2016 FFA Cup Final

2016 FFA Cup Final
Event 2016 FFA Cup
Date 30 November 2016
Venue AAMI Park, Melbourne
Man of the Match Bruno Fornaroli
Referee Peter Green
Attendance 18,751

The 2016 FFA Cup Final was the 3rd final of the premier association football knockout cup competition in Australia. The match was held on 30 November 2016 at AAMI Park. Melbourne Victory were the defending champions, but were defeated 2–0 by Melbourne City in the semi-finals.[1] The other team to qualify for the Final was Sydney FC, who defeated Canberra Olympic 3–0.[2]

The Final was the first to feature either Melbourne City or Sydney FC.

Melbourne City won the match 1–0, Tim Cahill scoring the goal.

Venue

The FFA announced that AAMI Park would host the 2016 final. AAMI Park also hosted the 2015 FFA Cup Final and the 2015 A-League Grand Final. In outlining the reason for the decision, FFA CEO David Gallop argued AAMI Park would succeed in "maximising attendance and broadcast numbers while ensuring the Cup Final is played in a venue that embodies the unique spirit of the competition".[3] The decision to play the Final at AAMI Park was controversial. Sydney FC chairman Scott Barlow labelled the decision "a slap in the face" to the club, who did not have a single home game throughout the tournament and had the best record of the two finalists. Barlow also hit out at the fact AAMI Park would host the Final for the second consecutive year and said the "decision was made by the FFA purely for commercial reasons, it is an unfair decision to our club and it is Sydney FC fans who are the ones that will miss out".[4]

Road to the final

Melbourne City Round Sydney FC
Opponent Result Opponent Result
Floreat Athena 2–1 (A) Round of 32 Wollongong Wolves 3–0 (A)
Brisbane Strikers 2–1 (A) Round of 16 Perth Glory (a.e.t) 2–0 (A)
Western Sydney Wanderers 4–1 (H) Quarter-finals Blacktown City 3–0 (A)
Melbourne Victory 2–0 (A) Semi-finals Canberra Olympic 3–0 (A)
Note: In all results above, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).
For more details on this topic, see 2016 FFA Cup.

Melbourne City and Sydney FC were among 704 teams who entered the FFA Cup competition, and as A-League clubs, both entered the tournament in the Round of 32.[5]

Melbourne City travelled to Perth for the opening Round of 32 clash against second tier side Floreat Athena and narrowly won 2–1. In the Round of 16, City were pitted against second tier club Brisbane Strikers. Playing away from home, City went down a goal before coming from behind to win 2–1 again. City then put in arguably the most impressive performance of their cup campaign, defeating A-League opponent Western Sydney Wanderers 4–1 at home. In a spiteful derby semi-final, City defeated rivals Melbourne Victory 2–0 at AAMI Park.

Sydney FC began their FFA Cup journey with a 3–0 win over the Wollongong Wolves at WIN Stadium. They then defeated fellow A-League side Perth Glory 2–0, away from home at the Dorrien Gardens in Perth. Sydney FC were drawn to face in-form second division side Blacktown City at the Sydney United Sports Centre, though were again clinical in a 3–0 victory. Their semi-final opponents, Canberra Olympic were competitive though unable to match the Sky Blues' firing power, Sydney winning the match 3–0.

Match

Summary

A minute's silence was held moments before the start of the match out of respect for the players of the Chapecoense club from Brazil, many of whom were killed in a plane crash in Colombia two days earlier. The match was a mostly cagey affair with neither side being able to grab the ascendancy and dominate proceedings. A feisty tackle by City midfielder Luke Brattan on Michael Zullo inside the opening 10 minutes resulted in a yellow card and set the tone for aggressive hostilities between the two teams. The best chance of the first half fell to the eventual goalscorer Tim Cahill, who headed fractionally wide from a set piece in the 35th minute. Both teams had good spells of possssion and entered threatening areas, though both lacked the finishing class to put their team in front.[6]

In the second half, Sydney's Alex Brosque missed an early chance and was immediately punished following a perfect cross by Ivan Franjic, which found Cahill unmarked and resulted in a header into the free opposite corner of the goal. Sydney's best chance to equalise came in the 70th minute, when Bobô headed from a Matt Simon cross into an unmarked goal, however desparete defending on the line from defender Michael Jakobsen kept City's clean sheet in tact. The match reached fever pitch in the final five minutes, with Brosque being denied a clear shot on goal due to controversial defending by City defender Osama Malik and winger Fernando Brandán squandering a golden opportunity to double the home side's lead. It mattered not however, as City hung on to claim its first ever trophy of any kind as a senior team.[6][7][8]

Melbourne City captain Bruno Fornaroli was named man of the match. In his post-match address, Fornaroli appeared to exhale a loud profanity, which resulted in him and the club being issued a formal warning by the FFA.[9] The crowd of 18,751 was the highest ever for any match in the FFA Cup to that point in time.[10]

Details

30 November 2016
19:30 AEDT
Melbourne City 1–0 Sydney FC
Cahill  53' Report
AAMI Park, Melbourne
Attendance: 18,751
Referee: Peter Green
Melbourne City
Sydney FC
GK 20 Australia Dean Bouzanis
RB 8Australia Neil Kilkenny
CB 6Australia Osama Malik
CB 22Denmark Michael Jakobsen
LB 5Australia Ivan Franjic
CDM 26Australia Luke Brattan
CM 17Australia Tim Cahill  61'
CM 9Argentina Nicolas Colazo
LW 11Australia Bruce Kamau  83'
ST 23Uruguay Bruno Fornaroli (c)
RW 27Argentina Fernando Brandán
Substitutes:
GK 1Denmark Thomas Sorensen
DF 2Malta Manny Muscat
DF 4Australia Connor Chapman
MF 10Australia Anthony Caceres  61'
FW 12Australia Nicholas Fitzgerald  89'  83'
Manager:
Netherlands John van't Schip
GK 20Australia Danny Vukovic
RB 23Australia Rhyan Grant
CB 2Australia Sebastian Ryall
CB 5Australia Matt Jurman
LB 7Australia Michael Zullo
CDM 13Australia Brandon O'Neill  26'  72'
CDM 6Australia Joshua Brillante
LM 10Serbia Milos Ninkovic
CAM 14Australia Alex Brosque (c)
RM 21Slovakia Filip Holosko  62'
ST 9Brazil Bobô
Substitutes:
GK 30Australia Mitch Evans
DF 17Australia David Carney 87'  72'
DF 4Australia Alex Wilkinson
MF 8Serbia Milos Dimitrijevic
FW 18Australia Matt Simon  62'
Manager:
Australia Graham Arnold

Man of the Match (Mark Viduka Medal): Bruno Fornaroli

Assistant referees:
Fourth official:

Additional assistant referees:

Match rules:[11]

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Five named substitutes, of which up to three may be used.

Statistics

Statistics[12] Melbourne City Sydney FC
Goals scored 10
Total shots 95
Shots on target 43
Ball possession 54%46%
Corner kicks 72
Fouls 1515
Offsides 58
Yellow cards 22
Red cards 00

See also

References

External links

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