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List of Melbourne Victory FC records and statistics

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 51.52.85.175 (talk) at 13:21, 6 August 2020 (→‎Record defeats). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Honours and achievements

A-League and Finals

Winners (3): 2006–07, 2008–09, 2014–15
Runners-up (2): 2009–10, 2016–17
Winners (4): 2007, 2009, 2015, 2018
Runners-up (2): 2010, 2017

The FFA

Winners (1): 2015

Other

Pre-season

Winners (1): 2008

Player records

Appearances

Most appearances

Competitive matches only, includes appearances as substitute. Numbers in brackets indicate goals scored.[1]

# Name Years League FFA Cup Asia Othera Total
1 Australia Leigh Broxham 2005– 310 (5) 17 (0) 42 (2) 6 (0) 375 (7)
2 Australia Archie Thompson 2005–2016 224 (90) 4 (1) 23 (2) 11 (4) 262 (97)
3 Australia Adrian Leijer 2005–2007
2009–2015
176 (7) 3 (0) 15 (1) 11 (0) 205 (8)
4 Australia Rodrigo Vargas 2006–2012 139 (6) 0 (0) 14 (2) 14 (0) 167 (8)
5 New Zealand Kosta Barbarouses 2013–2016
2017–2019
127 (41) 11 (5) 23 (5) 0 (0) 161 (51)
6 Australia Kevin Muscat 2005–2011 122 (28) 0 (0) 16 (6) 13 (1) 151 (35)
Australia Lawrence Thomas 2011– 122 (0) 8 (0) 21 (0) 0 (0) 151 (0)
8 Australia Danny Allsopp 2005–2009
2011–2012
118 (42) 0 (0) 11 (4) 20 (4) 149 (50)
9 Costa Rica Carlos Hernández 2007–2009
2009–2012
121 (36) 0 (0) 13 (2) 7 (1) 141 (39)
10 Kosovo Besart Berisha 2014–2018 103 (68) 14 (12) 20 (8) 0 (0) 137 (86)
a. Includes goals and appearances (including those as a substitute) in the OFC Champions League qualification.

Goalscorers

Top goalscorers

Competitive matches only, includes appearances as substitute. Numbers in brackets indicate goals scored.[2]

# Name Years League FFA Cup Asia Othera Total
1 Australia Archie Thompson 2005–2016 90 (224) 1 (4) 2 (23) 4 (11) 97 (262)
2 Kosovo Besart Berisha 2014–2018 68 (103) 12 (14) 8 (20) 0 (0) 86 (137)
3 New Zealand Kosta Barbarouses 2005–2016 41 (127) 5 (11) 5 (23) 0 (0) 51 (161)
4 Australia Danny Allsopp 2005–2009
2011–2012
42 (118) 0 (0) 4 (11) 4 (20) 50 (149)
5 Costa Rica Carlos Hernández 2007–2009
2009–2012
36 (121) 0 (0) 2 (13) 1 (7) 39 (141)
6 Australia Kevin Muscat 2005–2011 28 (122) 0 (0) 6 (16) 1 (13) 35 (151)
7 Australia James Troisi 2013–2014
2016–2019
27 (105) 2 (6) 3 (15) 0 (0) 32 (126)
8 New Zealand Marco Rojas 2011–2013
2016–2017
2020–
29 (81) 1 (2) 0 (2) 0 (0) 30 (85)
9 Sweden Ola Toivonen 2018–2020 25 (40) 0 (1) 4 (8) 0 (0) 29 (49)
10 Brazil Guilherme Finkler 2012–2016 20 (92) 3 (7) 0 (0) 0 (0) 23 (99)
a. Includes goals and appearances (including those as a substitute) in the OFC Champions League qualification.

Transfers

Record transfer fees received

Where the report mentions an initial fee potentially rising to a higher figure depending on contractual clauses being satisfied in the future, only the initial fee is listed in the tables.

# Fee Received from For Date Notes Ref
1 $1.3m Borussia Dortmund Mitchell Langerak 2009 A further $500k in add-ons [3]
2 $900k Baniyas Club Mark Milligan 2015 [3]
3 $800k JEF United Chiba Jason Geria 2018 [3]

Managerial records

  • A-League Coach of the Year
- 2006-07: Ernie Merrick
- 2009-10: Ernie Merrick

Club records

Matches

Firsts

Record wins

Record defeats

Record consecutive results

  • Record consecutive wins: 10, from 5 August 2006 to 8 October 2006
  • Record consecutive defeats: 4
    • from 22 July 2007 to 11 August 2007
    • from 11 February 2011 to 13 March 2011
    • from 5 December 2015 to 19 December 2015
    • from 8 May 2019 to 7 August 2019
  • Record consecutive matches without a defeat: 10
    • from 5 August 2006 to 8 October 2006
    • from 15 April 2015 to 17 October 2015
  • Record consecutive matches without a win: 10, from 15 July 2007 to 21 September 2007

Goals

Points

References

  1. ^ "A-League Stats — Melbourne Victory FC (Top 20 Appearances)". A-League Stats.
  2. ^ "A-League Stats — Melbourne Victory FC (Top 20 Goalscorers)". A-League Stats.
  3. ^ a b c Davutovic, David (30 July 2020). "A history of Australian transfers: Why our record is unbroken since 1995". Optus Sport. Retrieved 30 July 2020.

External links