OFC Champions League explained

OFC Champions League
Organiser:OFC
Founded:
(rebranded in 2007)
Qualifier For:FIFA Club World Cup
FIFA Intercontinental Cup
Region:Oceania
Current Champions: Auckland City
(12th title)
Most Successful Team: Auckland City
(12 titles)
Broadcasters:FIFA+ (live streaming)
Current:2024 OFC Champions League

The OFC Champions League is the premier men's club football competition in Oceania. It is organised by the OFC, Oceania's football governing body. Beginning as the Oceania Club Championship (1987–2006), it has been organised since 2007 under its current format.

The first four Club Championship titles were won by Australian clubs. Since 2006, when Australia left the OFC, 15 OFC titles have been won by clubs from New Zealand, one by a Papua New Guinean club and one by a New Caledonian club.

Trophies for OFC tournament winners are made by London-based silversmiths Thomas Lyte.[1]

History

Oceania Club Championship and OFC Champions League winners
Season Winners
Oceania Club Championship
Adelaide City
1988–1998: Not held
South Melbourne
2000: Not held
Wollongong Wolves
2002–2004: Not held
Sydney FC
Auckland City
OFC Champions League
Waitakere United
Waitakere United 
Auckland City 
Hekari United
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Team Wellington
Hienghène Sport
2020–2021: Not held
Auckland City 
Auckland City 
Auckland City 

Oceania Club Championship

The Oceania Club Championship was played in one or two venues, in one host country. There were two or three groups with single round-robin format, semifinals and final. The tournament usually lasted about 10 days, with matches being played every 2 days.

At first, this competition was played as a single playoff match between champions of New Zealand and Australia. That competition was held in 1987 and Adelaide City won the inaugural season. Then 12 years pause came, until the OFC organised the next, all-Oceania Cup. In January 1999, the Oceania Club Championship was held in the Fijian cities of Nadi and Lautoka. Nine teams took part, with Australian side South Melbourne winning the trophy. They also qualified for the following year's FIFA Club World Cup.

The next competition was held two years later, with an Australian team again winning the title. Wollongong Wolves won it, beating Vanuatu representative Tafea in the final. Two more editions were held under this name and format, with Sydney and Auckland City winning titles. OFC decided to change the competition format and name, so that since 2007 the competition is known as the OFC Champions League.

OFC Champions League

2007–2014

The OFC decided to change competition format, to make its main competition more interesting and more important to competing clubs.

The first two seasons saw competition with two groups of three teams each, and from the third edition onwards it consists of two groups of four teams each. Group winners progress to the final, played in double playoff format, with the winner taking the title. Unlike its previous format, the OFC Champions League lasts more than a half year, starting in October and ending the following April. The OFC Champions League qualifies to FIFA Club World Cup, entering the competition in the playoff round.

For the 2012–13 season the OFC Champions League changed its format with the introduction of qualifying stage, with the champions of the four weakest leagues competing for a play-off spot with the representative of country with the worst record from the previous tournament. Later rather were also scheduling and format changes for the main tournament. That competition was played between March and May 2013 with introduction of semifinal stage and final played on neutral venue. The first OFC Champions League single leg final was played in Auckland, and was the first OFC Champions League final between two teams from the same country, with Auckland City defeating Waitakere United to win its 5th title.

The OFC Champions League saw another change for 2013–14 season, with the group stage played in a pre-determined location and the semifinals and final played on a home-and-away basis. Fiji was selected as host. The Preliminary stage was played six months before the group stage, and the winner entered the group stage.

In 2014, both finalists of the OFC Champions League participated in the OFC President's Cup, an invitational tournament organised by the OFC. However, President's Cup was held only once.

2014–present

In the 2014–15 season, the tournament was sponsored by Fiji Airways and renamed the Fiji Airways OFC Champions League in that season.[2]

Another format change came in 2017 when the group stage was expanded to 16 teams, with the whole competition being played in one year (preliminary stage followed by group stage and later knock-out stage). Each of four groups was hosted by one of the teams from the group, meaning more countries and teams were included. Group winners qualified for the semifinal stage. The semifinals and final were both played on a home-and-away basis. Following the success of the 2017 season, the OFC added a quarterfinal round for the 2018 edition, meaning that the top two teams from each group qualified for the knock-out stage.

The 2019 final, Hienghène SportAS Magenta (both from New Caledonia), marked the first time in the history of the competition that there was no side from New Zealand present.

Format

Qualification

The OFC Champions League has in its current format having 8 teams in the group stage, where single rounds are played in two groups, so that the 2 best placed teams in each group qualify for the knockout stage.

The number of teams that each federation enters into the OFC Champions League is based on the federations development criteria before the OFC, where the developed associations receive 2 places, which are Fiji, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tahiti and Vanuatu, and those considered developing associations receive a single place, where the associations are American Samoa, Cook Islands, Samoa and Tonga.

The current qualifying format for the group stage is determined by the two classifieds of the developed associations playing home and away games called National play-offs, while the teams from the developing associations play against each other in round-robin regime in a centralized location, where the best-scoring team qualifies for the group stage.

Broadcasting

From the 2024 season, all games are live streamed on FIFA+.[3] [4]

List of finals

Key
Match was won during extra time
Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
width=40px align=center style="background-color:#eeee00"&Finals decided on away goals
List of Oceania Club Championship and OFC Champions League
scope=colSeasonscope=colCountryscope=colWinnersscope=colScorescope=colRunners-upscope=colCountryscope=colVenueAttendance
1987Adelaide Cityalign=center bgcolor=cedff21–1Hindmarsh Stadium, Adelaide, Australia3,500
1999South Melbourne5–1NadiPrince Charles Park, Nadi, Fiji10,000
20011–0Tafea3,000
2005Sydney FC2–0AS MagentaStade Pater, Papeete, Tahiti4,000
2006Auckland City3–1AS PiraeNorth Harbour Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand2,000
2007Waitakere United1–24R Electrical BaGovind Park, Ba, Fiji10,000
align=center bgcolor="#eeee00"1–0&</sup>Mount Smart Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand9,000
2007–08Waitakere United1–3KossaLawson Tama Stadium, Honiara, Solomon Islands20,000
5–0The Trusts Arena, Auckland, New Zealand6,000
2008–09Auckland City7–2KoloaleLawson Tama Stadium, Honiara, Solomon Islands20,000
2–2Kiwitea Street, Auckland, New Zealand1,250
2009–10PRK Hekari United3–0Waitakere UnitedPMRL Stadium, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea15,000
1–2Fred Taylor Park, Auckland, New Zealand3,000
2010–11Auckland City2–1AmicalePort Vila Municipal Stadium, Port Vila, Vanuatu7,925
4–0Kiwitea Street, Auckland, New Zealand3,000
2011–12Auckland City2–1TefanaKiwitea Street, Auckland, New Zealand1,500
1–0Stade Louis Ganivet, Faʻaʻā, Tahiti1,900
2012–13Auckland City2–1Waitakere UnitedMount Smart Stadium (Arena 2), Auckland, New Zealand3,000
2013–14Auckland City1–1AmicalePort Vila Municipal Stadium, Port Vila, Vanuatu10,000
2–1Kiwitea Street, Auckland, New Zealand3,000
2014–15Auckland Cityalign=center bgcolor=cedff21–1Team WellingtonANZ Stadium, Suva, Fiji3,000
2016Auckland City3–0Team WellingtonQBE Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand1,500
2017Auckland City3–0Team WellingtonDavid Farrington Park, Wellington, New Zealand1,000
2–0Kiwitea Street, Auckland, New Zealand1,000
2018Team Wellington6–0LautokaDavid Farrington Park, Wellington, New Zealand1,200
4–3Churchill Park, Lautoka, Fiji1,000
2019Hienghène Sport1–0AS MagentaStade Numa-Daly Magenta, Nouméa, New Caledonia7,000
2020Competition abandoned due to COVID-19 pandemic in Oceania; title not awarded[5]
2021No competition due to COVID-19 pandemic in Oceania; title not awarded[6]
2022Auckland City3–0VénusNgahue Reserve, Auckland, New Zealand400
2023Auckland Cityalign=center bgcolor="#FBCEB1"4–2SuvaVFF Freshwater Stadium, Port Vila, Vanuatu5,420
2024Auckland Cityalign=center 4–0PiraeStade Pater, Papeete, Tahiti819

Record and statistics

See main article: article and Oceania Club Championship and OFC Champions League records and statistics.

All-time table (Top 10 Clubs)

Rankwidth=22%ClubSeasons
1 align=left 18 1037618930876+232 246 11 11
2 align=left Waitakere United 8 482512119957+42 87 2 4
3 align=left 10 44228149860+38 74 0 2
4 align=left 11 50227217483–9 73 0 1
5 align=left 11 482010188069+11 70 1 1
6 align=left Team Wellington 5 30215410429+75 68 1 4
7 align=left Amicale 6 35156144841+7 51 0 2
8 align=left 7 30143138887+1 45 0 0
9 align=left 5 25132106647+19 41 0 1
10 align=left 6 28116114658–12 39 0 1

All-time table (Countries)

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New silverware awarded for victors . . 3 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151208151310/http://www.oceaniafootball.com/ofc/news/viewarticle/tabid/125/article/aae5af91-abfa-42e9-b318-6acf7f7d55f1/language/en-us/default.aspx . 8 December 2015 . 19 March 2013.
  2. Web site: OFC teams up with Fiji Airways. OFC. 2 April 2015. 3 April 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150403184534/http://www.oceaniafootball.com/ofc/News/ViewArticle/tabid/125/Article/28e047a5-45c7-4568-90bf-1bf4edc7f805/language/en-US/Default.aspx. 3 April 2015.
  3. Web site: Live Streams - OFC Men's Champions League . . 8 February 2024 . 8 February 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240208021846/https://www.plus.fifa.com/en/showcase/live-streams-ofc-men-s-champions-league/300ec768-0a05-489f-9445-98c412c5e6dc?gl=au&fbclid=IwAR1hz17z1RbO1E1lU3yxFubF3Ly_K34KzmezPuTLG5iXFR5A6cpd3EIGFeA . live .
  4. Web site: The OFC Men's Champions League - National Playoffs kick-off today! . Oceania Football Confederation . 8 February 2024 . 8 February 2024 . 8 February 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240208021845/https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=831243879032428&set=a.625298079627010 . live .
  5. Web site: OFC Champions League 2020 cancelled. Oceania Football Confederation. 4 September 2020. 4 September 2020. 27 November 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201127112532/https://www.oceaniafootball.com/ofc-champions-league-2020-cancelled/. live.
  6. Web site: OFC competitions calendar rescheduled. Oceania Football Confederation. 4 June 2021. 5 June 2021. 5 June 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210605184434/https://www.oceaniafootball.com/ofc-competitions-calendar-rescheduled/. live.