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)

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.

Clubs

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

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

Managerial changes

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

Foreign players

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

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

Transfers

Regular season

League table

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[lower-alpha 1]
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[lower-alpha 1]
4 Adelaide United 27 12 8 7 37 32 +5 44 Qualification for Finals series[lower-alpha 1]
5 Melbourne City 27 11 7 9 39 32 +7 40
6 Wellington Phoenix[lower-alpha 2] 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. 1 2 3 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

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

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

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

12 May 2019 Sydney FC 6–1Melbourne VictorySydney
19:00 AEST
Report
Stadium: Netstrata Jubilee Stadium
Attendance: 12,141
Referee: Chris Beath

Grand Final

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

Attendances

By club

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 Victory1420,60440,5048,039288,453
Sydney FC1313,56630,5886,261176,357
Perth Glory1410,36017,8567,213145,045
Brisbane Roar139,63215,1296,084125,222
Western Sydney Wanderers149,19121,9845,067128,670
Newcastle Jets139,07911,8146,701118,029
Adelaide United149,01312,8667,071126,188
Wellington Phoenix148,53323,6484,829119,455
Melbourne City138,13524,3064,950105,750
Central Coast Mariners135,5628,9233,70372,300
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League total 135 10,411 40,504 3,703 1,405,469

By round

2018–19 A-League Attendance
Round Total Games Avg. Per Game
Round 1 84,761516,952
Round 2 77,986515,597
Round 3 44,72858,946
Round 4 49,10559,821
Round 5 54,712510,942
Round 6 46,78959,358
Round 7 57,101511,420
Round 8 50,507510,101
Round 9 58,429511,686
Round 10 55,700511,140
Round 11 44,86658,973
Round 12 41,54658,309
Round 13 53,733510,747
Round 14 48,84959,770
Round 15 37,92057,584
Round 16 57,050511,410
Round 17 42,06558,413
Round 18 52,669510,534
Round 19 63,527512,705
Round 20 57,812511,562
Round 21 38,83557,767
Round 22 46,32959,266
Round 23 46,70459,341
Round 24 40,20558,041
Round 25 63,295512,659
Round 26 45,43159,086
Round 27 44,79458,959
Elimination Final 29,242214,621
Semi Final 30,009215,004
Grand Final 56,371156,371

Club membership

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

Top scorers

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

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateRef
Australia Alex BrosqueSydney FCCentral Coast Mariners5–24 January 2019[54]
New Zealand Kosta BarbarousesMelbourne VictoryBrisbane Roar0–515 January 2019[55]
Australia David WilliamsWellington PhoenixNewcastle Jets4–131 March 2019[56]
Fiji Roy KrishnaWellington PhoenixMelbourne City3–221 April 2019[57]

Own goals

As of the end of the Regular Season, 28 April 2019
Player Club Against Round
North Macedonia Daniel GeorgievskiNewcastle JetsWellington Phoenix1
Australia Connor O'TooleBrisbane RoarPerth Glory3
New Zealand Tom DoyleWellington PhoenixAdelaide United5
Australia Tomislav MrcelaPerth GloryCentral Coast Mariners5
Sweden Ola ToivonenMelbourne VictoryBrisbane Roar8
Australia Jordan ElseyAdelaide UnitedMelbourne City8
Greece Avraam PapadopoulosBrisbane RoarWellington Phoenix9
Australia Aaron ReardonBrisbane RoarPerth Glory11
Australia Nigel BoogaardNewcastle JetsSydney FC14
Australia Ben KennedyCentral Coast MarinersMelbourne Victory17
England Sam GrahamCentral Coast MarinersWellington Phoenix21
Australia Paulo RetreSydney FCMelbourne City22
Australia Harrison DelbridgeMelbourne CityBrisbane Roar24
Australia Vedran JanjetovićWestern Sydney WanderersNewcastle Jets24

Clean sheets

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

Discipline

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

Club

  • Most yellow cards: 67
    • Wellington Phoenix
  • Most red cards: 7
    • Central Coast Mariners
Fair Play Award
Club Yellow card Second yellow card Red card 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

Monthly awards

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 Australia Scott Galloway Adelaide United [60]
November Australia Terry Antonis Melbourne Victory Australia Chris Ikonomidis Perth Glory [61][62]
December Australia David Williams Wellington Phoenix New Zealand Sarpreet Singh Wellington Phoenix [63][64]
January Australia Jaushua Sotirio Western Sydney Wanderers Australia Lachlan Wales Melbourne City [65][66]
February France Éric Bauthéac Brisbane Roar Australia Thomas Deng Melbourne Victory [67][68]
March Australia Dylan Wenzel-Halls Brisbane Roar Australia Keanu Baccus Western Sydney Wanderers [69][70]
April France Éric Bauthéac Brisbane Roar Australia Riley McGree Melbourne City [71][72]
May Spain Diego Castro Perth Glory [73]

Annual awards

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 Poland Filip Kurto (Wellington Phoenix)
Defenders Australia Rhyan Grant (Sydney FC) Netherlands Bart Schenkeveld (Melbourne City) Australia Shane Lowry (Perth Glory) Australia Jason Davidson (Perth Glory)
Midfielders Spain Diego Castro (Perth Glory) Australia Neil Kilkenny (Perth Glory) Australia Brandon O'Neill (Sydney FC)
Forwards Australia Chris Ikonomidis (Perth Glory) Fiji Roy Krishna (Wellington Phoenix) Sweden Ola Toivonen (Melbourne Victory)
Substitutes Denmark Michael Jakobsen (Adelaide United) Spain Isaías (Adelaide United) England Adam Le Fondre (Sydney FC) Serbia Miloš Ninković (Sydney FC) Australia Liam Reddy (Perth Glory)

See also

Notes

  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]

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  3. Ingils, William (21 September 2018). "Brisbane Roar Release a Viciously Stunning Home Kit. What do you Think?". UK Soccer Shop.
  4. Windon, Jacob (30 August 2018). "Mariners announce sleek new kits". A-League.
  5. "Melbourne Victory extends partnership with adidas". Melbourne Victory. 6 February 2017.
  6. Dudley, George (2 June 2017). "Newcastle Jets agree apparel deal with Viva". SportsPro.
  7. "Macron sign on for four more years". Perth Glory. 30 May 2017.
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