Sydney FC Youth

(Redirected from Sydney FC Reserves)

Sydney Football Club Youth is the youth system of Sydney Football Club based in Moore Park, Sydney, Australia. The team referred to as Sydney Youth play in the Y-League (November to February) and consists of u23 players, the highest level of youth soccer in Australia. The club also competes in the National Premier Leagues NSW (March to August), the top competition of Football in NSW, however this team is known as Sydney U21, and is not to be confused with Sydney Youth which is a completely different team, involving different team selection and age group.

Sydney FC Youth
Full nameSydney Football Club Youth
Nickname(s)Sky Blues
Founded2008
GroundLambert Park (Y-League)
Rockdale Ilinden Sports Centre (NPL)
ChairmanScott Barlow
Youth ManagerJim van Weeren
LeagueNational Premier Leagues NSW
A-League Youth
20236th of 16
WebsiteClub website

The youth setup also features under-20s and under-18s teams that both play in the National Premier Leagues NSW in their age group.

Youth team history

Early years (2008–2009)

The youth team was founded in 2008, as a Sydney FC representative team for the National Youth League (NYL) competition. The team consisted of twelve contracted youth positions with four overage players (from the senior squad) allowed to participate in games. The side had initially contracted Football Superstar winner, Adam Hett, but had to be replaced for the campaign due to a season ending knee injury.[1] In its first season Sydney FC Youth won the 2008–09 NYL Championship, with former Socceroo & NSL stalwart, Steve O'Connor as the coach. Throughout the season the side dominated many games and finished the regular season on top of the ladder with 13 wins, 2 draws, 3 losses and 6 points clear of second-placed Adelaide United Youth. The pair then went straight to a Grand Final match, of which Sydney FC Youth emphatically took out the tournament with a 2–0 victory at Hindmarsh Stadium, Adelaide.[2] The goalscorers were Ibrahim Haydar and Robbie Mileski. Many of the Sydney FC Youth players in the Grand Final went on to have success for the senior squad or found a home elsewhere. They included Vedran Janjetovic, Rhyan Grant, Matt Jurman, Antony Golec and Brendan Gan. Sydney FC Youth were unable to follow it up the following year, finishing fifth on the ladder and missing out on the finals series due to goal difference (behind Gold Coast United FC Youth, who went on to win the Championship).

Managers success (2009–2015)

After the second season, club legend Steve Corica replaced Steve O'Connor as head coach. The team had mixed success finishing fourth on the standings with 30 points behind Gold Coast United FC Youth on 41 points. The competition did not have a finals series for the first time. A few players from this cohort went on to play for the first team, including Dimitri Petratos, Nathan Sherlock, Joel Chianese and Blake Powell.[3] To take up a more senior assistant role with the first team, Corica relinquished the head coach position for the 2011–12 season. He was replaced by Ian Crook. Again Sydney FC Youth were mid-table, finishing sixth. Crook himself went on to bigger things the following year, taking over head coach duties for the first team. Brian Dene came in as coach of the Youth team. The season became Sydney FC Youth's worst performance in the team's five-year history, finishing ninth. With the first team also struggling with performance and injuries, many of the Youth team played up in the first's team, which did not help the cause. Some of these players included Christopher Naumoff, Hagi Gligor, Peter Triantis and Aaron Calver.[4] Steve Corica then returned as head coach for Sydney FC Youth with immediate success. The side won the Foxtel National Youth League Championship for the 2013–14 season. Unable to repeat this performance the following year, Corica again relinquished his duties as head coach to focus on his role within the senior squad.

Entry into National Premier Leagues (2014–present)

In early 2015, it was confirmed that Sydney FC would compete in the NPL NSW 2 competition from the 2016 season onwards.[5] This followed a competition review by Football NSW that recommended the youth teams of Sydney FC, Western Sydney Wanderers and Central Coast Mariners join the National Premier Leagues. Along with a team playing first grade, an under-20 and under-18 team would also compete in their appropriate age groups. The team forms the top level of the Sydney FC academy, unveiled in January 2016.[6] Rob Stanton took over the reins as head coach due to the heavily increased workload of the new competition.[7][8] In the new National Youth League format with a shortened season, Sydney FC Youth started out of the block early recording three consecutive wins. Through the ten round campaign, the team lost only two games, both against Newcastle Jets Youth. The team sat two points clear of Newcastle to end the regular season in first place for Conference B. As Conference B winners, Sydney FC Youth played Adelaide United Youth for the premiership in a curtain raiser to A-League Round 16 match between Central Coast Mariners and Western Sydney Wanderers on 23 January 2016. Sydney FC Youth were convincing winners, taking out the premiership with a scoreline of 5–2.

Many influential faces returned for the debut of the team in the National Premier Leagues setup for Sydney U21. These included, Spyrakis, Timotheou, Araujo, Burgess, Lokolingoy and Antoniou. Notable exceptions included Anthony Bouzanis, Aaron Calver and George Blackwood as they had also signed senior contracts and were ineligible for the tournament. The team's debut match did not go according to plan, losing to Mounties FC 2–0 at home (Lambert Park).[9] The side then went on a thrilling ten-game winning streak, that included some big wins (7–0 against Macarthur Rams[10] and 7–4 against Bankstown Berries).[11] The streak ended in somewhat unfortunate circumstances against Marconi Stallions as Sydney FC U21, after leading 1–0, allowed in two goals in last five minutes of the Round 12 clash to lose 2–1. The following game saw another defeat for the Sky Blues, suffering defeat in the "mini derby" against rivals Western Sydney Wanderers U21. A win, then a draw to Mounties FC in the Round 14 make-up game, then two more losses, meant Sydney FC U21 only picked up four points out of a possible 24, with title hopes looking shaky. However, Sydney FC U21 would get back on track with wins against Bankstown City Lions FC and St George FC. Sydney FC U21 remained undefeated in the final four rounds of the regular season to win the Premiers Plate, two points ahead of Western Sydney Wanderers U21. In fact, the final day was a very tense affair, as the two clubs were matched up against each other. The Wanderers, who were trailing by 3 points and −10 points differential needed a very large win to leap-frog the Sky Blues. However, the sides played out a 4–all draw at Popondetta Park and Sydney FC U21 were declared premiers.

Under-23s current squad

These players can also play with the senior squad and are all Young Professionals.

As of 13 February 2024

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
FW  AUSJoe Lacey
DF  AUSNoah Matie
DF  AUSHayden Matthews
MF  AUSLachie Middleton
DF  AUSRichard Nkomo
GK  AUSAdam Pavlesic
FW  AUSTiago Quintal
MF  AUSDylan Rose
MF  AUSMatthew Scarcella
DF  AUSTyler Williams

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Under-20s current squad

These players can also play with the senior squad and the Under-23s.

Second years

As of 15 March 2020[12]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
29DF  AUSRocco Fragale
30GK  AUSDavid Malishev
42DF  AUSAidan Simmons
43MF  AUSStevan Stanic-Floody
44DF  AUSJoseph Roddy
54MF  AUSNikola Skataric
69MF  AUSJoseph Calusic

First years

As of 15 March 2020

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
53FW  AUSAndrew Vlahadamis
54MF  AUSNikola Skataric
55DF  AUSAiden Mostofi
58MF  AUSJake Girdwood-Reich
60GK  AUSBeau Ward
62FW  AUSOliver Burden
68MF  AUSAdrian Segecic
69MF  AUSJoseph Calusic

Schoolboys

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
 AUSJake Girdwood-Reich
 AUSJoseph Clausic
 AUSKyle Reilly Shaw
 AUSLuke Nieuwenhof
 AUSMax Vartuli
 AUSMorrie Kamara
 AUSOliver Burden
 AUSPaolo Pusateri
 AUSRamiro Soto
 AUSRawley St John
 AUSRick Aguilar
 AUSSteven Kriezis

Stadium

The team's home grounds for NYL matches are Leichhardt Oval and Netstrata Jubilee Stadium.[13] The team’s two home ground is Valentine Sports Park in the suburb of Glenwood and Rockdale Ilinden Sports Centre for NPL matches. The teams also shares Sydney FC's club's training base at Macquarie University in North Ryde. Also the team’s previous play out Lambert Park in the suburb of Leichhardt for NPL matches.

Club officials

Current staff

As of 4 July 2019
Head CoachAssistant
YouthJim van WeerenHoward Fondyke
Under 20sShane Smeltz
Technical Director – YouthKelly Cross

First team coaches (NPL/NYL)

NamePeriodSeasonsHonours
Steve O'Connor2008–20102 Y-League2008–09 NYL Premiers and Champions
Steve Corica2010–20111 Y-League
Ian Crook2011–20121 Y-League
Brian Dene2012–20131 Y-League
Steve Corica2013–20152 Y-League2013–14 NYL Champions
Robert Stanton2015–20183 Y-League, 2 NPL2015–16 NYL Premiers and Champions
2016 NPL NSW 2 Premiers and Champions
2016–17 NYL Premiers
Giancarlo Italiano2018–20191 Y-League
Jim Van Weeren2019–present1 NPL

Seasons

As of 30 December 2020
SeasonNYL / NPL NSWInternationalTop scorer1POTYRising
DivPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPositionFinalsPlayer(s)Goals
2008–09NYL1813234322+21411stWSean Rooney9
2009–10NYL2411674333+10395thKerem Bulut13
2010–11NYL209383631+5304thN/AKofi Danning8
2011–12NYL187474031+9256thN/AMitchell Mallia14Hagi Gligor
2012–13NYL186394146-5219thN/A3rdAlec Urosevski12Peter Triantis
2013–14NYL1813234929+20411stN/A2ndMitchell Mallia13Chris Naumoff
2014–15NYL188464027+13284thN/A5thGeorge Blackwood6George Blackwood
2015–16NYL86022111+10181stWMax Burgess4Daniel Araujo
NPL22616378441+43511stWCharles Lokolingoy27[14]
2016–17NYL85122315+8161stRUCharles Lokolingoy6Andrea Agamemnos
NPL12262143452-1814[a]11thCharles Lokolingoy7[15]
2017–18NYL8521189+9172ndJeremy Cox6Jeremy CoxMarco Tilio
NPL12244142747-201612thJeremy Cox10[16]
2018–19NYL8503158+7152ndMarco Tilio4Luke IvanovicRyan Teague
NPL12263133352-192111thBenjamin Koop8[17]
2019–20NYL85303715+22181stWMarco Tilio9[18]Joel KingAdam Pavlesic
NPL1116142619+7195thPatrick Wood11[19]
2021NPL117[b]3592944–151412thAdrian Segecic4[20]Patrick WoodAdrian Segecic
2022NPL1228865345+8327thJaiden Kucharski18[21]Patrick YazbekJake Girdwood-Reich
1 Top scorer only includes goals scored from league matches (National Youth League and NYL Finals or National Premier Leagues).

Honours

Domestic

Youth
Academy

International

Youth
Under-20s

Other

Youth
Individual

See also

References