Melbourne Derby (A-Leagues)
Location | Melbourne |
---|---|
Teams | Melbourne City Melbourne Victory |
First meeting | A-League Men City 2–1 Victory |
Latest meeting | 22 October 2022 A-League Men Victory 0–2 City |
Next meeting | 17 December 2022 A-League Men City v Victory |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 39 |
Most wins | Both teams (14) |
Top scorer | Jamie Maclaren (10) |
Largest victory | City 7–0 Victory (17 April 2021) |
The Melbourne Derby is an intra-city local derby in Australia's premier soccer competition, the A-League Men. It is contested between the first two Melbourne teams playing in the competition, Melbourne City and Melbourne Victory, and is the A-League Men's first intra-city derby.
History
With the introduction of Melbourne Heart (who would later be known as Melbourne City) to the A-League Men at the start of the 2010–11 season, (the Victory having joined the league at inception), the first derby was held on 8 October 2010 at AAMI Park. The match was originally scheduled for 2 October 2010. However, due to the 2010 AFL Grand Final Replay occurring on the same day, the match was postponed.[1]
Melbourne City won the inaugural derby 2–1, with goals from Alex Terra and John Aloisi. Robbie Kruse scored for Victory. Aziz Behich was sent off late in the second half, but Heart were able to hold on and secure the win. Although the game was an official sell out, only 25,897 fans turned up, well short of AAMI Park's official capacity of 30,050. The Victory hosted their first home derby on 22 January at Docklands Stadium, with the match ending in a 2–2 draw.[2] The match was marred by an unacceptable tackle by Kevin Muscat on Adrian Zahra, which earned the Victory captain his second straight red card and a subsequent eight-match ban, ending not only his season, but his A-League career.[3]
The first scoreless draw in the derby occurred in the third round of 2011–12 season, whilst a record crowd at AAMI Park was in attendance for the second derby of the season. This derby was arguably one of the best in the rivalry's brief existence, with Heart midfielder Matt Thompson scoring twice in a matter of minutes late in the first half to put Heart in the lead 2–1, before City substitute Alex Terra scored controversially after appearing to handball preceding his goal in the second half. City would win the match 3–2.[4] The intense rivalry and passion between both sets of supporters occasionally boiled over, as occurred in February 2011 when four Melbourne City supporters were charged with "conspiracy to falsely imprison a [Victory supporter] ".[5]
In the 2014–15 season, City underwent a takeover by the City Football Group. Melbourne City had their first derby win under the new management that season, winning the pre-Christmas derby 1–0 with Erik Paartalu scoring one of the latest winners in a derby.[6] Victory and City later met in the Finals Series for the first time, in front of a derby record attendance of 50,873 at Etihad Stadium. Melbourne Victory won the Semi Final convincingly with a score of 3–0, with goals from Besart Berisha, Kosta Barbarouses and Archie Thompson.[7] The third derby of the 2015–16 season was marred by a series of flares let off both outside AAMI Park before the match and inside the arena during the match by some Melbourne Victory supporters. The poor behaviour from Victory fans also extended to "an alleged assault on TV news personnel outside the stadium, throwing missiles at Melbourne City player Thomas Sørensen and a Victoria Police officer, and altercations with police after the match".[8] Football Federation Australia subsequently issued Melbourne Victory a $50,000 club fine and a suspended three competition points deduction.[8] On the field, the match was lauded as one of the most "captivating" derbies of the rivalry and featured an incredible passage of play for a goal from City striker Bruno Fornaroli.[9] In Round 2 of the 2016–17 season, City recorded just their second ever derby win at Etihad Stadium, comfortably defeating Victory 4–1. The match featured the A-League Men debut of Socceroos all-time leading goal scorer Tim Cahill for City, who scored an incredible long-range goal to open City's account.[10] The February 2017 derby was a spiteful and controversial affair. Most notably City goalkeeper Dean Bouzanis, was suspended and forced to undergo an education course after ethnically slurring Victory striker Besart Berisha during the late stages of Victory's 2–1 win.[11] Tim Cahill was also red carded before even being entering the field of play, and Victory held on to record a stunning come from behind win.[12][13]
The two rivals have been drawn for an FFA Cup derby only once; in 2016 at the semi-final stage of the tournament. Melbourne City advanced to the Final, knocking out Victory 2–0 in what was one of the most physically confrontational clashes between the two rivals. The game was not without controversy, with Melbourne City's first goal of the match allowed to stand, despite the fact that Tim Cahill had seemingly interfered with Lawrence Thomas's line of sight whilst in an offside position.[14][15]
In the nine matches played from the start of the 2017–18 season to the end of the 2019/20 season, the teams shared three wins, three draws and three losses respectively, indicating a period of relative evenness between the rivals. This changed in the first two derbies of the 2020–21 season, when City claimed historic record wins in the fixture's history, defeating Victory firstly by six goals to nil in March 2021 and then by seven goals to nil the following month.[16] Jamie Maclaren became the first player to score more than three goals in a derby in the latter game and the second player in league history to score five goals in a match, after Archie Thompson scored five goals in the 2007 A-League Grand Final.[17] The results, which coincided with a torrid run of form for the Victory that left them in last place on the ladder,[18] resulted in the sacking of head coach Grant Brebner on 17 April 2021.[19]
Matches
2010–2020
Season | Derby |
Comp* | Date |
Home team |
Score |
Away team |
Goals (home) |
Goals (away) |
Venue |
Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 1 | RS | 8 October 2010 | Heart | 2–1 | Victory | Aloisi (10), Terra (56) | Kruse (35) | AAMI | 25,897 |
2 | RS | 11 December 2010 | Heart | 1–3 | Victory | Sibon (17) | Kruse (12, 28), Srhoj (54 o.g.) | AAMI | 23,059 | |
3 | RS | 22 January 2011 | Victory | 2–2 | Heart | Allsopp (11), Hernández (30) | Aloisi (45+2, 51) | Etihad | 32,231 | |
2011–12 | 4 | RS | 22 October 2011 | Victory | 0–0 | Heart | – | – | Etihad | 39,309 |
5 | RS | 23 December 2011 | Heart | 3–2 | Victory | Thompson (37, 39), Terra (62) | Thompson (21), Hernández (90+2) | AAMI | 26,579 | |
6 | RS | 4 February 2012 | Heart | 0–0 | Victory | – | – | AAMI | 26,396 | |
2012–13 | 7 | RS | 5 October 2012 | Victory | 1–2 | Heart | Rojas (24) | Williams (14), Macallister (45+2) | Etihad | 42,032 |
8 | RS | 22 December 2012 | Heart | 1–2 | Victory | Fred (81) | Rojas (67), Thompson (90+2) | AAMI | 26,457 | |
9 | RS | 2 February 2013 | Victory | 2–1 | Heart | Thompson (29), Milligan (55) | Williams (72) | Etihad | 41,203 | |
2013–14 | 10 | RS | 12 October 2013 | Victory | 0–0 | Heart | – | – | Etihad | 45,202 |
11 | RS | 21 December 2013 | Heart | 1–3 | Victory | Kalmar (80) | Nichols (28, 63), Troisi (60) | AAMI | 26,491 | |
12 | RS | 1 March 2014 | Heart | 4–0 | Victory | Engelaar (8), Dugandzic (15) Williams (83) Kewell (86) | – | AAMI | 25,546 | |
2014–15 | 13 | RS | 25 October 2014 | Victory | 5–2 | City | Thompson (23, 87), Berisha (45+1, 46, 67) | Wielaert (13), Hoffman (26) | Etihad | 43,729 |
14 | RS | 20 December 2014 | City | 1–0 | Victory | Paartalu (90) | – | AAMI | 26,372 | |
15 | RS | 7 February 2015 | Victory | 3–0 | City | Berisha (10), Barbarouses (53), Ben Khalfallah (62) | – | Etihad | 40,042 | |
16 | FS | 8 May 2015 | Victory | 3–0 | City | Berisha (18), Barbarouses (30), Thompson (87) | – | Etihad | 50,873 | |
2015–16 | 17 | RS | 17 October 2015 | Victory | 3–2 | City | Ben Khalfallah (23), Barbarouses (57), Berisha (90) | Fornaroli (68), Mauk (71) | Etihad | 40,217 |
18 | RS | 19 December 2015 | City | 2–1 | Victory | Mauk (20), Retre (30) | Berisha (45) | AAMI | 23,572 | |
19 | RS | 13 February 2016 | City | 2–2 | Victory | Fornaroli (22, 31) | Ben Khalfallah (29), Finkler (47) | AAMI | 25,738 | |
2016–17 | 20 | RS | 15 October 2016 | Victory | 1–4 | City | Rojas (62) | Cahill (27), Fornaroli (31), Brattan (52), Brandán (62) | Etihad | 43,188 |
21 | CUP | 25 October 2016 | Victory | 0–2 | City | – | Brattan (9), Brandán (77) | AAMI | 15,791 | |
22 | RS | 17 December 2016 | City | 1–2 | Victory | Cahill (16) | Rojas (24) Berisha (78) | AAMI | 24,706 | |
23 | RS | 4 February 2017 | Victory | 2–1 | City | Berisha (84), Muscat (86 o.g.) | Baró (70 o.g.) | Etihad | 35,426 | |
2017–18 | 24 | RS | 14 October 2017 | Victory | 1–2 | City | George (55) | Budzinski (45+3), Kamau (64) | Etihad | 35,792 |
25 | RS | 23 December 2017 | City | 0–1 | Victory | – | Milligan (95 pen.) | AAMI | 22,515 | |
26 | RS | 2 March 2018 | City | 1–2 | Victory | Fornaroli (54 pen.) | Barbarouses (12), George (62) | AAMI | 20,083 | |
2018–19 | 27 | RS | 20 October 2018 | Victory | 1–2 | City | Honda (28) | de Laet (40), McGree (70) | Marvel | 40,505 |
28 | RS | 22 December 2018 | City | 1–1 | Victory | Vidošić (90+2) | Toivonen (55) | AAMI | 24,306 | |
29 | RS | 23 February 2019 | Victory | 1–1 | City | Barbarouses (50) | Maclaren (16 pen.) | Marvel | 32,431 | |
2019–20 | 30 | RS | 12 October 2019 | Victory | 0–0 | City | – | – | Marvel | 33,523 |
31 | RS | 21 December 2019 | City | 1–2 | Victory | Delbridge (56) | Toivonen (15, 41) | AAMI | 17,083 | |
32 | RS | 7 February 2020 | City | 2–1 | Victory | Berenguer (8), Maclaren (71) | Toivonen (78) | AAMI | 16,872 | |
* RS: A-League regular season, FS: A-League finals series, GF: A-League grand final, CUP: FFA Cup, AAMI: Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Etihad/Marvel: Docklands Stadium Melbourne City were known as Melbourne Heart from 2010 until 2014 |
2021–present
Season | Derby |
Comp* | Date |
Home team |
Score |
Away team |
Goals (home) |
Goals (away) |
Venue |
Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020–21 | 33 | RS | 6 March 2021 | Victory | 0–6 | City | – | Maclaren (34), Berenguer (52), Griffiths (56), Metcalfe (74, 77), Colakovski (90+3) | Marvel | 11,467[a] |
34 | RS | 17 April 2021 | City | 7–0 | Victory | Nabbout (11), Maclaren (34 pen., 64, 75 pen., 84, 85), Luna (87) | – | AAMI | 14,031[b] | |
35 | RS | 6 June 2021 | Victory | 1–1 | City | Brooks (90+5) | Ansell (54 o.g.) | AAMI | 0 (BCD) | |
2021–22 | 36 | RS | 18 December 2021 | City | 2–2 | Victory | Maclaren (60), Nabbout (63) | Margiotta (12), D'Agostino (81) | AAMI | 19,640 |
37 | RS | 19 March 2022 | City | 1–1 | Victory | Good (45) | Rojas (19) | AAMI | 18,080 | |
38 | RS | 9 April 2022 | Victory | 3–0 | City | Brimmer (7 pen.), Rojas (14, 27) | – | AAMI | 17,754 | |
2022–23 | 39 | RS | 22 October 2022 | Victory | 0–2 | City | – | Maclaren (17 pen.), Cadete (19 o.g.) | AAMI | 23,489 |
40 | 17 December 2022 | City | – | Victory | AAMI | |||||
41 | 18 February 2023 | Victory | – | City | AAMI | |||||
* RS: A-League (Men) regular season, FS: A-League (Men) finals series, GF: A-League (Men) grand final, CUP: FFA Cup, AAMI: Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Marvel: Docklands Stadium |
Statistics
- As of 22 November 2022
Competition | Matches | City wins | Draws | Victory wins | City goals | Victory goals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
League regular season | 37 | 13 | 11 | 13 | 61 | 52 |
League finals series | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
Australia Cup | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Total | 39 | 14 | 11 | 14 | 63 | 55 |
Top goalscorers
- As of 22 October 2022
Player | Club | Goals |
---|---|---|
Jamie Maclaren | Melbourne City | 10 |
Besart Berisha | Melbourne Victory | 9 |
Marco Rojas | Melbourne Victory | 7 |
Archie Thompson | Melbourne Victory | 6 |
Kosta Barbarouses | Melbourne Victory | 5 |
Bruno Fornaroli | Melbourne City | 4 |
Ola Toivonen | Melbourne Victory | |
John Aloisi | Melbourne City | 3 |
Fahid Ben Khalfallah | Melbourne Victory | |
Robbie Kruse | Melbourne Victory | |
David Williams | Melbourne City |
- Players in bold are still active for their club.
Records
- Most wins: Both teams (14)
- Biggest win: Melbourne City 7–0 Melbourne Victory (17 April 2021)
- Most consecutive wins: 3, Melbourne Victory (7 February 2015 – 17 October 2015), Melbourne City (7 February 2020 – 17 April 2021)
- Most consecutive matches undefeated: 6, Melbourne City (7 February 2020 – 19 March 2022)
- Most consecutive games without a draw: 8, (21 December 2013 – 19 December 2015, 15 October 2016 – 20 October 2018)
- Most consecutive draws: 3, (22 December 2018 – 21 December 2019, 6 June 2021 – 19 March 2022)
- Highest goalscorer: 10, Jamie Maclaren
- Highest goalscorer in one match: 5, Jamie Maclaren (17 April 2021)
- Player with most consecutive matches scored: 4, Besart Berisha (7 February 2015 – 19 December 2015)
- Highest attendance: 50,873 (8 May 2015)
- Lowest attendance (excluding behind closed doors): 11,467 (6 March 2021)
Honours
- As of 28 May 2022
Competition | Melbourne City | Melbourne Victory |
---|---|---|
A-League Men Premiership | 2 | 3 |
A-League Men Championship | 1 | 4 |
Australia Cup | 1 | 2 |
Total | 4 | 9 |
Players who played for both clubs
- Correct as of 5 May 2022
Player | Melbourne City career | Melbourne Victory career | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Span | League apps |
League goals |
Span | League apps |
League goals | |
Aziz Behich | 2010–2014 | 89 | 2 | 2009–2010 | 5 | 0 |
Oliver Bozanic | 2018 | 9 | 0 | 2015–2017 | 48 | 5 |
Joshua Brillante | 2019–2020 | 28 | 1 | 2021–present | 23 | 2 |
Mate Dugandžić | 2011–2015 | 75 | 13 | 2009–2011 | 37 | 7 |
Fred | 2011–2013 | 38 | 3 | 2006–2007 | 20 | 4 |
Scott Galloway | 2019–present | 58 | 4 | 2013–2016 | 54 | 1 |
Daniel Georgievski | 2021 | 3 | 0 | 2014–2017 | 67 | 3 |
Brendan Hamill | 2010–2012 | 35 | 1 | 2021–present | 17 | 2 |
Harry Kewell | 2013–2014 | 16 | 2 | 2011–2012 | 25 | 8 |
Anthony Lesiotis | 2018–2019, 2021–present | 3 | 0 | 2019–2020 | 23 | 0 |
Andrew Nabbout | 2021–present | 41 | 8 | 2012–2015, 2019–2020 | 62 | 13 |
Kristian Sarkies | 2010–2012 | 11 | 2 | 2005–2007 | 35 | 3 |
Tando Velaphi | 2013–2015 | 22 | 0 | 2011–2013 | 3 | 0 |
Bruno Fornaroli | 2015–2019 | 70 | 48 | 2022– | 1 | 1 |
See also
Notes
- ^ Capacity of the stadium was reduced by 50% due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- ^ Capacity of the stadium was reduced by 25% due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
References
- ^ "First Melbourne derby delayed". The Age. 27 September 2010.
- ^ "Victory, Heart draw first derby at Docklands Stadium". Archived from the original on 19 January 2011. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
- ^ "Kevin Muscat banned for eight games for tackle on Adrian Zahra". Herald-Sun. 28 January 2011. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
- ^ "Melbourne Heart defeat Melbourne Victory 3–2 in cracking A-League Men derby at AAMI Park". Fox Sports News. 23 December 2011.
- ^ "A-League: Melbourne derby rivalry turns nasty". Herald Sun. 26 February 2011.
- ^ "Melbourne City 1–0 Melbourne Victory: Paartalu nets dramatic winner". Goal.com. 20 December 2014.
- ^ Muscat hails 'deserved' Victory triumph Official FFA Match Report, 9 May 2015
- ^ a b "Melbourne Victory accepts $50,000 fine and suspended points deduction handed down by FFA". ABC News. 17 February 2016.
- ^ "A-League Melbourne derby: Bruno Fornaroli's Magic lights up game as 10-man City hold on for draw". The Sydney Morning Herald. 13 February 2016.
- ^ "Melbourne Victory's noisy neighbours take over the party and stake a claim to be top dogs". Fairfax Media. 16 October 2016.
- ^ "Melbourne Derby: Dean Bouzanis apologises for Besart Berisha gypsy slur". ABC News. 5 February 2017.
- ^ "Incredible derby finale as Victory snatch late win over City". The Age.
- ^ "Tim Cahill Red Card in Melbourne Derby before entering pitch". YouTube. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
- ^ "Luke Brattan awarded goal from 25m shot for City to lead despite Tim Cahill drifting into off-side spot". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
- ^ Lynch, Michael. "'Two sets of rules': Melbourne Victory coach fuming at referee after loss to City". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
- ^ Zac Rayson (7 March 2021). "'Six and out': Fan fury as derby 'humiliation' caps three-year collapse of A-League giants". Fox Sports.
- ^ Nick D'Urbano (17 April 2021). "City equal record for biggest ever A-League Men win with 7–0 local derby thrashing". news.com.au.
- ^ Simon Smale (7 March 2021). "Melbourne Victory's off-field woes laid bare after record derby defeat against Melbourne City". ABC News.
- ^ "Victory coach Brebner sacked after seven-goal derby drubbing". SBS Sport. 17 April 2021.