2021 A-League Grand Final Explained

2021 A-League Grand Final
Event:2020–21 A-League
Team1:Melbourne City
Team1score:3
Team2:Sydney FC
Team2score:1
Date:27 June 2021
Stadium:AAMI Park
City:Melbourne
Man Of The Match1a:Nathaniel Atkinson
Man Of The Match1aname:Joe Marston Medal
Referee:Chris Beath
Attendance:14,017
Weather:Sunny and clear
12.0 °C (53.6 °F)
Previous:2020
Next:2022

The 2021 A-League Grand Final was the 16th A-League Grand Final, the championship-deciding match of the Australian A-League and the culmination of the 2020–21 season. The match was played between season premiers Melbourne City and the second-placed team and championship holders Sydney FC on 27 June 2021 at AAMI Park in Melbourne.[1] [2] [3]

Melbourne City won their first championship by beating Sydney 3–1.

Teams

In the following table, finals until 2004 were in the National Soccer League era, since 2006 were in the A-League era.

TeamPrevious final appearances (bold indicates winners)
Melbourne City1 (2020)
Sydney FC6 (2006, 2010, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2020)

Route to the final

See also: 2020–21 A-League, 2020–21 Melbourne City FC season and 2020–21 Sydney FC season.

The 2020–21 season was the league's sixteenth since its inception in 2005, and the 44th season of top-flight association football in Australia. Twelve teams competed in the regular season, with each team playing a total of 26 matches, resulting in an uneven fixture that involved some clubs meeting three times and others meeting only twice. The top six teams qualified for the finals series, which were played in a straight-knockout format, with the top two teams earning an automatic place in the semi-finals and the bottom four teams playing off in elimination finals. The two winners of the semi-finals met in the grand final. Melbourne City and Sydney FC qualified for the semi-finals by virtue of finishing first and second respectively, whilst Central Coast Mariners (third) met Macarthur FC (sixth) in the first elimination final and Brisbane Roar (fourth) took on Adelaide United (fifth) in the second elimination final. Macarthur defeated Central Coast Mariners two goals to nil, both goals coming in extra time and Adelaide United defeated Brisbane Roar two goals to one. As the top-ranked team, Melbourne City were paired with and defeated Macarthur, the lowest-ranked winning team, 2–0, for their semi-final, whilst Sydney FC were victorious against Adelaide United in the other semi-final, the scoreline being 2–1.

Due to crowd restrictions imposed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Victoria, Melbourne City's home semi-final was moved to Netstrata Jubilee Stadium in New South Wales.[4]

Melbourne CityRoundSydney FC
1st placeRegular season2nd place
OpponentScoreOpponentScore
Bye weekN/AElimination finalsBye weekN/A
Macarthur FC2–0Semi-finalsAdelaide United2–1

Pre-match

Venue

The Grand Final was held at AAMI Park, Melbourne, Victoria, the home ground of Melbourne City.[5] It was the second Grand Final hosted at the venue, after 2015.

Attendance

Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the stadium was limited to 50% capacity.[6] Tickets for the game were sold out, resulting in a final attendance of 14,017 spectators.[7] Due to a COVID-19 lockdown in Sydney, many travelling fans for the away team were unable to attend the match.[8]

Broadcasting

The Grand Final was broadcast throughout Australia live on Fox Sports and streamed for free on Kayo Sports through the Kayo Freebies initiative.[9] This was also the last A-League match broadcast on Fox Sports after a sixteen-year association with the broadcaster, with the A-League moving to Network 10 and Paramount+.[10] In the United States, the Grand Final was shown on ESPN+.

Match

Summary

Despite early dominance from Melbourne City, they slipped to an early disadvantage after Sydney FC's Kosta Barbarouses hit a powerful effort past City goalkeeper Thomas Glover. Shortly after this goal, the eventual Joe Marston medalist Nathaniel Atkinson scored for City to put the teams level at 1–1. In the 35th minute of the match, Sydney midfielder Luke Brattan was sent off after accumulating two yellow cards, allowing Melbourne to continue to dominate after this point in the match. They eventually won the game 3–1 thanks to further goals from captain Scott Jamieson and Scott Galloway, and claimed their first A-League championship.[11] [12]

Details

width=25!width=25
GK 1 Tom Glover
RB 2 Scott Galloway
CB 4 Nuno Reis
CB 7 Rostyn Griffiths
LB 3 Scott Jamieson (c)
CM 10 Florin Berenguer
CM 8 Aiden O'Neill
CM 20 Adrián Luna
RF 13 Nathaniel Atkinson
CF 17
LF 23
Substitutes:
GK 33 Matt Sutton
DF 19 Ben Garuccio
DF 36 Kerrin Stokes
MF 16 Taras Gomulka
FW 11 Craig Noone
FW 15
FW 35 Raphael Borges Rodrigues
Head coach:
Patrick Kisnorbo
width=25!width=25
GK 20 Tom Heward-Belle
RB 8 Paulo Retre
CB 4 Alex Wilkinson (c)
CB 3 Ben Warland
LB 16 Joel King
CM 17
CM 26
RM 11 Kosta Barbarouses
LM 5
CF 9
CF 99 Adam Le Fondre
Substitutes:
GK 30 Adam Pavlesic
DF 2 Patrick Flottmann
DF 21
DF 25 Callum Talbot
MF 10
FW 18 Luke Ivanovic
FW 33
Head coach:
Steve Corica
Joe Marston Medal


Nathaniel Atkinson (Melbourne City)

Assistant referees


Matthew Cream
Nathan MacDonald
Fourth official


Daniel Elder
Fifth official


Wilson Brown
Video assistant referee


Kris Griffiths-Jones

Match rules
  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions, with a fourth allowed in extra time.

Statistics

Overall statistics
width=100width=120 Melbourne Citywidth=120 Sydney FC
Goals scored 3 1
Total shots 26 3
Shots on target 8 1
69.5% 30.5%
Corner kicks 10 1
Fouls conceded15 14
Offsides 1 1
Yellow cards 2 2
Red cards 0 1

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1 August 2017. Competition Rules. 28 May 2021. A-League. a-league.com.au . en.
  2. Web site: A-League 2021 Finals Series Dates Revealed . a-league.com.au. A-League. 4 June 2021.
  3. Web site: A-League 2021 Grand Final to be held at AAMI Park on Sunday 27 June . A-League. a-league.com.au . 23 June 2021.
  4. Web site: A-League 2021 Semi Final between Melbourne City FC and Macarthur FC switched to Netstrata Jubilee Stadium. A-League. a-league.com.au. 17 June 2021.
  5. Web site: 2021-06-23. A-League 2021 Grand Final to be held at AAMI Park on Sunday 27 June. 2021-06-27. A-League. en.
  6. Web site: 2021-06-27. All tickets sold for A-League 2021 Grand Final. 2021-06-27. A-League. en.
  7. Web site: 2021-06-27. All tickets sold for A-League 2021 Grand Final. 2021-07-02. A-League. en.
  8. Web site: 2021-06-23. Sydney COVID-19 restrictions force State of Origin, A-League grand final, AFL changes. 2021-07-02. www.abc.net.au. en-AU.
  9. Web site: Kayo Freebies: how to watch all the Finals Series action LIVE and FREE on Kayo Sports! . a-league.com.au . 9 June 2021.
  10. Web site: Perry . Kevin . A-LEAGUE FINDS NEW HOME ON CHANNEL 10 AND PARAMOUNT+ . tvblackbox.com.au . 26 May 2021.
  11. Web site: Jackson. Andrew. 27 June 2021. A ‘moment of madness’, penalty drama and quickfire goals — this A-League GF had it ALL. live. Fox Sports. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20210709190235/https://www.foxsports.com.au/football/a-league/aleague-grand-final-2021-melbourne-city-vs-sydney-fc-result-luke-brattan-red-card-penalty-reaction/news-story/4ed68d71ba575d2da1fe6517f4e13e69 . 2021-07-09 .
  12. Web site: Rayson. Zac. 27 June 2021. Melbourne City claim maiden crown as Sky Blue dynasty denied in epic final. live. Fox Sports. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20210709185127/https://www.foxsports.com.au/football/a-league/aleague-final-2021-melbourne-city-vs-sydney-fc-live-football-scores-start-time-how-to-watch-teams-updates/news-story/803f4ba50ebde576b4e120f6148a621d . 2021-07-09 .