Australia Cup
The Australia Cup, formerly called the FFA Cup,[1] is an Australian soccer knockout cup competition held every year. It is organised by Football Australia.
Founded | 24 February 2014 |
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Number of teams | 778 (in 2023) |
Qualifier for | AFC Cup |
Current champions | Sydney FC (2nd title) |
Most successful club(s) | Adelaide United (3 titles) |
Television broadcasters |
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Website | Australia Cup |
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It is different to the national league competition, the A-League Men, which also happens every year. The Australia Cup has more teams, and it is the only time that A-League clubs can play official matches against lower-ranked clubs, because the Australian soccer league system does not have relegation.
Since 2021, the winner of the Australia Cup qualifies for one of the play-off spots for the next years' AFC club competitions (the AFC Champions League for 2022, the AFC Cup for 2023-24 and the AFC Champions League 2 for 2024-24 onwards), unless Wellington Phoenix are the winner. The reason Wellington Phoenix cannot qualify for any of these competitions is because the club is based in New Zealand, which is a member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), while Australia is a member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).
The most successful team at the Australia Cup is Adelaide United. The current champions are Sydney FC, who defeated Brisbane Roar in the 2023 final.
Format
The Australia Cup is a 32-team knockout competition. Professional, semi-professional and even community clubs are all able to qualify.
Of the 32 qualifying slots, 10 are given to the 12 A-League Men clubs. The rest are given to clubs who play on the state and territory level. New South Wales is given six slots (four for Football NSW clubs and two for Northern NSW Football clubs, because the state has two federations), while Victoria gets five, Queensland gets four, Western Australia and South Australia get two each and Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory each get one.
2023
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2022
A-League clubs | |||
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2021
A-League clubs | |||
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East Zone | North Zone | South Zone | West Zone |
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2020
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 edition of the tournament was cancelled.
2019
A-League clubs | |||
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Member federation clubs | |||
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2018
A-League clubs | |||
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2017
A-League clubs | |||
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2016
A-League clubs | |||
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Member federation clubs | |||
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2015
A-League clubs | |||
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2014
A-League clubs | |||
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Women's Australia Cup
In March 2023, Football Australia announced that they would be launching a women's version of the Australia Cup, the Women's Australia Cup, in 2024. It will be the first women's competition of its kind in Australia and will allow A-League Women clubs to play official matches against lower-ranked women's clubs. The winner will have a chance to qualify for the AFC Women's Champions League.[2]
References
- "'Australia Cup' name to return to Australia's largest national knockout football competition". Football Australia. 5 February 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
- Lewis, Samantha. "Football Australia to launch Women's Australia Cup in 2024 as part of Women's World Cup legacy". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 7 October 2023.