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Sydney FC Youth

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Sydney Reserves
Full nameSydney FC Reserves
Nickname(s)Sydney Youth
Founded2008
GroundLambert Park
Capacity7,000
OwnerDavid Traktovenko
ChairmanScott Barlow
Head coachRob Stanton
LeagueNYL
NPL NSW
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Sydney FC Reserves is an Australian semi-professional association football team based in Sydney, New South Wales. Founded in 2008, it is the reserve and youth team of Sydney FC. The team currently plays in the National Premier Leagues NSW which is the second level of Australia's football pyramid and in the National Youth League.

History

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).

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

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. 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 Youth, 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 Youth. A win, then a draw to Mounties FC in the Round 14 make-up game, then two more losses, meant Sydney FC Youth only picked up four points out of a possible 24, with title hopes looking shaky. However, Sydney FC Youth would get back on track with wins against Bankstown City Lions FC and St George FC. Sydney FC Youth remained undefeated in the final four rounds of the regular season to win the Premiers Plate, two points ahead of Western Sydney Wanderers Youth. 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 Youth were declared premiers.

Stadium

The team's home ground is Lambert Park in the suburb of Leichhardt where they will play both NYL and NPL matches. The teams also shares Sydney FC's club's training base at Macquarie University in North Ryde.

Current squad

National Youth League

As of 7 June 2018

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Australia AUS Tom Heward-Belle
2 DF Australia AUS Brendan Curtis
3 DF Australia AUS Patrick Flottmann
4 DF Australia AUS Liam McGing
5 DF Australia AUS Patrick Sciblio
6 MF Australia AUS Andrea Agamemnonos
7 DF Australia AUS Joel King
8 MF Australia AUS Sam McIllhatton (Captain)
9 FW Australia AUS Hassan Jalloh
10 MF Australia AUS Aaron Avery
15 FW Australia AUS Jeremy Cox
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF Australia AUS William Mutch
18 MF Australia AUS Chris Zuvela
20 GK Australia AUS Duro Dragicevic
21 FW Australia AUS Charles Lokolingoy
GK Australia AUS Mitchell Evans
DF Australia AUS Alex Gollan
MF Australia AUS Cameron Devlin
MF Australia AUS Jerry Skotadis
MF Australia AUS Marco Tilio
FW Australia AUS Luke Ivanovic
FW Australia AUS Benjamin Koop

National Premier Leagues First Grade squad

As of 11 March 2018 [12]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Australia AUS Mitchell Evans
2 MF Australia AUS Brendan Curtis
3 DF Australia AUS Patrick Flottman
4 DF Australia AUS Liam McGing
5 DF Australia AUS Patrick Scibilio
6 MF Australia AUS Andrea Agamemnonos
7 MF Australia AUS Jerry Skotadis
8 MF Australia AUS Sam McIllhatton (captain)
9 FW Australia AUS Hassan Jalloh
10 MF Australia AUS Cameron Devlin
No. Pos. Nation Player
11 FW Australia AUS Luke Ivanovic
12 DF Australia AUS Jackson Bandiera
14 DF Australia AUS Joel King
15 FW Australia AUS Jeremy Cox
16 FW Australia AUS William Mutch
17 MF Australia AUS Marco Tilio
18 FW Australia AUS Benjamin Koop
23 MF Australia AUS Nikola Ujdur
24 DF Australia AUS Daniel Blachura
30 GK Australia AUS Duro Dragicevic

National Premier Leagues U-20s squad

As of 11 March 2018 [13]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
13 MF Australia AUS Jordi Swibel
19 FW Australia AUS Giuseppe Tilio
21 FW Australia AUS Finn Ballard-McBride
22 DF Australia AUS Harry van der Saag
25 DF Australia AUS Mason Ingram
26 DF Australia AUS Benjamin Van Meurs
No. Pos. Nation Player
27 FW Australia AUS Hamish Lamberton
28 DF Australia AUS Paolo Bonanni
29 MF Australia AUS Thomas Fay
31 MF Australia AUS Ryan Teague
32 MF Australia AUS Jacob Vasiliou
40 GK Australia AUS David Malishev

National Premier Leagues U-18s squad

As of 12 March 2018 [14] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
37 DF Australia AUS Thomas Main
39 FW Australia AUS Jaiden Kurcharski
41 DF Australia AUS Mitchell Mattison
53 MF Australia AUS Rocco Fragale
56 DF Australia AUS Scott Browning
57 FW Australia AUS Tyson Savas
65 FW Australia AUS Patrick Wood
78 FW Australia AUS Alex Masciovecchio
79 FW Australia AUS Harry McCarthy
80 MF Australia AUS Sam Amey
81 DF Australia AUS Callum Talbot
82 MF Australia AUS Evan Tsakos
No. Pos. Nation Player
83 DF Australia AUS Paolo Laxamana
90 MF Australia AUS Bailey Togiavalu
91 GK Australia AUS Adam Pavlesic
94 DF Australia AUS Feltcher McFarlane
97 MF Australia AUS Rocco Chisari
98 MF Australia AUS Jake Hollman
111 MF Australia AUS Aaron Gurd
DF Australia AUS Cameron Fong
DF Australia AUS Anton Mlinaric
MF Australia AUS Cameron Peupion
FW Australia AUS Max Rogers

Technical staff

Position Name
Head Coach Australia Robert Stanton
Assistant Youth Coach Australia David Zdrilic
Goalkeeping Coach Australia Brody Crane
Physiotherapist Australia Anthony Demasi
Team Manager Australia Michael Swibel

Head Coaches

Name Period Honours
Steve O'Connor 2008–10 2008–09 NYL
Steve Corica 2010–11
Ian Crook 2011–12
Brian Dene 2012–13
Steve Corica 2013–15 2013–14 NYL
Robert Stanton 2015–present 2015–16 NYL

Seasons

Correct as of the end of the 2015–16 season.

Season NYL / NPL NSW2 International Top scorer1
Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Position Finals Player(s) Goals
2008–09 NYL 18 13 2 3 43 22 +21 41 1st Champions Sean Rooney 9
2009–10 NYL 24 11 6 7 43 33 +10 39 5th DNQ Kerem Bulut 13
2010–11 NYL 20 9 3 8 36 31 +5 30 4th N/A Kofi Danning 8
2011–12 NYL 18 7 4 7 40 31 +9 25 6th N/A Mitchell Mallia 14
2012–13 NYL 18 6 3 9 41 46 −5 21 9th N/A 3rd Alec Urosevski 12
2013–14 NYL 18 13 2 3 49 29 +20 41 1st N/A 2nd Mitchell Mallia 13
2014–15 NYL 18 8 4 6 40 27 +13 28 4th N/A 5th George Blackwood 6
2015–16 NYL 8 6 0 2 21 11 +10 18 1st Champions Max Burgess 4
NPL2 26 16 3 7 84 41 +43 51 1st Champions Charles Lokolingoy 27[15]
2016–17 NYL 8 5 1 2 23 15 +8 16 1st Runners-Up Charles Lokolingoy 6
NPL1 22 6 2 14 34 52 -18 14[a] 11th Charles Lokolingoy 7[16]
2017–18 NYL 8 5 2 1 18 9 +9 17 2nd Jeremy Cox 6
1 Top scorer only includes goals scored from league matches (National Youth League and NYL Finals or National Premier Leagues).
  1. ^ Deducted six points for misconduct

Honours

Domestic

International

Notes

  1. ^ Conference B.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sydney set for start of Youth League". www.sydneyfc.com. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  2. ^ "Junior Sky Blues take Youth League title". Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  3. ^ "Sydney FC unveils its new look youth team". Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  4. ^ "Sydney FC name young Youth squad". Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  5. ^ "Sydney FC and Western Sydney Wanderers take rivalry to new level with plans for youth academies". smh.com.au. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  6. ^ "Sydney FC Academy Expression of Interest". SydneyFC.com. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  7. ^ "Sydney FC appoint new National Youth League head coach". Johnny Warren Football Foundation. 6 July 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  8. ^ "Sydney FC appoint National Youth League head coach". www.sydneyfc.com. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  9. ^ "PS4 NPL 2 NSW Round 1 Review". Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  10. ^ "Round 7 Review – PS4 NPL 2 NSW Men's". www.footballnsw.com.au. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  11. ^ "Round 8 Review – PS4 NPL 2 NSW Men's". www.footballnsw.com.au. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  12. ^ "First Grade & Under 20s". SydneyFC.com. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  13. ^ "First Grade & Under 20s". SydneyFC.com. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  14. ^ "First Grade & Under 20s". SydneyFC.com. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  15. ^ SportsTG. "Sydney FC statistics 2016". Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  16. ^ SportsTG. "Sydney FC statistics 2017". Retrieved 13 February 2018.

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