2022–23 A-League Men

The 2022–23 A-League Men, known as the Isuzu UTE A-League for sponsorship reasons, was the 46th season of national level men's soccer in Australia, and the 18th since the establishment of the competition as the A-League in 2004.

A-League Men
Season2022–23
Dates7 October 2022 – 3 June 2023
ChampionsCentral Coast Mariners (2nd title)
PremiersMelbourne City (3rd title)
Champions LeagueMelbourne City
AFC CupCentral Coast Mariners
Macarthur FC
Matches played156
Goals scored477 (3.06 per match)
Top goalscorerJamie Maclaren (24 goals)
Biggest home winMelbourne City 6–1 Macarthur FC
(4 February 2023)
Biggest away winSydney FC 0–4 WS Wanderers
(18 March 2023)
Highest scoringAdelaide United 4–4 WS Wanderers
(19 February 2023)
Perth Glory 4–4 Adelaide United
(23 April 2023)
Longest winning run4 matches
Adelaide United
Melbourne City
Longest unbeaten run12 matches
Adelaide United
Longest winless run6 matches
Macarthur FC
Melbourne Victory
Newcastle Jets
Perth Glory
Longest losing run3 matches
Brisbane Roar
Melbourne Victory
Newcastle Jets
Wellington Phoenix
Western United
Highest attendance34,232[1]
Sydney FC 0–1 WS Wanderers
(12 November 2022)
Lowest attendance1,408[1]
Central Coast Mariners 4–1 Macarthur FC
(11 March 2023)
Total attendance1,115,048[1]
Average attendance7,544[1] ( 1,942)
All statistics correct as of 23 April 2023.
(Note: Longest runs only include regular season results)

The regular season commenced on 7 October 2022. The season featured a mid-season break from 18 November 2022 to 8 December 2022 due to the 2022 FIFA World Cup being held in Qatar.[2]

Melbourne City were the defending premiers and Western United were the defending champions.[3] Melbourne City successfully defended their title, winning their third premiership in a row with two games remaining. Central Coast Mariners won their second championship, defeating Melbourne City 6–1 in the Grand Final.

This season was the first A-League Men season since 2013–14 to record an increase in average attendance compared to the previous season.

Clubs

Stadiums and locations

Twelve clubs are participating in the 2022–23 season.

Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
ClubCityHome groundCapacity
Adelaide UnitedAdelaideCoopers Stadium16,500
Brisbane RoarBrisbaneKayo Stadium11,500
Suncorp Stadium52,500
Central Coast MarinersGosfordIndustree Group Stadium20,059
MudgeeGlen Willow Regional Sports Stadium10,000
Macarthur FCCampbelltownCampbelltown Stadium17,500[4]
Melbourne CityMelbourneAAMI Park30,050
Melbourne Victory
Newcastle JetsNewcastleMcDonald Jones Stadium33,000
Perth GloryPerthHBF Park20,500
Macedonia Park4,500
Sydney FCSydneyAllianz Stadium42,500[5]
Wellington PhoenixWellingtonSky Stadium35,000
AucklandEden Park50,000
Palmerston NorthCentral Energy Trust Arena15,000
Western Sydney WanderersParramattaCommBank Stadium30,000
Western UnitedMelbourneAAMI Park30,050
BallaratMars Stadium11,000
HobartNorth Hobart Oval10,000
LauncestonUTAS Stadium19,000

Personnel and kits

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerKit sponsor
Adelaide United Carl Veart Craig Goodwin[6]UCAN[7]Flinders University[8]
Australian Outdoor Living[note 1][9][10]
Brisbane Roar Nick Green (caretaker) Tom Aldred[11]New Balance[12]Cars4Us[13][14]
Central Coast Mariners Nick Montgomery Danny Vukovic[15]Paladin Sports[16]MATE[17]
Macarthur FC Mile Sterjovski Ulises Dávila[18]Kelme[19]ALAND[20]
Melbourne City Rado Vidošić Scott Jamieson[21]Puma[22][23]Etihad Airways[23]
Melbourne Victory Tony Popovic Joshua Brillante[24]Macron[25]Bonza[26]
Newcastle Jets Arthur Papas Carl Jenkinson
Matthew Jurman
Brandon O'Neill[27]
Legend Sportswear[28]Port of Newcastle[29]
Ampcontrol[note 1][28][30]
Perth Glory Ruben Zadkovich Mustafa Amini[31]Macron[32]Evolution Capital[33]
Sydney FC Steve Corica Alex Wilkinson[34]Under Armour[35]The Star[36]
Wellington Phoenix Ufuk Talay Alex Rufer[37]Paladin Sports[38]Oppo[39]
Spark[note 1][39]
Western Sydney Wanderers Marko Rudan Marcelo[40]Kappa[41]Voltaren[42]
Turner Freeman Lawyers[note 1][43]
Western United John Aloisi Alessandro Diamanti[44]Kappa[45]Simonds Homes[45]

Managerial changes

TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyPosition on tableIncoming managerDate of appointment
Macarthur FC Ante MilicicResigned[46]26 April 2022Pre-season Dwight Yorke15 May 2022[47]
Perth Glory Ruben ZadkovichPromoted to full time2 June 2022 Ruben Zadkovich2 June 2022[48]
Melbourne City Patrick KisnorboSigned by Troyes[49]23 November 20221st Rado Vidošić (caretaker)23 November 2022
Macarthur FC Dwight YorkeMutual termination[50]21 January 20236th Mile Sterjovski23 January 2023[51]
Melbourne City Rado Vidošić (caretaker)Promoted to full time6 February 20231st Rado Vidošić6 February 2023[52]
Brisbane Roar Warren MoonSacked[53]20 February 202311th Nick Green (caretaker)21 February 2023[54]

Foreign players

ClubVisa 1Visa 2Visa 3Visa 4Visa 5Non-visa foreigner(s)Former player(s)
Adelaide United Zach Clough Hiroshi Ibusuki Juande Javi López Isaías1
Brisbane Roar Marcel Canadi Jay O'Shea Tom Aldred Stefan Šćepović Rahmat Akbari2
Jack Hingert2
Charlie Austin
Matti Steinmann
Riku Danzaki
Central Coast Mariners Moresche Marco Túlio Béni Nkololo Paul Ayongo James McGarry Dan Hall2
Storm Roux2
Brian Kaltak3
Kelechi John
Macarthur FC Craig Noone Bachana Arabuli Ulises Dávila Filip Kurto Jason Romero3 Mario Williams
Melbourne City Thomas Lam Florin Berenguer Valon Berisha Richard van der Venne Nuno Reis
Melbourne Victory Damien Da Silva Roderick Miranda Nani Cadete Rai Marchán Matthew Bozinovski2
Fernando Romero3
Newcastle Jets Carl Jenkinson Beka Mikeltadze Manabu Saitō Dane Ingham2 Beka Dartsmelia
James McGarry
Perth Glory Darryl Lachman Mark Beevers Aaron McEneff Adrián Sardinero Stefan Colakovski2
Salim Khelifi3
Pacifique Niyongabire2
Ben Azubel
Sydney FC Adam Le Fondre Joe Lolley Jack Rodwell Róbert Mak Diego Caballo
Wellington Phoenix Yan Sasse Bozhidar Kraev David Ball Scott Wootton Oskar Zawada
Western Sydney Wanderers Marcelo Yeni Ngbakoto Romain Amalfitano Morgan Schneiderlin Amor Layouni Adama Traoré1
Miloš Ninković1
Sulejman Krpić
Western United Alessandro Diamanti Tomoki Imai Tongo Doumbia Aleksandar Prijović Léo Lacroix Jamie Young2

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 Wellington Phoenix);[55]
2Australian citizens (or 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)

Regular season

The 2022–23 season sees each team play 26 games, starting on 7 October 2022, and concluding on 30 April 2023, with a mid-season break between 14 November 2022 and 8 December 2022, due to the 2022 FIFA World Cup.[56] This will be followed by a finals series for the top six teams.

League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Melbourne City2616736132+2955Qualification for AFC Champions League group stage and Finals series[a]
2Central Coast Mariners (C)2613585535+2044Qualification for AFC Cup group stage and Finals series
3Adelaide United2611965346+742Qualification for Finals series[b]
4Western Sydney Wanderers2611874327+1641
5Sydney FC26115104039+138
6Wellington Phoenix[c]269893945−635
7Western United2695123447−1332
8Brisbane Roar2679102633−730
9Perth Glory2678113646−1029Qualification for 2023 Australia Cup play-offs
10Newcastle Jets2685133045−1529
11Melbourne Victory2684142934−528
12Macarthur FC2675143148−1726Qualification for AFC Cup group stage and 2023 Australia Cup play-offs[d]
Source: A-Leagues
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Points per game; 5) Least red cards; 6) Least yellow cards; 7) Toss of a coin in an event of a tie of two clubs.
(C) Champions
Notes:

Fixtures and results

Home \ AwayADEBRICCMMACMCYMVCNEWPERSYDWELWSWWUNADEBRICCMMACMCYMVCNEWPERSYDWELWSWWUN
Adelaide United2–11–41–04–23–00–12–11–15–14–40–11–12–0
Brisbane Roar1–11–20–00–20–03–02–13–10–11–11–00–00–2
Central Coast Mariners4–04–12–31–12–11–21–22–11–12–24–24–13–0
Macarthur FC2–03–21–21–10–12–01–02–32–12–22–20–10–1
Melbourne City3–32–11–06–12–11–14–03–22–23–22–14–14–0
Melbourne Victory1–10–12–02–10–24–00–01–23–10–11–20–13–2
Newcastle Jets2–40–11–32–11–22–12–10–23–11–11–34–02–2
Perth Glory4–42–12–22–12–43–12–22–21–11–02–11–01–2
Sydney FC2–21–13–20–32–12–32–04–10–10–13–31–00–4
Wellington Phoenix1–12–22–24–11–31–22–12–21–01–12–33–12–1
Western Sydney Wanderers2–31–10–34–01–12–12–01–00–14–01–02–04–0
Western United2–41–10–31–11–31–01–12–11–30–31–02–31–0
Source: Keepup.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.

AFC Champions League qualification

Due to the re-formatting of the AFC Champions League to have an inter-year schedule from September (northern hemisphere autumn-to-spring) instead of an intra-year schedule (northern hemisphere spring-to-autumn),[58] the qualification for the 2023–24 AFC Champions League was changed. The single qualification spot for this competition goes to whichever of the Premiers for the current season or the previous season accrues the most combined points over both seasons.[59] Melbourne City won the Premiership in both the 2021–22 and 2022–23 seasons,[60] thereby automatically qualifying for the Champions League.

Melbourne Derby pitch invasion

During the Melbourne Derby between Melbourne City FC and Melbourne Victory FC on 17 December 2022 at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, the match was abandoned in the 22nd minute after several incidents of hooliganism took place both on and off the field. Throughout the match, supporters of both teams both ignited and threw flares.

In the 20th minute, the match was interrupted due to flares being ignited and thrown onto the pitch, two of which had been thrown by Melbourne Victory supporters. Conflict arose when Melbourne City goalkeeper Tom Glover, who was defending the goal in front of the Melbourne Victory supporters end, picked up and threw the flares away from the pitch, the second of which was thrown into the crowd of Victory supporters. This sparked a pitch invasion by between 100 and 200 spectators, who proceeded to attack Glover and match referee Alex King, both of whom sustained minor injuries. The match was abandoned as a result.

On 23 December, Football Australia handed down interim sanctions on both clubs while a full investigation was being conducted. Both teams had their active supporter bays closed, with Melbourne Victory further sanctioned with supporter restrictions: travelling support was banned for away games, while home games were restricted to only valid club members.

The match was resumed on 5 April 2023 from the 21st minute, with the score resuming at 1–0 to Melbourne City.[61] The match ended in a 2-1 win to Melbourne City, with Aiden O'Neill and Nishan Velupillay scoring for the Victory.

Finals series

Format

The finals series was held in mostly the same format as the previous year, run over three weeks, and involving the top six teams from the regular season. In the first week of fixtures, the third-through-sixth ranked teams played a single-elimination match, with the two winners of those matches joining the first and second ranked teams in two-legged semi-final ties. The two winners of those matches met in the Grand Final.

On 12 December 2022, the Australian Professional Leagues announced that the 2023 A-League Men Grand Final would be the first of three successive Grand Finals hosted in Sydney, regardless of which two teams earned the right to play in the final.[62] The move received a large amount of backlash from supporters of all 12 clubs,[63][64] and was overturned in the following season.

Bracket

Elimination-finalsSemi-finalsGrand Final
4Western Sydney Wanderers1
5Sydney FC25Sydney FC101
1Melbourne City145
1Melbourne City1
3Adelaide United22Central Coast Mariners6
6Wellington Phoenix03Adelaide United101
2Central Coast Mariners224

Elimination-finals

Adelaide United2–0Wellington Phoenix
  • Goodwin 19', 67' (pen.)
Report
Attendance: 10,231

Semi-finals

Summary

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Melbourne City5–1Sydney FC1–14–0
Central Coast Mariners4–1Adelaide United2–12–0

Matches

Sydney FC1–1Melbourne City
Report
Attendance: 15,322
Referee: Adam Kersey

Melbourne City won 5–1 on aggregate.


Central Coast Mariners won 4–1 on aggregate.

Grand Final

Melbourne City1–6Central Coast Mariners
Report
Attendance: 26,523
Referee: Chris Beath

Regular season statistics

Top scorers

As of 29 April 2023
RankPlayerClubGoals[65]
1 Jamie MaclarenMelbourne City24
2 Jason CummingsCentral Coast Mariners16
3 Oskar ZawadaWellington Phoenix15
4 Brandon BorelloWestern Sydney Wanderers13
5 Craig GoodwinAdelaide United12
6 Adam Le FondreSydney FC10
7 Róbert MakSydney FC9
Jay O'SheaBrisbane Roar
Marco TilioMelbourne City
Marco TúlioCentral Coast Mariners


Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateRef.
Richard van der VenneMelbourne CityMacarthur FC6–1 (H)4 February 2023[66]
Jamie MaclarenMelbourne CityWestern United3–1 (A)22 April 2023[67]
Jason CummingsCentral Coast MarinersMelbourne City6–1 (N)3 June 2023[68]
Key
(A)Away team
(H)Home team
(N)Neutral venue

Clean sheets

As of 29 April 2023
RankPlayerClubClean sheets[69]
1 Lawrence ThomasWestern Sydney Wanderers10
2 Jordan HolmesBrisbane Roar7
3 Tom GloverMelbourne City6
4 Paul IzzoMelbourne Victory5
Filip KurtoMacarthur FC
Andrew RedmayneSydney FC
Oliver SailWellington Phoenix
8 Danny VukovicCentral Coast Mariners4
Jamie YoungWestern United
10 Cameron CookPerth Glory3
Jack DuncanNewcastle Jets
Joe GauciAdelaide United

Awards

Club awards

ClubPlayerRef.
Adelaide United Craig Goodwin[70]
Brisbane Roar Tom Aldred[71]
Central Coast Mariners Josh Nisbet[72]
Macarthur FC Ivan Vujica[73]
Melbourne City Mathew Leckie[74]
Melbourne Victory Damien Da Silva[75]
Newcastle Jets Dane Ingham[76]
Perth Glory Mark Beevers[77]
Sydney FC Róbert Mak[78]
Wellington Phoenix Oskar Zawada[79]
Western Sydney Wanderers Brandon Borrello[80]
Western United Josh Risdon[81]

Annual awards

The following end of the season awards were announced at the 2022–23 Dolan Warren Awards night that took place at The Star Casino on 1 June 2023.[82]

AwardWinnerClub
Johnny Warren Medal Craig GoodwinAdelaide United
Young Footballer of the Year Jordan BosMelbourne City
Golden Boot Award Jamie MaclarenMelbourne City
Goalkeeper of the Year Lawrence ThomasWestern Sydney Wanderers
Coach of the Year Carl VeartAdelaide United
Goal of the Year Giordano ColliPerth Glory
Fair Play AwardBrisbane Roar
Referee of the Year Chris Beath

Team of the season

Goalkeeper[83]DefendersMidfieldersForwardsSubstitutes
Joe Gauci (Adelaide United) Marcelo (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Brian Kaltak (Central Coast Mariners)
Jordan Bos (Melbourne City)
Aiden O'Neill (Melbourne City)
Josh Nisbet (Central Coast Mariners)
Calem Nieuwenhof (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Mathew Leckie (Melbourne City)
Brandon Borrello (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Jamie Maclaren (Melbourne City)
Craig Goodwin (Adelaide United)
Lawrence Thomas (Western Sydney Wanderers)
Curtis Good (Melbourne City)
Nectarios Triantis (Central Coast Mariners)
Jay O'Shea (Brisbane Roar)
Marco Túlio (Central Coast Mariners)
Jason Cummings (Central Coast Mariners)
Marco Tilio (Melbourne City)

See also

Notes

References