2019 FFA Cup final explained

2019 FFA Cup Final
Team1:Adelaide United
Team1score:4
Team2:Melbourne City
Team2score:0
Date:23 October 2019
Stadium:Coopers Stadium
City:Adelaide
Man Of The Match1a:Al Hassan Toure
Referee:Alex King
Attendance:14,920
Weather:Sunny
30°C
Previous:2018
Next:2021

The 2019 FFA Cup Final was the sixth final of the FFA Cup, Australia's main soccer cup competition and the final match of the 2019 FFA Cup. The match was contested between Adelaide United and Melbourne City, and was held at Coopers Stadium, home of Adelaide United. The home side, Adelaide, defeated City by four goals to nil and recorded their third FFA Cup title, and second in succession.[1]

The match was broadcast live on Fox Sports.[2]

Road to the final

Adelaide UnitedRoundMelbourne City
OpponentResultOpponentResult
Melbourne Knights5–2 (A)Round of 32Campbelltown City3–1 (A)
Olympic FC3–2 (A)Round of 16Marconi Stallions2–1 (A)
Newcastle Jets1–0 (H)Quarter-finalsWestern Sydney Wanderers3–0 (H)
Central Coast Mariners2–1 (A)Semi-finalsBrisbane Strikers5–1 (A)
Note: In all results above, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).

Adelaide United entered the tournament as the reigning champions, having defeated Sydney FC 2–1 in the 2018 Cup Final at home. The Reds were drawn away to high-profile NPL VIC club Melbourne Knights and won 5–2, with Ben Halloran's two goals in that match helping to keep the Knights at bay. In the Round of 16, Adelaide travelled to Brisbane to take on Olympic FC and were in danger of becoming the second A-League club to lose to an NPL club in this year's tournament. Olympic FC drew level with Adelaide twice in the match, before George Blackwood's 84th minute penalty conversion got the Reds over the line.[3] United then met A-League clubs for the remainder of the cup, winning 1–0 against Newcastle Jets at home in the quarter-final. A come-from-behind semi-final victory over the Central Coast Mariners was sealed by to a controversial 90th minute goal scored by ex-City footballer Riley McGree.[4] Adelaide United became the first A-League club to qualify for their fourth FFA Cup Final.

Melbourne City's opponent in the round of 32, was NPL SA club Campbelltown City in Adelaide. Goals from Jamie Maclaren and Craig Noone saw Melbourne City victorious by a margin of 3–1.[5] In the round of 16, Melbourne City headed over to Sydney to take NPL NSW club Marconi Stallions. After Jamie Maclaren scored the opening goal in the second minute, Craig Noone would score Melbourne City's second off a flick from Connor Metcalfe to give Melbourne City a 2–0 lead. A late consolation goal wasn't enough for the Stallions, with the final scoreline reading 2–1.[6] The club met Western Sydney Wanderers in the quarter-finals for the second time in three years and were dominant in a 3–0 win. In their semi-final tie, City traveled to take on the Brisbane Strikers at Perry Park. Despite conceding the first goal inside the opening five minutes, City won the match 5–1. Striker Jamie Maclaren scored in each match, and entered the final with six goals to his name.

Pre-match

Venue

For the second consecutive year, the host venue was randomly drawn following the conclusion of the semi-finals. Adelaide's home ground of Coopers Stadium was drawn, making it the third time the venue had hosted the showpiece event and for the second consecutive year.[7]

Analysis

Adelaide entered the match as the reigning cup champions and made their fourth appearance in the event. Success would provide the club with their third title, having won the cup in 2014 and 2018. City meanwhile have reached the final once before, in 2016 when they defeated Sydney FC at home to claim the senior men's team first piece of silverware.

The two teams met three days prior in Round 2 of the A-League where City came out on top 2–1 with Jamie Maclaren scoring a brace and Riley McGree scoring Adelaide's only goal.[8]

Match

Details

width=25!width=25
GK 20
RB 4
CB 2
CB 22 Michael Jakobsen (c)
LB 7
DM 27
DM 5
RM 26
CM 8
LM 17
CF 35
Substitutes:
GK 30
MF 18
MF 16
MF 6
FW 11
Manager:
Gertjan Verbeek
width=25!width=25
GK 23
RB 2
CB 4
CB 22
LB 3 Scott Jamieson (c)
CM 34
CM 6
CM 20
RW 19
CF 29
LW 11
Substitutes:
GK 1
DF 40
MF 17
MF 7
FW 21
Manager:
Erick Mombaerts
Man of the Match (Mark Viduka Medal):
Al Hassan Toure

Assistant referees


Matthew Cream
Wilson Brown
Fourth official


Josh Mannella
Additional assistant referees


Shaun Evans
Adam Kersey

Match rules:[9]
  • 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

width=100 Statisticswidth=70 Adelaide Unitedwidth=70 Melbourne City
Goals scored 40
Total shots 1113
34%66%
Corner kicks 27
Fouls 138
Offsides 12
Yellow cards 42
Red cards 00

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Adelaide United defeat Melbourne City in FFA Cup final; Al Hassan Toure steals the show. News.com.au. 23 October 2019.
  2. Web site: How to watch and follow the FFA Cup 2019 Final. 3 October 2019. A-League.
  3. Web site: FFA Cup: Adelaide United's teen star Al Hassan Toure steals show. Fox Sports. 20 August 2019.
  4. Web site: Adelaide sink Mariners in FFA Cup semi-final. The Sydney Morning Herald. 2 October 2019.
  5. Web site: Reds begin FFA Cup defence in Melbourne, Fowler's Roar reign starts against Sydney FC. 26 June 2019. John. Greco. 19 August 2019. FFA Cup.
  6. Web site: FFA Cup Report: Marconi Stallions 1 City 2. 22 August 2019. 2 October 2019. Melbourne City.
  7. Web site: FFA Cup 2019 Final locked in: Adelaide United to host Melbourne City. FFA Cup. 2 October 2019.
  8. Web site: Melbourne City FC vs Adelaide United, Hyundai A-League, Round 2, 20th Oct 2019. Adelaide United. en. 2019-10-24. 24 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191024094801/https://www.adelaideunited.com.au/match/melbourne-city-fc-v-adelaide-united-a-league-20-10-2019/2023956. dead.
  9. Web site: FFA Cup How Draw Works. Football Federation Australia. 24 February 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140327115746/http://www.footballaustralia.com.au/news-display/How-the-FFA-Cup-draw-works/86839. 27 March 2014. dead. dmy-all.