2018 A-League Grand Final

2018 A-League Grand Final
Event 2017–18 A-League
Date 5 May 2018
Venue McDonald Jones Stadium, Newcastle
Man of the Match Lawrence Thomas
Referee Jarred Gillett
Attendance 29,410

The 2018 A-League Grand Final was the thirteenth A-League Grand Final, played on 5 May 2018. The match took place at McDonald Jones Stadium, with Newcastle Jets hosting Melbourne Victory, the first A-League grand final held outside a metropolitan city.[1]

Route to the final

Pos Team Pts
1 Sydney FC 64
2 Newcastle Jets 50
3 Melbourne City 43
4 Melbourne Victory 41
5 Adelaide United 39
6 Brisbane Roar 35
Elimination-finals   Semi-finals   Grand Final
                   
      Sydney FC 2  
Melbourne Victory 2     Melbourne Victory 3  
Adelaide United 1       Newcastle Jets 0
    Melbourne Victory 1
      Newcastle Jets 2
Melbourne City 2     Melbourne City 1  
Brisbane Roar 0  


Match

Details

Newcastle Jets
Melbourne Victory
GK20New Zealand Glen Moss
DF17Republic of Macedonia Daniel Georgievski 74'Yellow card 51'
DF44Australia Nikolai Topor-Stanley
DF4Australia Nigel Boogaard
DF18Australia John Koutroumbis
MF27Australia Riley McGree
MF6Australia Steven Ugarkovic
MF8Venezuela Ronald Vargas 65'
WI7Australia Dimitri Petratos
FW9Republic of Ireland Roy O'DonovanRed card 90+3'
WI3Australia Jason HoffmanYellow card 90+1'
Substitutes:
GK30Australia Ivan Necevski
DF22Australia Lachlan Jackson
DF16Australia Nick Cowburn
FW11Argentina Patito Rodríguez 74'
FW24Australia Joe Champness 65'
Manager: Scotland Ernie Merrick
GK20Australia Lawrence Thomas
DF22Australia Stefan Nigro 77'
DF17Australia James Donachie
DF14Australia Thomas Deng
DF6Australia Leigh Broxham
MF21Australia Carl Valeri (c)
MF24Australia Terry Antonis
WI9New Zealand Kosta Barbarouses 9'
MF10Australia James Troisi
WI41Netherlands Leroy George
FW8Kosovo Besart Berisha
Substitutes:
GK1Australia Matt Acton
DF16Australia Joshua Hope
MF23New Zealand Jai Ingham
MF18Argentina Matías Sánchez 77'Yellow card 90+2'
FW7Australia Kenny Athiu
Manager: Australia Kevin Muscat

Joe Marston Medal: Australia Lawrence Thomas

Assistant referees:
Australia Matthew Cream
Australia Paul Cetrangolo
Fourth official:
Australia Kurt Ams

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Five named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.


A-League
2018 Champions
Australia
Melbourne Victory
Fourth Title

Statistics

Overall statistics[2]
Newcastle Jets Melbourne Victory
Goals scored01
Total shots147
Shots on target42
Ball possession58.3%41.7%
Corner kicks45
Fouls Conceded1217
Offsides12
Yellow cards21
Red cards10

Broadcasting

The Grand Final was broadcast live throughout Australia on Fox Sports and Network Ten.[3]

Records

Kosta Barbarouses's 9th-minute goal was the fastest ever goal scored in an A-League Grand Final.[4]

Kosta Barbarouses's 9th-minute goal was the equal 3rd fastest goal ever scored in any previous National Soccer League Grand Final & A-League Grand Final history behind John Anastasiadis in 1998 for South Melbourne against Carlton at Olympic Park, Mile Sterjovski in 1999 for Sydney United against South Melbourne at Olympic Park, and Mark Koussas in 1984 for Sydney Olympic against South Melbourne at Olympic Park.

Melbourne Victory became the first ever team to qualify for the A-League Grand Final from outside the top 3. With their win, the Victory became the first team in A-League history to win 4 championships, and the first team in A-League history to win the Championship from outside the top 2.[5]

Melbourne Victory also became the first team to win the championship from outside the top 2 positions after regular season since Adelaide City won the 1994 NSL Grand Final from 5th spot on the ladder and Melbourne Victory are only just the 9th team in history to win an away from home Grand Final in 34-year history of season deciders in NSL & A-League history and were just only the 7th team in history to win the NSL Grand Final & A-League Grand Final from outside the top 2 positions after regular season.

Melbourne Victory equal the record for most NSL & A-League championships on four titles along with Hakoah Sydney City (1977, 1980, 1981, 1982), Marconi Stallions (1979, 1988, 1989, 1993), and South Melbourne (1984, 1991, 1998, 1999).

The crowd of 29,410 was Newcastle's biggest ever home attendance.

Video assistant referee (VAR) controversy

Kosta Barbarouses's goal in the 9th minute of the game came about via a header from James Donachie, however Donachie was offside when Leroy George took the free kick which Donachie passed to Barbarouses. The game's video assistant referee (VAR) system failed to detect Donachie's offside position as its video feed had failed in the thirty seconds leading up to the goal, although the issue was apparent from the Fox Sports broadcast footage. By the time the system was restored, the game had resumed, meaning the decision to allow the goal stood. The Football Federation Australia acknowledged the technical issues, and the frustration of Newcastle's team and fans.[6]

See also

References

  1. Gardiner, James (2018-04-29). "Newcastle Jets to host A-League grand final after Victory stun Sydney FC". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  2. "Newcastle Jets v Melbourne Victory". A-League. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  3. "New TV deal for Football". Hyundai A-League. Football Federation Australia. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  4. "A-League grand final: Melbourne Victory beat Newcastle Jets 1-0 to win fourth championship". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  5. Rosengarten, Jake. "Melbourne Victory's grand final win sees Melbourne City without an Asian Champions League spot". Fox Sports Australia. News Corp. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  6. "Major VAR glitch behind offside goal standing in A-League decider". ABC News. 6 May 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
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