Clubname: | Melbourne Victory Women |
Upright: | 0.75 |
Fullname: | Melbourne Victory Football Club |
Ground: | AAMI Park The Home of the Matildas |
Capacity: | 30,050 2,000 |
Chairman: | John Dovaston |
Manager: | Jeff Hopkins |
Current: | 2024–25 Melbourne Victory FC (A-League Women) season |
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Pattern B2: | _mvfc202324_away |
Leftarm2: | FFB6C1 |
Body2: | FFB6C1 |
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Melbourne Victory FC is an Australian professional women's soccer team affiliated with Melbourne Victory FC and Football Federation Victoria. Founded in 2008, the team is one of the representatives of Melbourne in Australia's top-tier domestic competition – the A-League Women.
Following on from the previous top-division Women's National Soccer League, Melbourne Victory Women linked with the Hyundai A-League men's club but run by Football Federation Victoria (FFV), was a foundation club of the Westfield W-League.[1] With a strong roster boasting Australia's number one goalkeeper Melissa Barbieri and former Matildas star Tal Karp as captain, expectations were high.
See also: 2008–09 Melbourne Victory W-League season and W-League 2008–09. Early signs were positive in the first season with New Zealand international Marlies Oostdam scoring the club's first goal as Victory won their first competitive fixture, defeating Central Coast Mariners 2–0.[2] Despite being on top of the table at the conclusion of Round 3, the next few rounds were lean for Melbourne, and it found itself in the position of needing a win in the final round to make the finals series. With the final round match in the balance, Central Coast Mariners came back to haunt Victory with goals in the 89th and 90th minutes to deny the Victory a play-off spot in the inaugural year.[3] Melissa Barbieri was awarded Goalkeeper of the Year by the league.[4]
See also: 2009 W-League (Australia). The second season proved even more painful as once again Melbourne's finals prospects came down to a last-round showdown, this time against Perth Glory. Needing only a draw to claim fourth spot, late goals again cost Victory as Perth scored in the 81st and 87th meaning the Victorians missed out on finals to Canberra via goal difference.
See also: 2010–11 W-League. Season 2010/11 saw a change of personnel for Melbourne Victory with new coach Vicki Linton taking charge of a re-shuffled squad. Adjusting to a new system and new teammates, it was a slow start with the team having to wait until Round 4 to claim its first win of the season before finishing the regular season off with a five-match undefeated run.
Finishing in fourth spot, Victory made the finals but succumbed to a strong Sydney FC team 5–1. The team was not quite ready for a title challenge but a maiden finals campaign was an important step forward. 2010/11 also saw the club win its first silverware with a win over Canberra United, seeing it awarded the OCRF Trophy while also taking out the W-League Fair Play Award.
See also: 2011–12 W-League. If 2010/11 was an important step forward, 2011/12 was a giant leap for Melbourne Victory as it consolidated its place as one of the top teams in Australia. Its most consistent season so far saw it never out of finals contention. Going the entire season undefeated at home – including going within minutes of beating the undefeated Canberra United – Victory finished fourth in the tightest season of the Westfield W-League in history.
Despite a tight 1–0 loss to Canberra in the semi-final it was a successful season with Steph Catley, Ashley Brown, Brianna Davey and Katrina Gorry all making their Matildas debuts while Catley and Brown won Footballer of the Year (Australian Football Fan Awards) and W-League Young Player of the Season respectively. Melbourne Victory also won its second successive W-League Fair Play Award, sharing with Canberra, and retained the OCRF Trophy.
See also: 2012–13 W-League. Hoping to build on their strong 2011/12 season, the Victory got off to a shaky start in 2012/13 with head coach Vicki Linton resigning only weeks before the season was to kick-off. With her departure Darren Tan was appointed as interim coach until former Gold Coast United coach Mike Mulvey was given the job just days before the opening round.
Having only a squad of 12 players registered going into the match, Melbourne Victory was forced to sign three more players due to FFA regulations before going on to lose 2–0 to Perth. Despite another loss in Round 2 leaving the team on the bottom of the ladder, a combination of international signings – including stars Petra Larsson and Jessica Fishlock – and players beginning to understand Mulvey's playing system led to a turnaround in form.
With the league's best defence, Melbourne finished the regular season in third place losing only a single match after Round 2. Even so, the team had to contend with more issues as Mulvey left following Round 9 to take up an A-League contract with Brisbane Roar, while Fishlock's guest contract ended after Round 10. A dramatic semi-final win over Perth Glory extended the side's historic undefeated streak to seven and allowed it to host the 2012/13 Westfield W-League grand final at AAMI Park, although it fell to Sydney FC 3–1. Despite this, Steph Catley was awarded W-League Young Player of the Year and Mike Mulvey W-League Coach of the Year.
The active support group for Melbourne Victory is the Victory Vikings, who also serve as the active support group for Melbourne Victory FC AWT.[5] [6] The group was formed prior to the 2019–20 W-League season by Melbourne Victory supporters who attended the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, after they were involved with the Matildas Active Support and enjoyed the experience.[7] Aside from attending matches, the Victory Vikings are also known for announcing statistics on player milestones, as well as posting instant live match updates for Melbourne Victory and AWT matches. The group is notable for their mascot, a large stuffed Homer Simpson doll wearing a Viking helmet that is brought to matches, with players frequently posing with it.[8]
See also: List of Melbourne Victory Women players.
Below is a list of notable footballers who have previously played for Melbourne Victory Women. Generally, this means players that have played 50 or more first-class matches for the club. However, some players who have played fewer matches are also included, are the club's integral founding members, were integral members of a championship winning team, have at least one senior international cap or made significant contributions to the club's history.
Australia
Canada
England
| New Zealand
South Korea
Sweden
Turkey
United States
Wales
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Dates | Name | Notes | Honours | |
---|---|---|---|---|
26 October 2008–5 December 2009 | Matt Sheppard[9] | Inaugural manager | ||
3 August 2010–7 September 2012 | Vicki Linton[10] [11] | First manager to take the club to W-League finals | W-League Fair-Play Award (x2): 2010–11 & 2011–12 | |
12 November 2011–13 November 2011 | Michael Edwards | Step-in Manager for one match | ||
21 October 2012–18 December 2012 | Mike Mulvey[12] | Departed in Round Ten to join Brisbane Roar in the A-League. | W-League Coach of the Year 2012–13 | |
18 December 2012–27 January 2013 | Fabrizio Soncin[13] [14] | Promoted from Assistant Coach to complete season 2012–13 | W-League Premiership Runners-Up 2012–13 | |
5 February 2013–23 February 2014 | Dave Edmondson[15] | Departed following Grand Final to join Bristol Academy[16] | W-League Champions 2013–14 | |
14 May 2014–March 2015 | Joe Montemurro[17] | Departed after season to join Melbourne City[18] | ||
October 2015–January 2016 | Dave Edmondson[19] [20] | |||
17 June 2016– | Jeff Hopkins[21] |
Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home | Away | Aggregate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | AFC Women's Club Championship | Incheon Hyundai Steel Red Angels | ||||
Jiangsu Suning | ||||||
Nippon TV Beleza |
8 | 5th | – | ||
2009 | 8 | 5th | – | |
7 | 4th | Semi-Finals | ||
7 | 4th | Semi-Finals | ||
8 | 3rd | Finalist | ||
8 | 3rd | Champions | ||
8 | 2nd | Finalist | ||
9 | 9th | – | ||
9 | 9th | – | ||
9 | 7th | – | ||
9 | 1st | Semi-Finals | ||
9 | 2nd | Semi-Finals | ||
9 | 3rd | Champions | ||
10 | 4th | Champions | ||
11 | 4th | Preliminary Final | ||
2023-24 | 12 | 4th | Elimination-final |
Amy Jackson holds the record for most appearances with 103 as of April 2023
Last updated 30 April 2023
Competitive, professional matches only.
width=20% | Name | width=20% | Years | width=12% | League | width=12% | Finals | width=12% | AFC Women's Champions League | width=12% | International Women's Club Championship | width=12% | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2010–2014, 2019- | |||||||||||||
2 | 2016– | |||||||||||||
3 | Casey Dumont | 2017– | ||||||||||||
4 | Melina Ayres | 2017– | ||||||||||||
5 | 2009–2018 |
Natasha Dowie holds the record for most league goals with 33 (including finals) as of April 2023.
Last updated 30 April 2023
Competitive, professional matches only, appearances including substitutes appear in brackets.
width=21% | Name | width=17% | Years | League | Finals | Total | width=17% | Games per goal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Natasha Dowie | 2015–2020 | 1.73 | ||||||
2 | 2017– | 2.36 | |||||||
=3 | Caitlin Friend | 2010–2014 | 3.07 | ||||||
=3 | Amy Jackson | 2010–2014, 2019- | 6.60 | ||||||
=5 | Lisa De Vanna | 2013–2015, 2020-2021 | 2.64 | ||||||
=5 | Catherine Zimmerman | 2021–2023 | 2.79 |