–1 1–4
Central Coast Mariners 0–3 1–1 1–1 2–3 1–2 1–4 1–2 2–8 3–1 0–1 3–5 2–1 0–3
Melbourne City 1–1 1–0 5–0 1–1 3–0 0–0 0–3 2–0 4–3 0–0 4–1 2–1 2–2
Melbourne Victory 2–0 2–1 4–1 1–2 2–1 2–3 2–1 1–1 4–0 2–1 1–1 0–2 1–2 3–3
Newcastle Jets 1–2 2–0 1–0 3–1 0–1 0–2 1–1 1–1 3–2 0–0 2–2 2–3 2–0
Perth Glory 0–0 2–1 3–2 1–0 0–2 2–0 1–2 3–0 1–1 4–0 1–0 3–1 5–0 4–3
Sydney FC 2–1 2–1 5–2 2–0 1–2 1–0 1–0 1–3 2–0 2–0 1–1 0–2 2–1
Wellington Phoenix 1–3 4–1 2–0 1–0 1–1 2–1 1–1 0–1 0–3 3–2 3–2 4–0 0–1 3–1
Western Sydney Wanderers 1–2 2–2 2–0 0–2 1–2 0–2 1–1 1–3 2–3 2–0 3–0 0–1 1–5 1–1
Updated to match(es) played on 28 April 2019. Source: A-League
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For upcoming matches, an "a" indicates there is an article about the rivalry between the two participants.

Finals series edit

Elimination-finals Semi-finals Grand Final
1 Perth Glory (pen.) 3 (5)
4 Adelaide United (a.e.t.) 1 4 Adelaide United 3 (4)
5 Melbourne City 0 1 Perth Glory 0 (1)
2 Sydney FC (pen.) 0 (4)
2 Sydney FC 6
3 Melbourne Victory 3 3 Melbourne Victory 1
6 Wellington Phoenix 1

Elimination-finals edit

3 May 2019 Melbourne Victory 3–1Wellington PhoenixMelbourne
19:50 AEST
Report
Stadium: AAMI Park
Attendance: 16,010
Referee: Shaun Evans
5 May 2019 Adelaide United 1–0 (a.e.t.)Melbourne CityAdelaide
18:30 ACST Halloran   119' Report Stadium: Coopers Stadium
Attendance: 13,232
Referee: Kurt Ams

Semi-finals edit

10 May 2019 Perth Glory 3–3 (a.e.t.)
(5–4 p)
Adelaide UnitedPerth
18:30 AWST
Report
Stadium: HBF Park
Attendance: 17,868
Referee: Alex King
Penalties
12 May 2019 Sydney FC 6–1Melbourne VictorySydney
19:00 AEST
Report
Stadium: Netstrata Jubilee Stadium
Attendance: 12,141
Referee: Chris Beath

Grand Final edit

19 May 2019 Perth Glory0–0 (a.e.t.)
(1–4 p)
Sydney FC Perth
16:30 AWST Report Stadium: Optus Stadium
Attendance: 56,371
Referee: Shaun Evans
Penalties

Season statistics edit

Attendances edit

By club edit

These are the attendance records of each of the teams at the end of the home and away season. The table does not include finals series attendances.

As of matches played on 28 April 2019.
Team Hosted Average High Low Total
Melbourne Victory 14 20,604 40,504 8,039 288,453
Sydney FC 13 13,566 30,588 6,261 176,357
Perth Glory 14 10,360 17,856 7,213 145,045
Brisbane Roar 13 9,632 15,129 6,084 125,222
Western Sydney Wanderers 14 9,191 21,984 5,067 128,670
Newcastle Jets 13 9,079 11,814 6,701 118,029
Adelaide United 14 9,013 12,866 7,071 126,188
Wellington Phoenix 14 8,533 23,648 4,829 119,455
Melbourne City 13 8,135 24,306 4,950 105,750
Central Coast Mariners 13 5,562 8,923 3,703 72,300
{{{T11}}} 0 0 0 0 0
{{{T12}}} 0 0 0 0 0
League total 135 10,411 40,504 3,703 1,405,469

By round edit

2018–19 A-League Attendance
Round Total Games Avg. Per Game
Round 1 84,761 5 16,952
Round 2 77,986 5 15,597
Round 3 44,728 5 8,946
Round 4 49,105 5 9,821
Round 5 54,712 5 10,942
Round 6 46,789 5 9,358
Round 7 57,101 5 11,420
Round 8 50,507 5 10,101
Round 9 58,429 5 11,686
Round 10 55,700 5 11,140
Round 11 44,866 5 8,973
Round 12 41,546 5 8,309
Round 13 53,733 5 10,747
Round 14 48,849 5 9,770
Round 15 37,920 5 7,584
Round 16 57,050 5 11,410
Round 17 42,065 5 8,413
Round 18 52,669 5 10,534
Round 19 63,527 5 12,705
Round 20 57,812 5 11,562
Round 21 38,835 5 7,767
Round 22 46,329 5 9,266
Round 23 46,704 5 9,341
Round 24 40,205 5 8,041
Round 25 63,295 5 12,659
Round 26 45,431 5 9,086
Round 27 44,794 5 8,959
Elimination Final 29,242 2 14,621
Semi Final 30,009 2 15,004
Grand Final 56,371 1 56,371

Club membership edit

2018–19 A-League membership figures
Club Members
Adelaide United 8,082
Brisbane Roar 11,524
Central Coast Mariners 6,843
Melbourne City 10,302
Melbourne Victory 26,478
Newcastle Jets 11,606
Perth Glory 10,460
Sydney FC 15,848
Wellington Phoenix 5,671
Western Sydney Wanderers 16,444
Total 123,258
Average 12,326

Last updated: 28 April 2019.
Source: a-league.com.au

Scoring edit

Top scorers edit

As of the end of the Regular Season, 28 April 2019[53]
Rank Player Club Goals
1   Roy Krishna Wellington Phoenix 18
2   Adam Le Fondre Sydney FC 16
3   Andy Keogh Perth Glory 15
4   Kosta Barbarouses Melbourne Victory 14
5   Ola Toivonen Melbourne Victory 13
6   Roy O'Donovan Newcastle Jets 11
  Adam Taggart Brisbane Roar
  David Williams Wellington Phoenix
9   Craig Goodwin Adelaide United 10
  Oriol Riera Western Sydney Wanderers

Hat-tricks edit

Player For Against Result Date Ref
  Alex Brosque Sydney FC Central Coast Mariners 5–2 4 January 2019 [54]
  Kosta Barbarouses Melbourne Victory Brisbane Roar 0–5 15 January 2019 [55]
  David Williams Wellington Phoenix Newcastle Jets 4–1 31 March 2019 [56]
  Roy Krishna Wellington Phoenix Melbourne City 3–2 21 April 2019 [57]

Own goals edit

As of the end of the Regular Season, 28 April 2019
Player Club Against Round
  Daniel Georgievski Newcastle Jets Wellington Phoenix 1
  Connor O'Toole Brisbane Roar Perth Glory 3
  Tom Doyle Wellington Phoenix Adelaide United 5
  Tomislav Mrcela Perth Glory Central Coast Mariners 5
  Ola Toivonen Melbourne Victory Brisbane Roar 8
  Jordan Elsey Adelaide United Melbourne City 8
  Avraam Papadopoulos Brisbane Roar Wellington Phoenix 9
  Aaron Reardon Brisbane Roar Perth Glory 11
  Nigel Boogaard Newcastle Jets Sydney FC 14
  Ben Kennedy Central Coast Mariners Melbourne Victory 17
  Sam Graham Central Coast Mariners Wellington Phoenix 21
  Paulo Retre Sydney FC Melbourne City 22
  Harrison Delbridge Melbourne City Brisbane Roar 24
  Vedran Janjetović Western Sydney Wanderers Newcastle Jets 24

Clean sheets edit

As of the end of the Regular Season, 28 April 2019[58]
Rank Player Club Clean
sheets
1   Liam Reddy Perth Glory 12
2   Eugene Galekovic Melbourne City 8
  Paul Izzo Adelaide United
  Andrew Redmayne Sydney FC
5   Glen Moss Newcastle Jets 6
6   Lawrence Thomas Melbourne Victory 5
7   Vedran Janjetović Western Sydney Wanderers 4
  Filip Kurto Wellington Phoenix
9   Jamie Young Brisbane Roar 2
10   Matt Acton Melbourne Victory 1
  James Delianov Melbourne City

Discipline edit

During the season each club is given fair play points based on the number of cards they received in games. A yellow card is worth 1 point, a second yellow card is worth 2 points, and a red card is worth 3 points. At the annual awards night, the club with the fewest points wins the Fair Play Award.[59]

Player edit

Club edit

  • Most yellow cards: 67
    • Wellington Phoenix
  • Most red cards: 7
    • Central Coast Mariners
Fair Play Award
Club       FP Pts
Newcastle Jets 42 1 1 47
Sydney FC 49 0 0 49
Adelaide United 41 2 2 51
Perth Glory 50 0 1 53
Melbourne Victory 53 2 0 57
Western Sydney Wanderers 57 1 1 62
Melbourne City 61 2 0 65
Wellington Phoenix 59 1 2 67
Central Coast Mariners 58 5 2 74
Brisbane Roar 61 3 3 76
League total 532 17 12

Last updated: 28 April 2019.
Source: ultimatealeague.com

Awards edit

Monthly awards edit

The A-League Goal of the Month is an award that recognises the player who is deemed to have scored the best A-League goal each month of the season. The winner is chosen by an online public vote through the A-League website.

Month Goal of the Month Nominee for Young Footballer of the Year Ref.
Player Club Player Club
October   Scott Galloway Adelaide United [60]
November   Terry Antonis Melbourne Victory   Chris Ikonomidis Perth Glory [61][62]
December   David Williams Wellington Phoenix   Sarpreet Singh Wellington Phoenix [63][64]
January   Jaushua Sotirio Western Sydney Wanderers   Lachlan Wales Melbourne City [65][66]
February   Éric Bauthéac Brisbane Roar   Thomas Deng Melbourne Victory [67][68]
March   Dylan Wenzel-Halls Brisbane Roar   Keanu Baccus Western Sydney Wanderers [69][70]
April   Éric Bauthéac Brisbane Roar   Riley McGree Melbourne City [71][72]
May   Diego Castro Perth Glory [73]

Annual awards edit

The NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award was awarded to the finest performance of an under-23 player from Australia or New Zealand throughout the season.[74]

The following end of the season awards were announced at the 2018–19 Dolan Warren Awards night on 13 May 2019.[75][76]

Team of the Season[77]
Goalkeeper   Filip Kurto (Wellington Phoenix)
Defenders   Rhyan Grant (Sydney FC)   Bart Schenkeveld (Melbourne City)   Shane Lowry (Perth Glory)   Jason Davidson (Perth Glory)
Midfielders   Diego Castro (Perth Glory)   Neil Kilkenny (Perth Glory)   Brandon O'Neill (Sydney FC)
Forwards   Chris Ikonomidis (Perth Glory)   Roy Krishna (Wellington Phoenix)   Ola Toivonen (Melbourne Victory)
Substitutes   Michael Jakobsen (Adelaide United)   Isaías (Adelaide United)   Adam Le Fondre (Sydney FC)   Miloš Ninković (Sydney FC)   Liam Reddy (Perth Glory)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ McCormack transferred out of Central Coast Mariners and his marquee deal part-way through on 5 January 2019.[26]
  2. ^ De Silva is being paid marquee wages with Central Coast Mariners paying part and Roma paying most of it, while being on loan at Sydney FC.[28][29]
  3. ^ Fornaroli was mutually released from his contract and marquee deal by Melbourne City part-way through on 26 February 2019.[34]

References edit

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  4. ^ Windon, Jacob (30 August 2018). "Mariners announce sleek new kits". A-League.
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  6. ^ Dudley, George (2 June 2017). "Newcastle Jets agree apparel deal with Viva". SportsPro.
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  11. ^ Bossi, Dominic (12 April 2018). "Mike Mulvey returns to A-League as new coach of Central Coast Mariners". stuff.co.nz.
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