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2017–18 A-League

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A-League
Season2017–18
Dates6 October 2017 – 5 May 2018
ChampionsMelbourne Victory (4th title)
PremiersSydney FC (3rd title)
Champions LeagueSydney FC
Melbourne Victory
Newcastle Jets
Matches played135
Goals scored398 (2.95 per match)
Top goalscorerBobô (27 goals)
Biggest home winSydney FC 6–0 Perth Glory
(30 December 2017)
Biggest away winCentral Coast Mariners 2–8 Newcastle Jets
(14 April 2018)
Highest scoringCentral Coast Mariners 2–8 Newcastle Jets
(14 April 2018)
Longest winning runSydney FC (7 games)
Longest unbeaten runSydney FC (15 games)
Longest winless runCentral Coast Mariners (11 games)
Longest losing runCentral Coast Mariners (6 games)
Highest attendance36,433
Western Sydney Wanderers vs. Sydney FC
(9 December 2017)
Lowest attendance4,312
Wellington Phoenix vs. Melbourne City
(14 April 2018)
Average attendance10,671
All statistics correct as of 5 May 2018.

The 2017–18 A-League is the 41st season of top-flight soccer in Australia, and the 13th since the establishment of the A-League in 2004. The season began on 6 October 2017.[1]

Clubs

Team City Home Ground Capacity
Adelaide United Adelaide Coopers Stadium
Adelaide Oval
17,000
53,583
Brisbane Roar Brisbane Suncorp Stadium 52,500
Central Coast Mariners Gosford Central Coast Stadium 20,119
Melbourne City Melbourne AAMI Park 30,050
Melbourne Victory Melbourne Etihad Stadium
AAMI Park
56,347
30,050
Newcastle Jets Newcastle McDonald Jones Stadium 33,000
Perth Glory Perth nib Stadium 20,500
Sydney FC Sydney Allianz Stadium 45,500
Wellington Phoenix Wellington Westpac Stadium 34,500
Western Sydney Wanderers Sydney ANZ Stadium
Spotless Stadium
84,000
24,000

Personnel and kits

Team Manager Captain Kit manufacturer Kit sponsor
Adelaide United Germany Marco Kurz Spain Isaías Macron IGA
Brisbane Roar Australia John Aloisi Australia Matt McKay Umbro Central Home Loans
Central Coast Mariners Republic of Ireland Wayne O'Sullivan Spain Alan Baró Umbro Masterfoods
Melbourne City England Warren Joyce Denmark Michael Jakobsen Nike Etihad Airways
Melbourne Victory Australia Kevin Muscat Australia Carl Valeri Adidas Optislim & Optivite
Newcastle Jets Scotland Ernie Merrick Australia Nigel Boogaard Viva Sports Ledman Group
Perth Glory England Kenny Lowe Republic of Ireland Andy Keogh Macron QBE Insurance
Sydney FC Australia Graham Arnold Australia Alex Brosque Puma The Star
Wellington Phoenix England Chris Greenacre New Zealand Andrew Durante Adidas Huawei
Century 21
Western Sydney Wanderers Spain Josep Gombau Australia Mark Bridge Nike NRMA Insurance

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position on table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Newcastle Jets Australia Mark Jones Sacked[2] 16 April 2017 Pre-season Scotland Ernie Merrick[3] 9 May 2017
Adelaide United Spain Guillermo Amor Resigned[4] 10 May 2017 Germany Marco Kurz[5] 16 June 2017
Melbourne City Australia Michael Valkanis End of contract[6] 10 May 2017 England Warren Joyce[7] 19 June 2017
Wellington Phoenix England Des Buckingham End of contract[8] 19 May 2017 Bosnia and Herzegovina Darije Kalezić[9] 7 June 2017
Western Sydney Wanderers Australia Tony Popovic Resigned[10] 1 October 2017 Australia Hayden Foxe (Caretaker)[11] 3 October 2017
Western Sydney Wanderers Australia Hayden Foxe (Caretaker) End of caretaker spell 1 November 2017 4th Spain Josep Gombau[12] 1 November 2017
Wellington Phoenix Bosnia and Herzegovina Darije Kalezić Sacked[13] 7 March 2018 10th England Chris Greenacre (Caretaker)[13] 7 March 2018
Central Coast Mariners Australia Paul Okon Resigned[14] 20 March 2018 9th Republic of Ireland Wayne O'Sullivan (Caretaker)[14] 20 March 2018

Transfers

Foreign players

Club Visa 1 Visa 2 Visa 3 Visa 4 Visa 5 Non-Visa Foreign
Adelaide United Denmark Johan Absalonsen Germany Daniel Adlung Senegal Baba Diawara Slovenia Džengis Čavušević Spain Isaías Turkey Ersan Gülüm2
Brisbane Roar Denmark Thomas Kristensen France Éric Bauthéac Italy Massimo Maccarone Tunisia Fahid Ben Khalfallah Brazil Henrique1
England Jamie Young2
Greece Avraam Papadopoulos2
New Zealand Dane Ingham2
Central Coast Mariners Netherlands Wout Brama Netherlands Tom Hiariej Spain Alan Baró New Zealand Storm Roux2
Melbourne City Denmark Michael Jakobsen Netherlands Bart Schenkeveld Poland Marcin Budziński Uruguay Bruno Fornaroli Italy Iacopo La Rocca1
Malta Manny Muscat2
Melbourne Victory Argentina Matías Sánchez Kosovo Besart Berisha Netherlands Leroy George New Zealand Kosta Barbarouses New Zealand Jai Ingham2
Newcastle Jets England Wayne Brown Republic of Ireland Roy O'Donovan Venezuela Ronald Vargas Argentina Patito Rodríguez3
Croatia Ivan Vujica2
North Macedonia Daniel Georgievski2
New Zealand Glen Moss2
Perth Glory England Joseph Mills Republic of Ireland Andy Keogh Spain Andreu Spain Diego Castro Spain Xavi Torres
Sydney FC Brazil Bobô Netherlands Jordy Buijs Poland Adrian Mierzejewski Serbia Miloš Ninković Portugal Fábio Ferreira1
Wellington Phoenix Croatia Goran Paracki Fiji Roy Krishna Italy Marco Rossi Serbia Andrija Kaluđerović Serbia Matija Ljujić
Western Sydney Wanderers Curaçao Roly Bonevacia Spain Álvaro Cejudo Spain Raúl Llorente Spain Oriol Riera Argentina Marcelo Carrusca1

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 (and New Zealand citizenship, in the case of Wellington Phoenix);[15]
2Australian citizens (and 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)

Salary cap exemptions

Club First Marquee Second Marquee Mature Age Rookie Captain Vice-Captain
Adelaide United None None None Spain Isaías[16] Australia Jordan Elsey[citation needed]
Brisbane Roar Australia Brett Holman[17] Italy Massimo Maccarone[18] Australia Brendan White[19] Australia Matt McKay[20] Australia Jade North[21]
Central Coast Mariners None None None Spain Alan Baró[22] None
Melbourne City Uruguay Bruno Fornaroli[23] Poland Marcin Budziński[24] None Denmark Michael Jakobsen[25] None
Melbourne Victory Kosovo Besart Berisha[26] None None Australia Carl Valeri[27] Australia Leigh Broxham[27]
Newcastle Jets Venezuela Ronald Vargas[28] None None Australia Nigel Boogaard[29] None
Perth Glory Spain Diego Castro[30] None None Republic of Ireland Andy Keogh[31] None
Sydney FC Brazil Bobô[32] Serbia Miloš Ninković[33] None Australia Alex Brosque[34] None
Wellington Phoenix None None None New Zealand Andrew Durante[35] None
Western Sydney Wanderers Spain Oriol Riera[36] Spain Álvaro Cejudo[37] None Australia Mark Bridge[38] None

Regular season

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Sydney FC 27 20 4 3 64 22 +42 64 Qualification for 2019 AFC Champions League group stage and Finals series
2 Newcastle Jets 27 15 5 7 57 37 +20 50 Qualification for 2019 AFC Champions League second preliminary round and Finals series
3 Melbourne City 27 13 4 10 41 33 +8 43 Qualification for Finals series
4 Melbourne Victory (C) 27 12 5 10 43 37 +6 41 Qualification for 2019 AFC Champions League group stage and Finals series
5 Adelaide United 27 11 6 10 36 38 −2 39 Qualification for Finals series
6 Brisbane Roar 27 10 5 12 33 40 −7 35
7 Western Sydney Wanderers 27 8 9 10 38 47 −9 33
8 Perth Glory 27 10 2 15 37 50 −13 32
9 Wellington Phoenix[a] 27 5 6 16 31 55 −24 21
10 Central Coast Mariners 27 4 8 15 28 49 −21 20
Source: A-Leagues
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. ^ Wellington Phoenix cannot qualify for the AFC Champions League as they are not recognised as an AFC club.


Results

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Positions by round

Team ╲ Round123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627
Sydney FC423213111111111111111111111
Newcastle Jets132331222222222222222222222
Melbourne City211122333333433333333343333
Melbourne Victory897879686755355444554434444
Adelaide United555568545444544555445655555
Brisbane Roar9101010910898699899986777877676
Western Sydney Wanderers344444479988766667666566767
Perth Glory766655757866677798888788888
Wellington Phoenix567710710101010101010101010101010101010101010109
Central Coast Mariners10899869645779888799999999910
Leader and qualification to AFC Champions League Group stage
Qualification to Finals series
Source: ultimatealeague.com
Notes:
  • Adelaide United were tied with Wellington Phoenix at the end of Round 1.
  • Perth Glory were tied with Wellington Phoenix at the end of Round 2.
  • Melbourne Victory were tied with Wellington Phoenix at the end of Round 3.
  • Western Sydney Wanderers and Wellington Phoenix had a game in hand from Rounds 7 and 20, with their Round 7 game played during Round 20 on 11 February 2018.
  • Western Sydney Wanderers and Perth Glory played their Round 23 game in the middle of Round 22 on 4 March 2018.

Finals series

Elimination-finals Semi-finals Grand Final
1 Sydney FC 2
4 Melbourne Victory 2 Melbourne Victory (a.e.t.) 3
5 Adelaide United 1 Newcastle Jets 0
Melbourne Victory 1
2 Newcastle Jets 2
3 Melbourne City 2 Melbourne City 1
6 Brisbane Roar 0

Elimination-finals

20 April 2018 Melbourne City 2−0Brisbane RoarMelbourne
19:50 AEST
Report Stadium: AAMI Park
Attendance: 7,757
Referee: Jarred Gillett

Semi-finals

27 April 2018 Newcastle Jets 2−1Melbourne CityNewcastle
19:50 AEST
Report Stadium: McDonald Jones Stadium
Attendance: 19,131
Referee: Shaun Evans
28 April 2018 Sydney FC2–3 (a.e.t.) Melbourne Victory Sydney
19:50 AEST
Report
Stadium: Allianz Stadium
Attendance: 17,775
Referee: Kurt Ams

Grand Final

Statistics

Attendances

By club

These are the attendance records of each of the teams at the end of the home and away season. The table does not include finals series attendances.

As of matches played on 15 April 2018.
Team Hosted Average High Low Total
Melbourne Victory 14 17,631 35,792 8,370 246,832
Sydney FC 14 14,593 34,810 9,110 204,304
Western Sydney Wanderers 13 11,924 36,433 6,612 155,017
Newcastle Jets 14 11,016 18,156 6,258 154,218
Melbourne City 14 9,868 22,515 5,207 138,158
Adelaide United 13 9,830 19,416 7,021 127,790
Perth Glory 13 9,186 13,565 7,277 119,419
Brisbane Roar 14 9,093 11,485 5,192 127,299
Central Coast Mariners 13 7,194 12,044 4,973 93,525
Wellington Phoenix 13 5,694 8,154 4,312 74,022
{{{T11}}} 0 0 0 0 0
{{{T12}}} 0 0 0 0 0
League total 135 10,671 36,433 4,312 1,440,584

By round

2017–18 A-League Attendance
Round Total Games Avg. Per Game
Round 1 66,814 5 13,363
Round 2 86,537 5 17,307
Round 3 85,558 5 17,118
Round 4 45,757 5 9,151
Round 5 61,403 5 12,281
Round 6 48,008 5 9,602
Round 7 46,569 5 9,314
Round 8 39,323 5 7,865
Round 9 37,224 5 7,445
Round 10 73,636 5 14,727
Round 11 44,008 5 8,802
Round 12 55,153 5 11,031
Round 13 59,479 5 11,896
Round 14 51,890 5 10,378
Round 15 44,845 5 8,969
Round 16 48,325 5 9,665
Round 17 50,613 5 10,123
Round 18 50,514 5 10,103
Round 19 45,865 5 9,173
Round 20 46,316 5 9,263
Round 21 59,729 5 11,946
Round 22 60,794 5 12,159
Round 23 43,918 5 8,784
Round 24 33,053 5 6,611
Round 25 58,202 5 11,640
Round 26 47,837 5 9,567
Round 27 49,184 5 9,837
Elimination Final 23,259 2 11,630
Semi Final 36,906 2 18,453
Grand Final 29,410 1 29,410

Club membership

2017–18 A-League membership figures
Club Members
Adelaide United 6,906
Brisbane Roar 9,345
Central Coast Mariners 7,124
Melbourne City 11,255
Melbourne Victory 26,095
Newcastle Jets 9,195
Perth Glory 9,368
Sydney FC 14,834
Wellington Phoenix 5,289
Western Sydney Wanderers 19,007
Total 118,418
Average 11,841

Last updated: 15 April 2018.
Source: a-league.com.au

Player stats

Top scorers

As of matches played on 15 April 2018[39]
Rank Player Club Goals
1 Brazil Bobô Sydney FC 27
2 Spain Oriol Riera Western Sydney Wanderers 15
3 Scotland Ross McCormack Melbourne City 14
4 Kosovo Besart Berisha Melbourne Victory 13
Poland Adrian Mierzejewski Sydney FC
6 Australia Andrew Nabbout Newcastle Jets 10
Australia Dimitri Petratos Newcastle Jets
8 Serbia Andrija Kaluđerović Wellington Phoenix 9
Italy Massimo Maccarone Brisbane Roar
Republic of Ireland Roy O'Donovan Newcastle Jets
Australia Dario Vidošić Wellington Phoenix
Melbourne City

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date Ref
Republic of Ireland Roy O'Donovan Newcastle Jets Central Coast Mariners 5–1 7 October 2017 [40]
Brazil Bobô Sydney FC Wellington Phoenix 1–4 23 December 2017 [41]
Brazil Bobô Sydney FC Perth Glory 6–0 30 December 2017 [42]
Kosovo Besart Berisha Melbourne Victory Central Coast Mariners 5–2 18 March 2018 [43]
Australia Riley McGree Newcastle Jets Central Coast Mariners 2–8 14 April 2018 [44]

Own goals

As of matches played on 15 April 2018
Player Club Against Round
Australia Thomas Deng Melbourne Victory Sydney FC 1
Australia Brendan Hamill Western Sydney Wanderers Perth Glory 1
Australia Nigel Boogaard Newcastle Jets Brisbane Roar 3
Serbia Andrija Kaluđerović Wellington Phoenix Central Coast Mariners 8
Croatia Goran Paracki Wellington Phoenix Melbourne Victory 9
Australia Lachlan Scott Western Sydney Wanderers Sydney FC 10
Australia Jeremy Walker Perth Glory Newcastle Jets 10
Australia Mark Milligan Melbourne Victory Wellington Phoenix 15
Australia Dino Djulbic Perth Glory Adelaide United 19
Australia Shane Lowry Perth Glory Wellington Phoenix 20
Australia Ryan Strain Adelaide United Central Coast Mariners 20
Australia Taylor Regan Adelaide United Melbourne Victory 21
Australia Leigh Broxham Melbourne Victory Wellington Phoenix 26
Australia Jacob Pepper Brisbane Roar Perth Glory 27

Clean sheets

As of matches played on 15 April 2018[45]
Rank Player Club Clean
sheets
1 Australia Andrew Redmayne Sydney FC 12
2 Australia Dean Bouzanis Melbourne City 6
3 Australia Ben Kennedy Central Coast Mariners 5
England Jamie Young Brisbane Roar
5 Australia Jack Duncan Newcastle Jets 4
Australia Vedran Janjetović Western Sydney Wanderers
Australia Liam Reddy Perth Glory
8 Australia Eugene Galekovic Melbourne City 3
Australia Paul Izzo Adelaide United
New Zealand Glen Moss Newcastle Jets
Australia Lawrence Thomas Melbourne Victory

Discipline

During the season each club is given fair play points based on the number of cards they received in games. A yellow card is worth 1 point, a second yellow card is worth 2 points, and a red card is worth 3 points. At the annual awards night, the club with the least number of points wins the Fair Play Award.[46]

Club Yellow card Second yellow card Red card FP Pts
Sydney FC 38 0 1 41
Newcastle Jets 51 1 1 56
Wellington Phoenix 54 0 1 57
Melbourne City 44 2 3 57
Perth Glory 59 0 1 62
Adelaide United 51 2 3 64
Central Coast Mariners 50 3 3 65
Melbourne Victory 53 2 3 66
Brisbane Roar 62 0 2 68
Western Sydney Wanderers 61 3 2 73
League total 523 13 20

Last updated: 15 April 2018.
Source: ultimatealeague.com

NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award

The NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award will be awarded to the finest performance of an under-23 player from Australia or New Zealand throughout the season. Each month one player is rewarded with a monthly nomination. At the end of the season a panel of experts vote for an overall winner using a 3-2-1 points basis. The winner receives a $10,000 personal investment portfolio and a NAB Private Client Manager to assist with meeting their financial goals.[47]

Nominees

Month Player Club
October 2017 Australia Bruce Kamau[48] Melbourne City
November 2017 Australia Daniel De Silva[49] Central Coast Mariners
December 2017 Australia Joe Champness[50] Newcastle Jets
January 2018 Australia Daniel Arzani[51] Melbourne City
February 2018 Australia Chris Ikonomidis[52] Western Sydney Wanderers
March 2018 Australia Thomas Deng[53] Melbourne Victory

End of season awards

The following end of the season awards were announced at the 2017–18 Dolan Warren Awards night on 30 April 2018.[54]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hyundai A-League 2017/18 season draw released". A-League. Football Federation Australia. 28 June 2017.
  2. ^ "Mark Jones dismissed by Newcastle Jets after poor end to the season". ESPN FC. 16 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Merrick sees off Kean for Jets job". The World Game. SBS. 8 May 2017.
  4. ^ "Gui Amor departs Adelaide United". FourFourTwo. 10 May 2017.
  5. ^ Migliaccio, Val (16 June 2017). "Adelaide United has signed German Marco Kurz as new head coach". The Advertiser.
  6. ^ Davutovic, David (10 May 2017). "Melbourne City plans to appoint overseas coach by end of May". Herald Sun.
  7. ^ Windley, Matt; Davutovic, David (19 June 2017). "Melbourne City signs former Manchester United Warren Joyce as head coach". Herald Sun.
  8. ^ "Greenacre and Buckingham miss out on Phoenix job". Radio New Zealand. 19 May 2017.
  9. ^ Geenty, Mark (7 June 2017). "New Wellington Phoenix coach Darije Kalezic under way with player hunt as club finally gets their man with 'new vision'". Stuff.co.nz.
  10. ^ "Tony Popovic quits Western Sydney Wanderers to take up role coaching Karabukspor". Daily Telegraph. 1 October 2017.
  11. ^ Bossi, Dominic (3 October 2017). "Western Sydney Wanderers: Hayden Foxe appointed as caretaker coach". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  12. ^ "Josep Gombau becomes Wanderers coach". FourFourTwo. 1 November 2017.
  13. ^ a b Hyslop, Liam (7 March 2018). "Darije Kalezic out, Chris Greenacre in as Wellington Phoenix continue search for new head coach". Stuff.co.nz.
  14. ^ a b Kemp, Emma (20 March 2018). "Paul Okon quits as Mariners boss after disappointing A-League campaign". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  15. ^ "A-League Collective Bargaining Agreement – 2008/9 – 2012/13" (PDF). Australian Professional Footballers' Football Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-04. Retrieved 9 October 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ Migliaccio, Val (23 September 2017). "Isaias is officially the heart and soul of Adelaide United". The Advertiser.
  17. ^ "Fahid Ben Khalfallah signs one-year deal with Brisbane Roar". Sydney Morning Herald. 26 May 2017.
  18. ^ Monteverde, Marco (17 July 2017). "Brisbane Roar sign Massimo Maccarone, former Sampdoria and Middlesbrough striker, as marquee". The Courier-Mail.
  19. ^ "Brendan White joins Roar goalkeeping ranks". Brisbane Roar. 4 November 2017.
  20. ^ "McKay is Roar's new captain". Brisbane Roar. 22 December 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  21. ^ "Back-line general Jade North re-signs". Brisbane Roar. 17 May 2016.
  22. ^ Radbourne-Pugh, Lucas (23 September 2017). "Alan Baro announced new Mariners captain". FourFourTwo.
  23. ^ "Bruno Fornaroli A-League deal done, says Melbourne City coach John Van 't Schip". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1 August 2016.
  24. ^ Lynch, Michael (18 September 2017). "Melbourne City sign Polish midfielder Marcin Budzinski as new marquee player". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  25. ^ Windley, Matt (4 October 2017). "Scott Jamieson speaks about life at his fifth A-League club". Herald Sun.
  26. ^ "Besart Berisha says money not a reason to leave Roar as Melbourne Victory double his pay". Herald Sun. 24 January 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  27. ^ a b "Carl Valeri to lead Melbourne Victory as captain". Melbourne Victory. 15 September 2015.
  28. ^ "Jets sign Venezuela international Vargas". The World Game. SBS. 16 September 2017.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ "Nigel Boogaard confirmed as Jets captain". Newcastle Jets. 5 October 2015.
  30. ^ "Castro Perth Glory's new marquee player". SBS. 6 August 2015.
  31. ^ Miller, Dale (11 August 2017). "Andy Keogh in line for Perth Glory captaincy". The West Australian.
  32. ^ Bossi, Dominic (17 August 2016). "Sydney FC sign Brazilian striker Bobo as new A-League marquee". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  33. ^ Kemp, Emma (9 May 2017). "Milos Ninkovic signs Sydney FC marquee deal". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  34. ^ "Brosque to skipper Sydney". fourfourtwo.com. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  35. ^ "Durante named Wellington Phoenix skipper". Wwos.ninemsn.com.au. Archived from the original on 2012-03-30. Retrieved 22 December 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  36. ^ Bossi, Dominic (5 July 2017). "Western Sydney Wanderers sign La Liga regular Oriol Riera as first marquee player". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  37. ^ "Wanderers sign Spanish winger Alvaro Cejudo". FourFourTwo. 24 July 2017.
  38. ^ Adno, Carly (24 February 2018). "Graham Arnold says Wanderers captain Mark Bridge tried to join Sydney FC". The Daily Telegraph.
  39. ^ "Statistics >> Player (Goals)". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  40. ^ Gardiner, James (7 October 2017). "Roy O'Donovan bags hat-trick as Newcastle Jets thrash Central Coast Mariners 5-1 in A-League derby". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  41. ^ "Bobo hits hat-trick as clinical Sydney FC dispatch Wellington Phoenix 4-1". The Sydney Morning Herald. 23 December 2017.
  42. ^ Bossi, Dominic (30 December 2017). "Sydney FC thrash Perth Glory 6-0 to extend lead at the top of the A-League". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  43. ^ McKay, Ben (18 March 2018). "Berisha hat-trick lifts Victory to five-star thrashing of Mariners". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  44. ^ Kerry, Craig (14 April 2018). "Jets belt Mariners with 8 A-League goals". The Newcastle Herald.
  45. ^ "Statistics >> Player (Clean Sheets) >> 2017–18". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  46. ^ Owen, Scott (11 March 2016). "A Fair Play Update". Football Central.
  47. ^ "NAB Young Footballer of the Year back for 2017/18 Season". Football Federation Australia. 25 October 2017.
  48. ^ "Kamau named Hyundai A-League NAB YFOTY nominee for October". Football Federation Australia. 31 October 2017.
  49. ^ "De Silva named Hyundai A-League NAB YFOTY nominee for November". Football Federation Australia. 28 November 2017.
  50. ^ "Jet Champness named Hyundai A-League NAB YFOTY nominee for December". Football Federation Australia. 3 January 2018.
  51. ^ "City ace Arzani January nominee for NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award". Football Federation Australia. 30 January 2018.
  52. ^ "Wanderers attacker Ikonomidis February nominee for NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award". Football Federation Australia. 1 March 2018.
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