Collingwood Warriors SC

Collingwood Warriors Soccer Club was an Australian semi-professional association football (soccer) club based in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Abbotsford. It participated in the National Soccer League in 1996–97, lasting only a solitary season.[1] The club's most notable achievement was winning the last ever NSL Cup in the 1996–97 tournament, which would be the only silverware the club celebrated.[2]

Collingwood Warriors
Full nameCollingwood Warriors Soccer Club
Nickname(s)Warriors, Collingwood
Short nameCWSC
Founded1996
Dissolved1997
GroundVictoria Park
Olympic Park
Capacity15'000
18'500
Head CoachZoran Matic
LeagueNational Soccer League

History

The club was formed as a joint-venture between Australian Football League club Collingwood[3] and Greek backed former NSL club Heidelberg United, that was then trading as 'Melbourne Warriors'.[4] The home strip was of a shirt with black and white stripes resembling the Australian rules club, with streaks of yellow resembling Heidelberg, with black shorts and white socks. The kit provider was Lotto[5] which also provided a third kit, which was worn in the 1996–97 NSL Cup final. The club's match-day home-ground and place of training & administration was Victoria Park in Abbotsford, sharing with the Australian rules club during their respective off-season.[6]

In the pre-season the club recruite Zoran Matic who had previously taken Adelaide City to two NSL championships and signed multiple experienced players leading to high-anticipation for the season. The Warriors defeated Marconi-Fairfield 1-0 in the last ever NSL Cup[7] Despite a strong start to the season in which the team went seven matches without defeat, Collingwood's form slumped and it ended up finishing second from bottom on the table.[8] The team also lacked money, and disbanded at the end of the 1996/97 season. Throughout this period, Heidelberg maintained a separate team in the Victorian Premier League. Con Boutsianis, Goran Lozanovski and Kimon Taliadoros scored equal most goals for the club at seven each, with Frank Juric making the most appearances, of twenty-five for the club.[9]

Notable former players

Honours

NSL Cup

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.