National Premier Leagues Victoria

National Premier Leagues Victoria
Founded 1908
First season 1909
Country Australia
Number of teams 14
Level on pyramid 2
Relegation to NPL 2
Domestic cup(s) FFA Cup
Dockerty Cup
Current champions South Melbourne FC
(2016)
Current premiers Bentleigh Greens SC
Most championships South Melbourne (10 titles)
TV partners Flip TV
FFV Radio
Website NPL Victoria
2017 Football Federation Victoria season

The National Premier Leagues Victoria is an Australian professional association football league comprising teams from Victoria. As a subdivision of the National Premier Leagues, the league sits at Level 1 on the Victorian league system (Level 2 of the overall Australian league system). The competition is administered by Football Federation Victoria, the governing body of the sport in the state. In 2014 the league was rebranded from the Victorian Premier League to reflect the league joining the National Premier Leagues.

History

Victorian Premier League logo.

The league commenced in 1909 with Carlton United being the first champions. It has run continuously except for a three season postponement from 1916 to 1918 owing to World War I. After 1945 the league, like fellow state competitions around the country, received a massive boost in numbers and quality with the post-war influx of European migrants, whose dominance was established so effectively that no club which had won the title before 1952, Juventus' first title, has won one since.

Juventus would go on to dominate the league in the 1950s, winning six titles, including five in a row from 1952 to 1956. In 1958, after the Victorian Amateur Soccer Federation was formed, the league became known as the Victorian State League. From 1962 until 1976 the league was largely dominated by South Melbourne Hellas and Footscray JUST, which won 11 titles between them.

With creation of the National Soccer League (NSL) in 1977, the league gradually lost most of its stronger clubs, a trend that reached its peak between 1984 and 1986, when the NSL used a split conference system. After 1987, however, the league slowly started regaining clubs, firstly those discarded when the conference system experiment was abandoned and later when clubs became permanently relegated by the NSL to their respective state leagues. The dominant side during the years from 1977 to 2004 was Green Gully, who won six titles during this period, despite also missing the years 1984-1986 from being in the NSL.

In 1991 the league rebranded again to become the Victorian Premier League and the first finals to determine the champions were staged in 1992, won by the newly promoted North Geelong. Following the demise of the NSL in 2004, the remaining two Victorian NSL teams Melbourne Knights and South Melbourne were granted permission to play in the VPL season of 2005. The league received a major boost at the start of the 2005 season when Vodafone became major naming rights sponsors, with the competition being renamed the Vodafone Cup. The 2005 season initially saw crowds attending in record numbers to witness the return of old derbies such as that between South Melbourne and Heidelberg United, but with the formation of the A-League filling the void of a national domestic league, 2006 saw a sharp decline in attendances.

The end of the 2006 season also witnessed a controversial finish to the relegation battle. With three teams finishing on 30 points, Sunshine George Cross were relegated on goal difference. However, a post-season appeal to the tribunal on the grounds that Essendon Royals had fielded a suspended player (Ilcho Mladenovski in round 24) saw the Royals deducted a point and relegated. Ultimately, both clubs reprised their position in the following season's competition with the inclusion of the Australian Institute of Sport evening out the numbers to 16, and as the first part of reforms to the competition set to be brought about in 2008.

The Australian Institute of Sport experiment was largely derided by the local clubs, and after their removal from the competition in 2008, the league reverted to 12 teams and a Top 5 Finals-Series in 2009. However, the concept of a youth development squad was reintroduced in 2010 with the National Training Centre team playing in midweek fixtures throughout the season but not for competition points. In 2011 the team, mostly comprising players from the Melbourne Victory youth squad, was renamed Victorian Training Centre Football and was eligible to score competition points for its matches but ineligible to qualify for the finals series or be relegated.

On 15 September 2013, Victoria Police arrested up to ten people, including Southern Stars FC players David Obaze, Nicholas McKoy and Joe Woolley as well as the coach, Zaya Younan, for allegations of match fixing. They are expected to be charged with corrupting the outcome of betting.[1]

In early 2013, it was announced that Victoria would join the National Premier Leagues, with the Victorian Premier League expected to be rebranded for the 2014 season.[2][3] Although Football Federation Victoria's initial proposal was halted with the announcement of a deferral in November 2013 after several clubs objected to the process for selecting team. However, by December 2013, a resolution was reached whereby Victorian teams would participate in the 2014 season.[4][5]

Format

The league sits below the A-League and forms a part of the second tier of league soccer in Australia. It is primarily staged in the Australian winter and, in its current format, runs between March and September. The league comprises teams based in the Australian state of Victoria and Football Federation Victoria is the governing body.

The introduction of the NPL by Football Federation Victoria in 2014 resulted in twenty eight licences being issued and accepted by clubs divided into two divisions: NPL and NPL1. Two teams (Eastern Lions and Surf Coast) were offered licences however decided not to accept them.[6] In 2016 to avoid confusion the divisions were renamed as NPL and NPL2.

NPL & NPL2: Each league comprises fourteen teams competing in a Seniors and Under 20s competition. Every team plays each other twice over the course of a 26-week season.

Finals

Victorian Finals: A finals series was re-introduced in 2015 for the top 6 teams. There is no finals series for the NPL2.

National NPL Finals: The Victorian NPL champion represents Victoria in the Australian National Premier Leagues finals. In 2014 the first round of NPL national finals saw Victoria play Tasmania’s NPL champion. Since 2016 the match ups in the national finals series have been randomly drawn.

Promotion and Relegation: The teams finishing in the last two NPL ladder positions at the end of the season may be relegated for the following season at the discretion of Football Federation Victoria. The teams finishing in the top two NPL2 ladder positions at the end of the may be promoted to NPL in the following season.

Media coverage

Radio: Radio station 1116 SEN broadcasts a segment titled 'World of Football' every Tuesday night between 8:00pm and 9:00pm. This segment is part of the stations 'Evenings with Finey' program presented by Mark Fine.

Television: South Melbourne FC has a professionally produced weekly show titled SMFC.TV and covers NPL team match highlights including player and coaching staff interviews. This show is broadcast on Channel 31 at 7:00pm on Tuesdays and replayed 5:30am on Wednesdays. Episodes are also published on YouTube at SMFC.TV

Newspapers: Print coverage is generally scant in Melbourne's two major daily newspapers, the Herald Sun and The Age, but more coverage is provided by specialist newspaper GoalWeekly, non-English language newspapers and free suburban newspapers.

Live Match Coverage: live Twitter feeds of NPL and NPL1 matches are provided by a team of media representatives engaged by Football Federation Victoria. Some matches are radio broadcast live on the internet by livecast.com.au

Video Highlights:Football Federation Victoria together with a number of NPL and NPL1 club produce regular shows and round-by-round highlights videos which are published on YouTube and their respective club websites.

Clubs

Current clubs

Club Location Home ground Capacity
Avondale Avondale Heights Knights Stadium (temporary) 15,000
Bentleigh Greens Cheltenham Kingston Heath Soccer Complex 5,000[7][8]
Bulleen Lions Bulleen David Barro Stadium 6,000
Green Gully Keilor Downs Green Gully Reserve 10,000
Heidelberg United Heidelberg Olympic Park 12,000
Hume City Broadmeadows ABD Stadium 5,000
Kingston City Clayton South The Grange Reserve 2,000
Melbourne Knights Sunshine Knights Stadium 15,000
North Geelong Lara Elcho Park 5,000
Oakleigh Cannons Oakleigh Jack Edwards Reserve 5,000
Pascoe Vale Fawkner CB Smith Reserve 2,000
Port Melbourne Port Melbourne SS Anderson Reserve 1,000
South Melbourne Albert Park Lakeside Stadium 12,000
St Albans St Albans Churchill Reserve 3,500

^Due to facility upgrades, Avondale will play their home matches at Knights Stadium for the 2017 season.[9]

Clubs to have participated from 1963 onward

Champions

Premiers

References

  1. The Age newspaper
  2. "Gallop aims for Aussie FA Cup". The Australian. AAP. 14 February 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  3. "Second Division 'By 2022'?". Australian FourFourTwo. Sportal Australia. 3 October 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  4. "NPL update - message from FFV Board". Football Federation Victoria. 8 November 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  5. "National Premier Leagues confirmed for Victoria in 2014". Football Federation Australia. 6 December 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  6. http://www.foxsportspulse.com/assoc_page.cgi?client=1-10178-0-0-0&sID=317230&&news_task=DETAIL&articleID=28122563
  7. "Kingston Heath Soccer Complex". Austadiums. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  8. "KINGSTON HEATH SOCCER COMPLEX". Soccerway. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  9. Avondale move to Knights Stadium “not ideal” Melbourne Football (mfootball)
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