FFA Cup | |
Year: | 2016 |
Country: | Australia New Zealand |
Dates: | 12 February – 30 November 2016 |
Num Teams: | 704 |
Champions: | Melbourne City |
Count: | 1 |
Runner-Up: | Sydney FC |
Matches: | 31 |
Goals: | 94 |
Attendance: | 105574 |
Top Goal Scorer: | Patrick Antelmi (5 goals) |
Prevseason: | 2015 |
Nextseason: | 2017 |
The 2016 FFA Cup was the third season of the FFA Cup, the main national soccer knockout cup competition in Australia. 32 teams again took part in the competition proper (from the round of 32),[1] including the 10 A-League teams and 21 Football Federation Australia (FFA) member federation teams determined through individual state qualifying rounds, as well as the reigning National Premier Leagues Champion (Blacktown City from NSW).
The winner of the FFA Cup, Melbourne City, received $50,000 as part of a total prize money pool of $131,000.[2] The defending champions, Melbourne Victory, were knocked out in the semi-final stage of the competition.
Round | Draw date | Match date | Number of fixtures | Teams | New entries this round | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Preliminary rounds | Various | 12 February–25 June 2016 | 672 + 56 byes | 704 → 32 | 693 | |
Round of 32 | 30 June 2016 | 27 July–10 August 2016 | 16 | 32 → 16 | 11 | |
Round of 16 | 10 August 2016 | 24–30 August 2016 | 8 | 16 → 8 | none | |
Quarter-finals | 30 August 2016 | 21–27 September 2016 | 4 | 8 → 4 | none | |
Semi-finals | 27 September 2016 | 19–25 October 2016 | 2 | 4 → 2 | none | |
Final | 25 October 2016 | 30 November 2016 | 1 | 2 → 1 | none |
The prize fund was unchanged from the 2015 event.[2]
Round | No. of Clubs receive fund | Prize fund | |
---|---|---|---|
width=60% | 8 | $2,000 | |
4 | $5,000 | ||
2 | $10,000 | ||
1 | $25,000 | ||
1 | $50,000 | ||
Total | $131,000 |
In addition, a further $2,500 was donated from sponsor NAB to Member Federation clubs for each goal scored by them against an A-League opposition.[3] Clubs to receive donations were: Green Gully ($5,000), Redlands United ($5,000), Brisbane Strikers ($2,500), Edgeworth FC ($2,500) and Floreat Athena ($2,500).
See main article: 2016 FFA Cup preliminary rounds.
FFA member federations teams competed in various state-based preliminary rounds to win one of 21 places in the competition proper (round of 32).[4] All Australian clubs were eligible to enter the qualifying process through their respective FFA member federation, however only one team per club was permitted entry in the competition. All nine FFA member federations participated. The number of qualification spots per member federation was unchanged from the 2015 tournament.
Federation | Competition | Round of 32 Qualifiers | |
---|---|---|---|
Australian Capital Territory | Federation Cup | 1 | |
New South Wales | Waratah Cup | 5 | |
Northern New South Wales | — | 2 | |
Northern Territory | Sport Minister's Cup | 1 | |
Queensland | Canale Cup / Football Queensland Cup | 4 | |
South Australia | Federation Cup | 1 | |
Tasmania | Milan Lakoseljac Cup | 1 | |
Victoria | Dockerty Cup | 4 | |
Western Australia | State Cup | 2 |
A total of 32 teams participated in the 2016 FFA Cup competition proper, ten of which came from the A-League, one the 2015 National Premier Leagues Champion (Blacktown City), and the remaining 21 teams from FFA member federations, as determined by the qualifying rounds. A-League clubs represent the highest level in the Australian league system, whereas member federation clubs come from Level 2 and below. The current season tier of member federation clubs is shown in parentheses.
The Round of 32 draw took place on 30 June 2016,[5] with match information confirmed on 5 July.[6]
The lowest ranked sides that qualified for this round were Marconi Stallions and Surfers Paradise Apollo. They were the only level 3 teams left in the competition.
All times listed below are at AEST
The Round of 16 draw took place on 10 August 2016, immediately following matchday 4 of the round of 32, with match information confirmed on 12 August.[7]
The lowest ranked sides that qualified for this round were Bentleigh Greens, Blacktown City, Bonnyrigg White Eagles, Brisbane Strikers, Canberra Olympic, Devonport City, Edgeworth FC, Green Gully, Hume City, Melbourne Knights and Redlands United. They were the only level 2 teams left in the competition.
All times listed below are at AEST
The quarter-finals draw took place on 30 August 2016, immediately following the final matchday of the round of 16, with match information confirmed on 2 September.[8]
The lowest ranked sides that qualified for this round were Bentleigh Greens, Blacktown City, Canberra Olympic and Green Gully. They were the only level 2 teams left in the competition.
All times listed below are at AEST
The semi-finals draw took place on 27 September 2016, immediately following the final matchday of the quarter-finals, with the match details announced on 29 September.[9]
The lowest ranked side that qualified for this round was Canberra Olympic, who were the only level 2 team left in the competition.
All times listed below are at AEDT
All times listed below are at AEDT
See main article: 2016 FFA Cup Final.
The live television rights for the competition were held by the subscription network Fox Sports, who broadcast 11 games live, with live updates and crosses from a single camera at the concurrent matches for goals and highlights.[10] Games not broadcast on Fox Sports were streamed live via their online services.[11] These matches were televised live by Fox Sports:
Round | Live broadcast matches | |
---|---|---|
Round of 32 | Hume City vs Marconi Stallions[12] Green Gully vs Central Coast Mariners Redlands United vs Adelaide United Wollongong Wolves vs Sydney FC | |
Round of 16 | Brisbane Strikers vs Melbourne City Edgeworth FC vs Western Sydney Wanderers | |
Quarter-finals | Blacktown City vs Sydney FC Bentleigh Greens vs Melbourne Victory | |
Semi-finals and Final | All matches |