List of Australian soccer champions

The Australian soccer champions are the winners of the highest league in Australian men's soccer, which since 2005–06 is currently the A-League Men.

Australian League (1st tier)
National Soccer League (1977–2004)
A-League Men (2005–present)
Country
 Australia
Founded
1977
Number of teams
12 (since 2020–21 season)
Current champions
Central Coast Mariners (2022–23)
Most successful club
Sydney FC (5 championships)

The National Soccer League was established in 1977. At the end of the 1977 season, Sydney City (now Hakoah Sydney City East) were the first club to be crowned champions.

As is the case in most Australian sports, the winners of a post-season playoffs competition, known as the Finals, has traditionally been crowned champion, unlike the first-past-the-post system used in many other countries. The team that finished first-past-the-post was often referred to as the Minor Premiers while the Finals winning team was awarded the Premiership. In an attempt to create more prestige around the first-past-the-post title, it was renamed the Premiership and the finals winning team is now awarded the Championship.

Background edit

In 1977, the Australian Soccer Association established the National Soccer League (NSL) of Australia,[1] which included teams from Adelaide, Brisbane, Canberra, Melbourne and Sydney. The competition ran a promotion-relegation system for its entire lifespan as well as a knockout cup competition.

For the first seven seasons, the NSL awarded the championship to the team that finished first-past-the-post and was dominated by Sydney-based teams. By the mid-80s, the league had introduced a post-season playoffs competition that would crown the champions and the title was shared more evenly around the nation. Seasons initially ran over the winter months until 1989 when it was changed to the summer months to avoid conflicts with Australian rules football and the two rugby codes. By 2000, each major capital city had secured at least one NSL title outside of Perth. The Perth Glory made history in 2002–03 when they were crowned champions and the victory meant the five major cities of Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney had all secured at least one NSL title over the duration of the league's history.

The National Soccer League was disbanded in 2004 and an 8-team A-League Men competition was established in 2005, which included a salary cap and no promotion-relegation. Adelaide, Newcastle and Perth were the only NSL teams retained in the new competition. It included one team from each of the major capital cities, two regional teams and a team from New Zealand. As is the case in many sporting leagues in Australia, a New Zealand-based team has been allowed entry into the top tiered Australian league since 1999. The decision to retain a New Zealand-based team in the top league has proved problematic in recent years due to Football Federation Australia's decision to move from the Oceania Football Confederation to the Asian Football Confederation in 2006. As a result, a New Zealand-based team can be crowned Premiers and/or Champions of Australia but is ineligible to compete in the Asian Champions League.[2]

Lists of champions edit

Championship determination
Season(s) Format
1977 to 1983 First placed team
1984 to 1986 Grand Final winning team
1987 First placed team
1988 onwards Grand Final winning team

National Soccer League (1977–2004) edit

Season Champions (number of titles) Score Runners-up Winning manager Winning team top goalscorer
1977 Sydney City[a] Marconi Fairfield   Gerry Chaldi   Terry Smith (14)
1978 West Adelaide Sydney City   Billy Birch   Ian McGregor (7)
1979 Marconi Fairfield[b] Heidelberg United   Les Scheinflug   Mark Jankovics (18)
1980 Sydney City (2) Heidelberg United   Eddie Thomson   Ken Boden (13)
1981 Sydney City (3) South Melbourne   Eddie Thomson   Ken Boden (12)
  Ian Souness (12)
1982 Sydney City (4) St George-Budapest   Eddie Thomson   John Kosmina (23)
1983 St George-Budapest Sydney City   Frank Arok
1984 South Melbourne[c] 2–1
2–1
Sydney Olympic   Len McKendry   Duggie Brown (22)
1985 Brunswick Juventus[d] 1–0
1–0
Sydney City   John Margaritis   Joe Sweeney (10)
1986 Adelaide City 0–1
3–1
Sydney Olympic   Zoran Matić   Steve Maxwell (11)
  Charlie Villani (11)
1987 APIA Leichhardt Preston Makedonia   Rale Rasic   Rod Brown (14)
1988 Marconi Fairfield (2) 0–0 (5–4p) Sydney Croatia   Berti Mariani   Frank Farina (17)
1989 Marconi Fairfield[c] (3) 1–0 Sydney Olympic   Berti Mariani   Zlatko Nastevski (22)
1989–90 Sydney Olympic 2–0 Marconi Fairfield   Mick Hickman   Abbas Saad (13)
1990–91 South Melbourne (2) 1–1 (5–4p) Melbourne Croatia   Ferenc Puskás
1991–92 Adelaide City[e] (2) 0–0 (4–2p) Melbourne Croatia   Zoran Matić   Carl Veart (11)
1992–93 Marconi Fairfield (4) 1–0 Adelaide City   Frank Arok   Andy Harper (18)
1993–94 Adelaide City (3) 1–0 Melbourne Knights   Zoran Matić   Carl Veart (14)
1994–95 Melbourne Knights[c][e] 2–0 Adelaide City   Mirko Bazić   Mark Viduka (21)
1995–96 Melbourne Knights (2) 2–1 Marconi Fairfield   Mirko Bazić
1996–97 Brisbane Strikers 2–0 Sydney United   Frank Farina
1997–98 South Melbourne[c] (3) 2–1 Carlton   Ange Postecoglou
1998–99 South Melbourne (4) 3–2 Sydney United   Ange Postecoglou   Vaughan Coveny (14)
1999–2000 Wollongong Wolves 3–3 (7–6p) Perth Glory   Nick Theodorakopoulos   Stuart Young (19)
2000–01 Wollongong Wolves (2) 2–1 South Melbourne   Ron Corry   Sasho Petrovski (21)
2001–02 Sydney Olympic (2) 1–0 Perth Glory   Gary Phillips
2002–03 Perth Glory 2–0 Olympic Sharks   Mich d'Avray   Damian Mori (24)
2003–04 Perth Glory[c] (2) 1–0 (a.e.t) Parramatta Power   Mich d'Avray   Damian Mori (16)

A-League Men (2005–present) edit

Season Champions (number of titles) Score Runners-up Winning manager Winning team top goalscorer
2005–06 Sydney FC 1–0 Central Coast Mariners   Pierre Littbarski   Sasho Petrovski (9)
2006–07 Melbourne Victory[c] 6–0 Adelaide United   Ernie Merrick   Archie Thompson (15)
2007–08 Newcastle Jets 1–0 Central Coast Mariners   Gary van Egmond   Joel Griffiths (14)
2008–09 Melbourne Victory[c][f] (2) 1–0 Adelaide United   Ernie Merrick   Danny Allsopp (13)
2009–10 Sydney FC[c] (2) 1–1 (4–2p) Melbourne Victory   Vítězslav Lavička   John Aloisi (9)
2010–11 Brisbane Roar[c] 2–2 (4–2p) Central Coast Mariners   Ange Postecoglou   Kosta Barbarouses (12)
2011–12 Brisbane Roar (2) 2–1 Perth Glory   Ange Postecoglou   Besart Berisha (21)
2012–13 Central Coast Mariners 2–0 Western Sydney Wanderers   Graham Arnold   Daniel McBreen (19)
2013–14 Brisbane Roar[c] (3) 2–1 Western Sydney Wanderers   Mike Mulvey   Besart Berisha (13)
2014–15 Melbourne Victory[c] (3) 3–0 Sydney FC   Kevin Muscat   Besart Berisha (15)
2015–16 Adelaide United[c] 3–1 Western Sydney Wanderers   Guillermo Amor   Bruce Djite (11)
2016–17 Sydney FC[c] (3) 1–1 (4–2p) Melbourne Victory   Graham Arnold   Bobô (15)
2017–18 Melbourne Victory (4) 1–0 Newcastle Jets   Kevin Muscat   Besart Berisha (14)
2018–19 Sydney FC (4) 0–0 (4–1p) Perth Glory   Steve Corica   Adam Le Fondre (18)
2019–20 Sydney FC[c] (5) 1–0 Melbourne City   Steve Corica   Adam Le Fondre (21)
2020–21 Melbourne City[c] 3–1 Sydney FC   Patrick Kisnorbo   Jamie Maclaren (25)
2021–22 Western United 2–0 Melbourne City   John Aloisi   Aleksandar Prijović (13)
2022–23 Central Coast Mariners (2) 6–1 Melbourne City   Nick Montgomery   Jason Cummings (20)

Total championships won edit

There are 21 clubs who have won an Australian championship (either by winning the grand final or finishing top of the league in the seasons without a grand final), including eight who have won the A-League Men (2005–present). The most recent clubs to win their inaugural championship were Western United (2021–22 champions), Melbourne City (2020–21) and Adelaide United (2015–16).

Six teams have finished as runner-up without ever winning the championship: Heidelberg United (1979, 1980), Preston Lions (1987), Sydney United 58 (1988, 1996–97, 1998–99), Carlton (1997–98), Parramatta Power (2003–04) and Western Sydney Wanderers (2012–13, 2013–14, 2015–16).

Teams in bold compete in the A-League Men as of the 2023–24 season.

Rank Club Winners Runners-up Winning seasons
1 Sydney FC 5 2 2005–06, 2009–10, 2016–17, 2018–19, 2019–20
2 Hakoah Sydney City East 4 3 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982
Marconi Stallions 1979, 1988, 1989, 1992–93
South Melbourne 2 1984, 1990–91, 1997–98, 1998–99
Melbourne Victory 2006–07, 2008–09, 2014–15, 2017–18,
6 Adelaide City 3 2 1986, 1991–92, 1993–94
Brisbane Roar 0 2010–11, 2011–12, 2013–14
8 Sydney Olympic 2 4 1989–90, 2001–02
Perth Glory 2002–03, 2003–04
Melbourne Knights 3 1994–95, 1995–96
Central Coast Mariners 2012–13, 2022–23
Wollongong Wolves 0 1999–2000, 2000–01
13 Melbourne City 1 3 2020–21
Adelaide United 2 2015–16
Newcastle Jets 1 2007–08
West Adelaide 0 1978
St George 1983
Brunswick Juventus 1985
APIA Leichhardt 1987
Brisbane Strikers 1996–97
Western United 2021–22

By city edit

City Championships Clubs
Sydney 17 Sydney FC (5), Hakoah Sydney City East (4), Marconi Fairfield (4), Sydney Olympic (2), St George (1), APIA Leichhardt (1)
Melbourne 13 South Melbourne (4), Melbourne Victory (4), Melbourne Knights (2), Brunswick Juventus (1), Melbourne City (1), Western United (1)
Adelaide 5 Adelaide City (3), West Adelaide (1), Adelaide United (1)
Brisbane 4 Brisbane Roar (3), Brisbane Strikers (1)
Gosford 2 Central Coast Mariners (2)
Perth 2 Perth Glory (2)
Wollongong 2 Wollongong Wolves (2)
Newcastle 1 Newcastle Jets (1)

Australian soccer champions map edit

Lists of premiers edit

National Soccer League (1977–2004) edit

A-League Men (2005–present) edit

Season Premiers (number of titles)
2005–06 Adelaide United
2006–07 Melbourne Victory
2007–08 Central Coast Mariners
2008–09 Melbourne Victory (2)
2009–10 Sydney FC
2010–11 Brisbane Roar
2011–12 Central Coast Mariners (2)
2012–13 Western Sydney Wanderers
2013–14 Brisbane Roar (2)
2014–15 Melbourne Victory (3)
2015–16 Adelaide United (2)
2016–17 Sydney FC (2)
2017–18 Sydney FC (3)
2018–19 Perth Glory
2019–20 Sydney FC (4)
2020–21 Melbourne City
2021–22 Melbourne City (2)
2022–23 Melbourne City (3)
2023–24

Total Premierships won edit

Teams in bold competed in the A-League as of the 2023–24 season.

Club Winners Runners-up Winning seasons
Sydney FC
4
2
2009–10, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2019–20
Melbourne Knights
4
1
1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94, 1994–95
Perth Glory
4
1
1999–2000, 2001–02, 2003–04, 2018–19
South Melbourne
3
5
1992–93, 1997–98, 2000–01
Melbourne Victory
3
2
2006–07, 2008–09, 2014–15
Sydney United
3
2
1986, 1996–97, 1998–99
Marconi Stallions
3
1
1989, 1989–90, 1995–96
Melbourne City
3
1
2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23
Adelaide United
2
2
2005–06, 2015–16
Central Coast Mariners
2
3
2007–08, 2011–12
Brisbane Roar
2
1
2010–11, 2013–14
Sydney City
2
0
1984, 1985
Sydney Olympic
1
3
2002–03
Western Sydney Wanderers
1
2
2012–13
Wollongong Wolves
1
2
1988

National Cup winners edit

Key
Cup winners also won the NSL/A-League Men Championship that season
Cup winners also won the NSL/A-League Men Premiership that season
Cup winners also won the NSL/A-League Men Championship and Premiership that season

Australia Cup edit

Season Cup Winner
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Clubs
participating
Top goalscorer Goals[3]
1962 Sydney Yugal (1) 8–1 St. George Budapest 16   Tiko Jelisavcic (Sydney Yugal) 6
1963 Slavia Melbourne (1) 0–0
3–2
Polonia Melbourne 24   Des Palmer (Slavia Melbourne) 6
1964 George Cross (1) 3–2 (a.e.t.) APIA Leichhardt 19   John Giacometti (APIA Leichhardt) 7
1965 Sydney Hakoah (1) 1–1 (13–13 p)
2–1 (replay)
APIA Leichhardt 13   Hugo Rodriguez (St George Budapest) 6
1966 APIA Leichhardt (1) 2–0 Sydney Hakoah 16   John Giacometti (APIA Leichhardt)
  Herbert Ninaus (Sydney Hakoah)
4
1967 Melbourne Hungaria (1) 4–3 APIA Leichhardt 16   Attila Abonyi (Melbourne Hungaria)
  Johnny Watkiss (APIA Leichhardt)
6
1968 Sydney Hakoah (2) 3–0
3–1
Melbourne Hakoah 18   Jimmy Armstrong (Melbourne Hakoah)
  Willie Rutherford (Sydney Hakoah)
4

NSL Cup edit

Season Cup Winner
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Clubs
participating
Highest placed
non-NSL club
Top goalscorer Goals
1977 Brisbane City (1) 1–1 (5–3 p) Marconi Fairfield 14 [g]   Branko Buljevic (Fitzroy United)
  Gary Cole (Fitzroy United)
  Peter Sharne (Marconi Fairfield)
3
1978 Brisbane City (2) 2–1 Adelaide City 32 Essendon Croatia (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Branko Culina (Essendon Croatia)
  Barry Kelso (Brisbane City)
4
1979 Adelaide City (1) 3–1 St. George-Budapest 32 Eastern Districts Azzurri (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  John Nyskohus (Adelaide City) 7
1980 Marconi Fairfield (1) 0–0 (a.e.t.)
3–0 (Replay)
Heidelberg United 32 Spearwood Dalmatinac (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Eddie Krncevic (Marconi Fairfield) 6
1981 Brisbane Lions (1) [h] 3–1 West Adelaide 36 St Kilda Hakoah (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Ken Boden (Sydney City) 5
1982 APIA Leichhardt (2) 2–1 Heidelberg United 16 [g]   John Bradley (APIA Leichhardt)
  Ian Gibson (Canberra City)
  Peter Jones (APIA Leichhardt)
  John Kosmina (Sydney City)
  Grant Lee (Sydney City)
  Jimmy McBreen (APIA Leichhardt)
  Ian Stone (Canberra City)
  Mike Valentine (Heidelberg United)
2
1983 Sydney Olympic (1) 1–0
1–0
Heidelberg United 16 [g]   Jim Patikas (Sydney Olympic) 5
1984 Newcastle Rosebud (1) 1–0 Melbourne Croatia 24 [g]   David Brogan (Melbourne Croatia) 5
1985 Sydney Olympic (2) 2–1 Preston Makedonia 32 Adelaide Croatia (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Steve Smith (Preston Makedonia) 4
1986 Sydney City (3) 3–2 (a.e.t.) West Adelaide 32 Croydon City (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Frank Farina (Sydney City) 5
1987 Sydney Croatia (1) 1–0
1–0
South Melbourne 13 [g]   Charlie Egan (South Melbourne)
  Robbie Slater (Sydney Croatia)
3
1988 APIA Leichhardt (3) 0–0 (5–3 p) Brunswick Juventus 14 [g]   Grant Lightbown (Brisbane Lions) 3
1989 Adelaide City (2) 2–0 Sydney Olympic 14 [g]   Kimon Taliadoros (South Melbourne) 4
1989–90 South Melbourne (1) 4–1 Sydney Olympic 14 [g]   Paul Trimboli (South Melbourne)
  Abbas Saad (Sydney Olympic)
3
1990–91 Parramatta Eagles (1) 1–0 Preston Lions 14 [g]   Greg Brown (Parramatta Eagles) 3
1991–92 Adelaide City (3) 2–1 Marconi Fairfield 14 [g]   David Seal (Marconi Fairfield) 3
1992–93 Heidelberg United (1) 2–0 Parramatta Eagles 14 [g]   Carl Veart (Adelaide City) 5
1993–94 Parramatta Eagles (2) 2–0 Sydney United 14 Brisbane United (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Francis Awaritefe (South Melbourne) 4
1994–95 Melbourne Knights (1) 6–0 Heidelberg United 14 Melbourne Zebras (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Mark Viduka (Melbourne Knights) 6
1995–96 South Melbourne (2) 3–1 Newcastle Breakers 12 [g]   Vaughan Coveny (South Melbourne) 6
1996–97 Collingwood Warriors (1) 1–0 Marconi Fairfield 16 Brisbane Lions (2)
(Round of 16)
  Francis Awaritefe (Marconi Fairfield) 4

FFA Cup / Australia Cup edit

Season Cup winners
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Clubs
participating
Highest placed
non-A-League club
Top goalscorer Goals
2014 Adelaide United (1) 1–0 Perth Glory 631 Bentleigh Greens (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Sergio Cirio (Adelaide United) 6
2015 Melbourne Victory (1) 2–0 Perth Glory 648 Hume City (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Aaron Mooy (Melbourne City) 6
2016 Melbourne City (1) 1–0 Sydney FC 704 Canberra Olympic (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Patrick Antelmi (Blacktown City) 5
2017 Sydney FC (1) 2–1 (a.e.t.) Adelaide United 735 South Melbourne (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Bobô (Sydney FC) 8
2018 Adelaide United (2) 2–1 Sydney FC 781 Bentleigh Greens (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Craig Goodwin (Adelaide United) 5
2019 Adelaide United (3) 4–0 Melbourne City 736 Brisbane Strikers (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Jamie Maclaren (Melbourne City) 6
2020 Tournament cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia[5] 765
2021 Melbourne Victory (2) 2–1 Central Coast Mariners 765 APIA Leichhardt (2)
(Quarter-finals)
  Cyrus Dehmie (Brisbane Roar) 3
2022 Macarthur FC (1) 2–0 Sydney United 58 750 Sydney United 58 (2)
(Final)
  Al Hassan Toure (Macarthur FC) 5
2023 Sydney FC (2) 3–1 Brisbane Roar 778 Melbourne Knights (2)
(Semi-finals)
  Lachlan Brook (Western Sydney Wanderers) 5
2024 764

Total Cups won edit

Club Winners Runners-up Winning seasons
APIA Leichhardt
3
3
1966, 1982, 1988
Adelaide United
3
1
2014, 2018, 2019
Adelaide City
3
1
1979, 1989, 1991–92
Sydney City
3
1
1965, 1968, 1986
Sydney Olympic
2
2
1983, 1985
Parramatta Eagles
2
1
1990–91, 1993–94
South Melbourne
2
1
1989–90, 1995–96
Sydney FC
2
1
2017, 2023
Brisbane City
2
0
1977, 1978
Melbourne Victory
2
0
2015, 2021
Heidelberg United
1
4
1992–93
Marconi Stallions
1
3
1980
Melbourne Knights
1
1
1994–95
Sydney United
1
1
1987
Brisbane Roar
1
0
19815
Collingwood Warriors
1
0
1996–97
George Cross
1
0
1964
Macarthur FC
1
0
2022
Melbourne City
1
0
2016
Melbourne Hungaria
1
0
1967
Newcastle Rosebud
1
0
1984
Slavia Melbourne
1
0
1963
Sydney Yugal
1
0
1962

Continental Champions edit

Oceania Club Championship edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Number of clubs participating
1987 Adelaide City (1) 1–1 (4–1 p)   University-Mount Wellington 9
1999 South Melbourne (1) 5–1   Nadi 9
2001 Wollongong Wolves (1) 1–0   Tafea 11
2005 Sydney FC (1) 2–0   Magenta 13

Oceania Cup Winners' Cup edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Number of clubs participating
1987 Sydney City (1) 2–0   North Shore United 2

AFC Champions League edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Score Runners-up Number of clubs participating
2014 Western Sydney Wanderers (1) 1–0
0–0
  Al-Hilal 47

Multiple trophy wins edit

The Double edit

Continental Double
OFC (1966–2004) / AFC (2005–present)
Club Season Titles
South Melbourne
1998–99
NSL Premiership, Oceania Club Championship
Wollongong Wolves
2000–01
NSL Premiership, Oceania Club Championship
Domestic Double
Club Season Titles
South Melbourne
1984
NSL Minor Premiership, NSL Premiership
Adelaide City
1991–92
NSL Premiership, NSL Cup
Melbourne Knights
1994–95
NSL Minor Premiership, NSL Premiership
South Melbourne
1997–98
NSL Minor Premiership, NSL Premiership
Perth Glory
2003–04
NSL Minor Premiership, NSL Premiership
Melbourne Victory
2006–07
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Melbourne Victory
2008–09
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Sydney FC
2009–10
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Brisbane Roar
2010–11
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Brisbane Roar
2013–14
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Melbourne Victory
2014–15
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Adelaide United
2015–16
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Sydney FC
2016–17
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Sydney FC
2017–18
A-League Premiership, FFA Cup
Sydney FC
2019–20
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship
Melbourne City FC
2020–21
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship

The Treble edit

Domestic Treble (Season)
Club Season Titles
Melbourne Knights
1994–95
NSL Minor Premiership, NSL Premiership, NSL Cup

Note: In the 2008–09 season Melbourne Victory won all three pieces of A-League silverware on offer, the Pre-Season Challenge Cup, the Premiership, and the Championship.

Domestic Treble (Calendar Year)
Club Year Titles
Melbourne Victory
2015
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship, FFA Cup
Sydney FC
2017
A-League Premiership, A-League Championship, FFA Cup

Pre-Season Cup winners edit

Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament edit

Season Champions Score Runners-up Clubs
participating
Top goalscorer Goals
2005 Sydney FC 1–0 Central Coast Mariners 7   Nik Mrdja (Central Coast Mariners) 3

A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup edit

Season Champions Score Runners-up Clubs
participating
Top goalscorer Goals
2005 Central Coast Mariners 1–0 Perth Glory 8   Bobby Despotovski (Perth Glory)
  Nik Mrdja (Central Coast Mariners)
  Sasho Petrovski (Sydney FC)
3
2006 Adelaide United 1–1 (5–4 p) Central Coast Mariners 8   Danny Allsopp (Melbourne Victory)
  Alex Brosque (Sydney FC)
  Sasho Petrovski (Sydney FC)
  Carl Veart (Adelaide United)
3
2007 Adelaide United 2–1 Perth Glory 8   Cássio (Adelaide United)
  Bruce Djite (Adelaide United)
  Joel Griffiths (Newcastle Jets)
  Simon Lynch (Queensland Roar)
  Shane Smeltz (Wellington Phoenix)
3
2008 Melbourne Victory 0–0 (8–7 p) Wellington Phoenix 8   Cássio (Adelaide United)
  Sergio van Dijk (Queensland Roar)
2

Note: All seasons were exclusive to A-League clubs only.

Multiple title winners edit

Clubs in bold play in the A-League.

Team Champions League Premiers Cup Winners Continental Winners Pre-Season Cup Total
Sydney FC 5 4 2 1 1 13
Melbourne Victory 4 3 2 1 10
South Melbourne 4 3 2 1
Sydney City 4 2 3 1
Marconi Stallions 4 3 1 8
Adelaide United 1 2 3 2
Adelaide City 3 3 1 7
Melbourne Knights 2 4 1
Brisbane Roar 3 2 1 6
Perth Glory 2 4
Sydney Olympic 2 1 2 5
Central Coast Mariners 2 2 1
Melbourne City 1 3 1
Wollongong Wolves 2 1 1 4
Sydney United 3 1
APIA Leichhardt 1 3
St George 2 2
Western Sydney Wanderers 1 1
Brisbane City 2

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hakoah Sydney City East were known as Sydney City until 1987.
  2. ^ Marconi Stallions were known as Marconi Fairfield until 2004.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Also won Premiers.
  4. ^ Brunswick Zebras were known as Brunswick Juventus until 1993.
  5. ^ a b Also won the NSL Cup.
  6. ^ Also won the A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l This season's competition was exclusive to NSL clubs.
  8. ^ In 2016 the FFA confirmed Brisbane Roar assumed all of the Brisbane Lions FC's NSL history and were therefore credited the 1981 NSL Cup honour.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Hay, Roy; Murray, Bill, eds. (2006). The world game downunder. Melbourne: Australian Society for Sports History. p. 120. ISBN 0975761668.
  2. ^ Phoenix seek Champions League resolution
  3. ^ Andrew Robinson (8 June 2016). "Australia Cup 1962–1968".
  4. ^ "FFA amalgamate A-League and NSL honours for new national list of records". Sydney Morning Herald. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  5. ^ "Coronavirus forces FFA Cup to be cancelled". The World Game. SBS. 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.