2024–25 A-League Men

A-League Men
Season2024–25
Dates18 October 2024 – 31 May 2025
ChampionsMelbourne City (2nd title)
PremiersAuckland FC (1st title)
AFC Champions League EliteMelbourne City
AFC Champions League TwoMacarthur FC
Matches played176
Goals scored573 (3.26 per match)
Top goalscorerArchie Goodwin
Adrian Segecic (13 goals)
Best goalkeeperAlex Paulsen
Biggest home winNewcastle Jets 6–0 Central Coast Mariners
(12 April 2025)
Biggest away winPerth Glory 0–5 Melbourne City
(10 November 2024)
Highest scoringAdelaide United 4–5 Macarthur FC
(14 March 2025)
Longest winning run6 matches
Auckland FC
Longest unbeaten run14 matches
Auckland FC
Longest winless run12 matches
Brisbane Roar
Longest losing run5 matches
Brisbane Roar
Highest attendance32,741
Sydney FC 3–3 Western Sydney Wanderers
(8 February 2025)
Lowest attendance2,425
Perth Glory 1–3 Western United
(22 November 2024)
Total attendance1,590,618
Average attendance9,038 ( 480)
All statistics correct as of 31 May 2025.

The 2024–25 A-League Men, known as the Isuzu UTE A-League for sponsorship reasons, was the 48th season of national level men's soccer in Australia, and the 20th since the establishment of the competition as the A-League in 2004. Central Coast Mariners were the defending premiers and champions.

The 2024–25 A-League Men season saw the league's average attendance increase for the third consecutive season, the first time this has occurred since 2013–14.

Clubs

Stadiums and locations

Thirteen clubs are participating in the 2024–25 season. This is an increase from the previous years after Auckland FC joined the league.

Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
Club City Home ground Capacity
Adelaide United Adelaide Coopers Stadium 16,500
Auckland FC Auckland Go Media Stadium 25,000
Brisbane Roar Brisbane Suncorp Stadium 52,500
Central Coast Mariners Gosford Industree Group Stadium 20,059
Macarthur FC Sydney Campbelltown Sports Stadium 17,500[1]
Melbourne City Melbourne AAMI Park 30,050
Melbourne Victory Melbourne AAMI Park 30,050
Newcastle Jets Newcastle McDonald Jones Stadium 30,000
Perth Glory Perth HBF Park 20,500
Sydney FC Sydney Allianz Stadium 42,500[2]
Wellington Phoenix Wellington Sky Stadium 34,500
Western Sydney Wanderers Sydney CommBank Stadium 30,000
Western United Melbourne Ironbark Fields 5,000
AAMI Park[3] 30,050

Personnel and kits

Team Manager Captain Kit manufacturer Kit sponsor
Adelaide United Carl Veart Ryan Kitto[4] UCAN[5] Flinders University[6]
CG FinTech[note 1][7]
Auckland FC Steve Corica Hiroki Sakai[8] New Balance[9] Anchor[10]
Go Media[note 1][11]
Brisbane Roar Ruben Zadkovich Jay O'Shea[12] Cikers[13] OutKast[14]
Central Coast Mariners Mark Jackson Trent Sainsbury[15] Cikers[16] polytec[17]
Macarthur FC Mile Sterjovski Luke Brattan[18] Kelme[19] SipEnergy[20]
Melbourne City Aurelio Vidmar Aziz Behich[21] Puma[22][23] Etihad Airways[23]
Melbourne Victory Arthur Diles Roderick Miranda[24] Macron[25] Turkish Airlines[26]
Newcastle Jets Robert Stanton Kosta Grozos[27] Legend Sportswear[28] Brydens Lawyers[29]
Perth Glory David Zdrilic Adam Taggart[30] Macron[31] La Vida Homes[32]
Sydney FC Ufuk Talay Rhyan Grant[33] Under Armour[34] Macquarie University[35]
Wellington Phoenix Giancarlo Italiano Alex Rufer[36] Paladin Sports[37] Oppo[38]
Entelar Group[note 1][38]
Western Sydney Wanderers Alen Stajcic Lawrence Thomas[39] Adidas[40] Voltaren[41]
Turner Freeman Lawyers[note 1][42]
Western United John Aloisi Ben Garuccio[43] Kappa[44] Sharp[44]

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position on table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Auckland FC Inaugural Pre-season Steve Corica 20 December 2023[45]
Melbourne City Aurelio Vidmar (caretaker) Promoted to full-time Aurelio Vidmar 15 May 2024[46]
Western Sydney Wanderers Marko Rudan Mutual consent 16 May 2024[47] Alen Stajcic 25 June 2024[48]
Melbourne Victory Tony Popovic End of contract 12 June 2024[49] Patrick Kisnorbo 25 June 2024[50]
Perth Glory Alen Stajcic Mutual consent 25 June 2024[51] David Zdrilic 28 June 2024[52]
Melbourne Victory Patrick Kisnorbo Signed by Yokohama F. Marinos 17 December 2024[53][54] 3rd Arthur Diles (caretaker) 17 December 2024
Arthur Diles (caretaker) Promoted to full-time N/A 6th Arthur Diles 31 January 2025[55]

Foreign players

Club Visa 1 Visa 2 Visa 3 Visa 4 Visa 5 Non-visa foreigner(s) Former player(s)
Adelaide United Zach Clough Ryan Tunnicliffe Bart Vriends Javi López Isaías Sánchez1
Auckland FC Louis Verstraete Felipe Gallegos Neyder Moreno Hiroki Sakai Guillermo May Dan Hall2
Brisbane Roar Florin Berenguer Rafael Struick Jay O'Shea Walid Shour Asumah Abubakar Jack Hingert2
Marcus Ferkranus2
Néicer Acosta
Central Coast Mariners Mikael Doka Vitor Feijão Ryan Edmondson Alfie McCalmont Brian Kaltak William Wilson2
Storm Roux2
Macarthur FC Kévin Boli Filip Kurto Saîf-Eddine Khaoui Marin Jakoliš2 Dino Arslanagić
Valère Germain
Melbourne City Germán Ferreyra Andreas Kuen Samuel Souprayen Yonatan Cohen Jamie Young2
Melbourne Victory Clarismario Santos Zinédine Machach Nikos Vergos Roderick Miranda Adama Traoré1
Newcastle Jets Wellissol Kota Mizunuma Lachlan Bayliss2
Dane Ingham2
Charles M'Mombwa2
Perth Glory Anas Hamzaoui Luke Amos Hiroaki Aoyama Yuto Misao Takuya Okamoto Oliver Sail2 Cristian Caicedo
Luis Cangá
Joel Anasmo2
Sydney FC Douglas Costa Léo Sena Joe Lolley Anas Ouahim Patryk Klimala Jaushua Sotirio2
Wellington Phoenix Scott Wootton Hideki Ishige Kazuki Nagasawa Josh Oluwayemi Francisco Geraldes Stefan Colakovski2 David Ball
Mohamed Al-Taay2
Western Sydney Wanderers Bozhidar Kraev Jeong Tae-wook Juan Mata Marcus Antonsson Mohamed Al-Taay2
Dylan Scicluna2
Western United Riku Danzaki Hiroshi Ibusuki Tomoki Imai Charbel Shamoon2
Luka Coveny2

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 (or New Zealand citizenship, in the case of Auckland FC and/or Wellington Phoenix);[56]
2Australian citizens (or New Zealand citizens, in the case of Auckland FC and/or 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)

Regular season

The regular season is made up of a full home-and-away 24-match schedule for each club, plus three byes and two extra rounds (including the Unite Round), for a total of 26 matches played. The top six qualify for a finals series.

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Auckland FC[a] 26 15 8 3 49 27 +22 53 Qualification for Finals series[b]
2 Melbourne City (C) 26 14 6 6 41 25 +16 48 Qualification for AFC Champions League Elite and Finals series
3 Western United 26 14 5 7 55 37 +18 47 Qualification for Finals series[b]
4 Western Sydney Wanderers 26 13 7 6 58 40 +18 46
5 Melbourne Victory 26 12 7 7 44 36 +8 43
6 Adelaide United 26 10 8 8 53 55 −2 38
7 Sydney FC 26 10 7 9 53 46 +7 37
8 Macarthur FC 26 9 6 11 50 45 +5 33 Qualification for AFC Champions League Two[c]
9 Newcastle Jets 26 8 6 12 43 44 −1 30
10 Central Coast Mariners 26 5 11 10 29 51 −22 26 Qualification for 2025 Australia Cup play-offs
11 Wellington Phoenix[a] 26 6 6 14 27 43 −16 24
12 Brisbane Roar 26 5 6 15 32 51 −19 21
13 Perth Glory 26 4 5 17 22 56 −34 17
Source: A-Leagues
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) wins; 5) head-to-head results; 5a) head-to-head points; 5b) head-to-head goal difference; 6) Fair Play points; 7) away goal difference; 8) away goals per match; 9) home goal difference; 10) home goals per match; 11) toss of a coin in an event of a tie of two clubs.[57]
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Auckland FC and Wellington Phoenix cannot qualify for Asian Football Confederation competitions as they are based in New Zealand, which is part of the Oceania Football Confederation.
  2. ^ a b 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.
  3. ^ Qualified for AFC Champions League Two as the 2024 Australia Cup winners.

Fixtures and results

Home \ Away ADL AKL BRI CCM MAC MCY MVC NEW PER SYD WEL WSW WUN ADL AKL BRI CCM MAC MCY MVC NEW PER SYD WEL WSW WUN
Adelaide United 2–2 1–1 1–1 4–5 1–0 3–2 1–2 2–2 3–3 3–2 2–3 2–1 2–3
Auckland FC 4–4 2–0 2–2 2–1 3–0 0–0 2–0 1–0 1–0 2–0 1–1 0–4 6–1
Brisbane Roar 2–3 0–2 1–3 1–5 1–4 1–1 0–1 0–1 2–3 1–0 0–1 2–1 1–1
Central Coast Mariners 0–4 1–4 1–2 2–2 1–1 0–0 2–2 0–0 2–1 0–3 0–4 1–3 3–1
Macarthur FC 1–2 0–1 4–4 1–1 1–0 1–2 1–2 6–1 0–2 1–2 1–3 2–2 3–3
Melbourne City 0–0 2–2 1–0 1–0 2–0 1–3 0–1 1–0 5–1 2–0 0–2 2–0 3–2
Melbourne Victory 5–3 0–2 2–0 3–0 2–1 1–1 1–1 2–0 2–0 1–0 2–2 3–4 2–2
Newcastle Jets 0–1 1–1 3–1 1–2 1–3 0–1 3–0 2–2 2–2 1–2 0–1 2–6 6–0
Perth Glory 4–1 1–0 1–3 1–1 0–3 0–5 0–2 0–4 0–0 0–2 1–2 1–3 2–3
Sydney FC 4–1 2–2 3–4 4–1 1–2 2–3 3–0 3–2 3–0 1–1 4–2 3–4 3–3
Wellington Phoenix 1–2 0–2 1–1 0–0 1–2 0–1 1–0 2–1 0–2 0–0 2–2 1–1 2–3
Western Sydney Wanderers 3–4 0–1 2–2 1–3 2–3 2–2 4–2 4–1 4–1 1–2 4–1 2–0 2–1
Western United 3–0 0–2 1–0 2–2 0–0 0–1 1–3 3–1 3–1 1–0 4–1 1–1 4–2
Source: Aleagues.com.au
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

Bracket

Elimination finals Semi-finals Grand Final
1 Auckland FC 1 0 1
4 Western Sydney Wanderers 1 5 Melbourne Victory 0 2 2
5 Melbourne Victory 2 2 Melbourne City 1
5 Melbourne Victory 0
2 Melbourne City 3 1 4
3 Western United 3 3 Western United 0 1 1
6 Adelaide United 2

Elimination finals

Western United3–2Adelaide United
Botic 20', 31', 62' Report
Attendance: 3,078
Referee: Alex King

Western Sydney Wanderers1–2Melbourne Victory
Sapsford 23' Report
Attendance: 16,399
Referee: Adam Kersey

Semi-finals

Summary

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Auckland FC 1–2 Melbourne Victory 1–0 0–2
Melbourne City 4–1 Western United 3–0 1–1

Matches

Melbourne Victory0–1Auckland FC
Report
Attendance: 14,121
Referee: Ben Abraham
Auckland FC0–2Melbourne Victory
Report
Attendance: 29,148
Referee: Alex King

Melbourne Victory won 2–1 on aggregate.


Western United0–3Melbourne City
Report
Attendance: 5,186
Referee: Shaun Evans
Melbourne City1–1Western United
Behich 20' Report Botic 66'
Attendance: 7,691
Referee: Adam Kersey

Melbourne City won 4–1 on aggregate.

Grand Final

Melbourne City1–0Melbourne Victory
Cohen 10' Report
Attendance: 29,902
Referee: Adam Kersey (Queensland)

Regular season statistics

Top scorers

As of end of regular season[58]
Rank Player Club Goals
1 Archie Goodwin Adelaide United 13
Adrian Segecic Sydney FC
3 Noah Botic Western United 12
Nicolas Milanovic Western Sydney Wanderers
5 Patryk Klimala Sydney FC 11
6 Kosta Barbarouses Wellington Phoenix 10
Hiroshi Ibusuki Western United
Marin Jakoliš Macarthur FC
Adam Taggart Perth Glory
10 Eli Adams Newcastle Jets 9
Joe Lolley Sydney FC
Guillermo May Auckland FC

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date Ref.
Nicolas Milanovic Western Sydney Wanderers Newcastle Jets 4–1 (H) 8 November 2024 [59]
Joe Lolley Sydney FC Perth Glory 3–0 (H) 8 January 2025 [60]
Adrian Segecic Sydney FC Central Coast Mariners 4–1 (H) 11 January 2025 [61]
Logan Rogerson Auckland FC Wellington Phoenix 6–1 (H) 22 February 2025 [62][63]
Marin Jakoliš Macarthur FC Brisbane Roar 5–1 (A) 4 April 2025 [64]
Noah Botic Western United Adelaide United 3–2 (H) 9 May 2025 [65]
Key
(H) Home team
(A) Away team

Clean sheets

As of end of regular season[66]
Rank Goalkeeper Club Clean sheets
1 Alex Paulsen Auckland FC 12
2 Patrick Beach Melbourne City 11
3 Harrison Devenish-Meares Sydney FC 5
Matt Sutton Western United
Lawrence Thomas Western Sydney Wanderers
6 Jack Duncan Melbourne Victory 4
Mitchell Langerak Melbourne Victory
Oliver Sail Perth Glory
9 Filip Kurto Macarthur FC 3
Josh Oluwayemi Wellington Phoenix
Dylan Peraić-Cullen Central Coast Mariners
Ryan Scott Newcastle Jets

Awards

Annual awards

Award Winner Club Ref.
Johnny Warren Medal Nicolas Milanovic Western Sydney Wanderers [67]
Young Footballer of the Year Archie Goodwin Adelaide United [68]
Golden Boot Award Archie Goodwin
Adrian Segecic
Adelaide United
Sydney FC
[68]
Goalkeeper of the Year Alex Paulsen Auckland FC [68]
Goal of the Year Jordan Lauton Western United [68]
Save of the Year Alex Paulsen Auckland FC [68]
Playmaker of the Year Zac Sapsford Western Sydney Wanderers FC [68]
Fan Player of the Year Francis de Vries Auckland FC [68]
Coach of the Year Steve Corica Auckland FC [69]
Fair Play Award Adelaide United [68]
Referee of the Year Adam Kersey [70]

Club awards

Club Player of the Season Ref.
Adelaide United Ethan Alagich [71]
Auckland FC Guillermo May [72]
Brisbane Roar Jay O'Shea [73]
Central Coast Mariners Mikael Doka [74]
Macarthur FC Kealey Adamson [75]
Melbourne City Kai Trewin [76]
Melbourne Victory Jordi Valadon [77]
Newcastle Jets Thomas Aquilina [78]
Perth Glory Adam Taggart [79]
Sydney FC Adrian Segecic [80]
Wellington Phoenix Kosta Barbarouses [81]
Western Sydney Wanderers Nicolas Milanovic [82]
Western United Angus Thurgate [83]

Team of the season

Goalkeeper[84] Defenders Midfielders Forwards Substitutes
Alex Paulsen (Auckland FC) Hiroki Sakai (Auckland FC)
Nathaniel Atkinson (Melbourne City)
Kai Trewin (Melbourne City)
Francis de Vries (Auckland FC)
Louis Verstraete (Auckland FC)
Ryan Teague (Melbourne Victory)
Angus Thurgate (Western United)
Nicolas Milanovic (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Archie Goodwin (Adelaide United)
Adrian Segecic (Sydney FC)
Lawrence Thomas (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Aziz Behich (Melbourne City)
Nando Pijnaker (Auckland FC)
Anthony Caceres (Sydney FC)
Marco Tilio (Melbourne City)
Noah Botic (Western United)
Guillermo May (Auckland FC)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Away kit

References

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