Australia Cup

Not to be confused with Australian Cup or Australia Cup (1999–2004).
Australia Cup
Founded 1962
Abolished 1968
Region Australia
Most successful club(s) Hakoah Eastern Suburbs (2 titles)

The Australia Cup was a football (soccer) knockout cup competition in Australia. It was the first national club tournament in the country, initiated in 1962 by the newly formed governing body of the sport, Australian Soccer Federation. The inaugural season of the tournament was contested by biggest teams from Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Newcastle. In 1963 the Australia Cup grew to take in teams from throughout Tasmania, and from 1964 Perth and Canberra clubs were represented, giving the competition a truly national feel.

Played throughout football's first real boom period in the 1960s, the Australia Cup was a refreshing competition for the sport. Though as the tournament grew, interstate travel provided difficulties and the decision was taken to abolish the Australia Cup after the 1968 season. However, the new national stage in which the tournament provided fuelled an expansionist desire across the big state league clubs ultimately leading to the creation of Australia's first national league in the 1970s, the National Soccer League.

In its seven season run, six clubs from around Australia won the tournament, with Hakoah Eastern Suburbs the only team to win it on two occasions.[1]

History

The origins of the Australia Cup are stemmed from September 1961, when Henry Seamonds, Chairman and Treasurer of the NSW Federation of Soccer Clubs, met with Victorian counterparts at a time when the Australian Soccer Football Association was suspended by FIFA. Seamonds put forward plans to not only form a new national governing body for the sport, but to also create a national knockout cup. The competition was ambitious, with clubs to be flown to Sydney for matches that were to be played over a five-week period starting later that year.[2] Although the tournament did not go ahead, in November of that year Seamonds summoned a meeting of all state representatives to Sydney. There the Australian Soccer Federation was formed with Seamonds made Chairman, and in 1962 the Australia Cup was founded.[3]

Initially the competition was confined to clubs from New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and South Australian, with the draw including 16 teams - four each from Victoria and the Sydney competition in New South Wales, three from South Australia and Queensland, and two from Northern New South Wales. The inaugural season of the Cup was won by Yugal who defeated St George Budapest 8–1 at Wentworth Park in the final. The third place playoff, between Juventus and Juventus (from Melbourne and Adelaide respectively), was won by the South Australian team on penalty kicks.[4]

Front page of Soccer Tennis News in November 1967, reporting on the 1967 final

The 1963 season saw four Tasmania teams taking part, with the big Sydney and Melbourne clubs entering the tournament in the second round. The final was contested by two Melbourne clubs, with Slavia Melbourne beating Polonia Melbourne 3–2 in a replay, after a scoreless draw. In the final, Des Palmer scored a hat-trick for the winners. Melbourne’s George Cross went on to win in 1964 after downing APIA Leichhardt from Sydney by three goals to two in front of a 15,000 crowd at Olympic Park Stadium. Archie Campbell scored the winner in extra-time. The following year Hakoah Eastern Suburbs beat APIA Leichhardt by the same score, but in 1966 APIA claimed the title against Hakoah.[4]

In the final of 1967, Melbourne Hungaria defeated APIA 4–3 at Olympic Park Stadium. Former Irish international and Manchester City player Bill Walsh was coach, and Australian international Attila Abonyi scored a hat-trick for the winning side.[4]

In what proved to be the final year of Australia Cup in 1968 Hakoah clubs of Melbourne and Sydney won through to the final, with the Sydneysiders triumphing over Melbourne Hakoah by six goals to one over two legs.[4][5]

The prize money for the first season of competition was 5,000, claimed to be the richest football prize in the country. Fred Villiers, in the Victorian Soccer News wrote that the first competition was so successful the New South Wales rugby league administration had stolen the idea to promote their game. Yet the Australia Cup never proved to be a financial success. Supporters were more interested in domestic league competitions and visits by overseas touring sides than they were in interstate club competitions.[4] The tournament proved that a national cup competition could be staged, but also showed up many of the problems of such a concept. If strictly knock-out from the beginning it risked losing the big draw-cards early, while a seeded draw potentially reduced the attractiveness to smaller teams who might be faced with prohibitive travel costs if they succeeded in getting through early rounds.[6] Though the Cup was also an early indication that the focus of the game in the Australia was beginning to shift away from a state level towards a national and international level. In 1965 Australia attempted qualification for the FIFA World Cup for the first time, and just over a decade later the first national league in Australia of any of the football codes was established - the National Soccer League.[7]

Trophy

The Australia Cup trophy was a large silver traditional cup style trophy. It had two handles with a laurel wreath design on the underside and figures studded on the top of each handle. The trophy featured a football as a trim on the very top of the cup lid, and it was mounted on a wooden base which had silver plates attached with the names and years of Cup Champion inscribed. After the passing of founding Australian Soccer Federation Chairman, Henry Seamonds, in 1963, the name The Henry Seamonds Memorial Trophy was also inscribed on the trophy.[8]

The legacy of the Australia Cup trophy extends to the FFA Cup. Established in 2014 as the first national cup competition that encompasses clubs on all levels of the Australian league system, the design of the tournaments trophy was influenced by that of the historic Australia Cup trophy.[9]

In 2011 a group of builders discovered the Australia Cup trophy in the rubbish whilst doing renovation works at the Hakoah Club in Sydney. Football Federation Australia were contacted by the finders, but weren't interested in its safe keeping.[8]

Finals

Seasons Champion Score Runner-up Venue
1962 Yugal 8–1 St George Budapest Wentworth Park, Sydney
1963 Slavia-Port Melbourne 0–0 & 3–2 Polonia Melbourne Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne
1964 George Cross 3–2 (a.e.t.) APIA Leichhardt Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne
1965 Hakoah Eastern Suburbs 1–1 & 2–1 APIA Leichhardt Wentworth Park, Sydney
1966 APIA Leichhardt 2–0 Hakoah Eastern Suburbs
1967 Melbourne Hungaria 4–3 APIA Leichhardt Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne
1968 Hakoah Eastern Suburbs 3–0 & 3–1 Hakoah Melbourne

References

  1. "Australia - List of Cup Winners". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 13 January 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2010.
  2. Sporting Traditions Volume 10 Issue 2: Marmaras’ Oyster or Seamonds’ Baby: The Formation of the Victorian Soccer Federation (PDF). Australian Society for Sports History. pp. 3–24. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  3. "Timeline of Australian Football". migrationheritage.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "The Australia Cup". goalweekly.com. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  5. "Hakoah - Sydney City Soccer Milestones". hakoah.com.au. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  6. "Will the FFA Cup help Australia's 'old soccer' clubs?". theguardian.com. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  7. "FFA Cup a new old tradition". footballaustralia.com.au. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  8. 1 2 "Australia Cup Found In Rubbish". ozfootball.net. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  9. Dominic Bossi. "FFA Cup: Minnows get a shot at A-League clubs". Canberra Times. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, October 14, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.