Melbourne Victory Football Club is an Australian professional
soccer club based in
Melbourne,
Victoria. Competing in the country's premier men's competition, the
A-League Men, under
licence from
Australian Professional Leagues (APL),[9] Victory entered the competition in the
inaugural season as the only Victorian-based club in the newly revamped domestic Australian league.
Following the demise of the
National Soccer League, Australia's first national
soccer first tier competition, Melbourne Victory Football Club was unveiled as
Melbourne's representative of the newly established
A-League, along with seven other foundation clubs on 1 November 2004. Established as an unlisted public company, inaugural chairman
Geoff Lord of Belgravia Leisure Pty Ltd was the largest financial backer of the club[10] with support from other Melbourne-based business men consisting of Ron Peck, John Harris, future chief executive officer
Richard Wilson, and future chairman
Anthony Di Pietro. Despite a diverse range of owners of different industry backgrounds, the consortium managed to raise only $4.5 million of the $5 million budget minimum set by
Football Federation Australia, thus resulting in the federation depositing the needed $500,000 to obtain the license with the condition of imposing one board member performing duties in the best interests of the federation to ensure return on investment.[11]
The inaugural manager was
Ernie Merrick who had signed his former
Sunshine George Cross defender
Kevin Muscat to be inaugural captain, alongside marquee
Archie Thompson, both of whom would become legends of the soccer club in their own right. The club's first competitive match was against
Newcastle Jets on 22 July 2005 in round one of the
A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup, finishing in a 1–1 draw in
Newcastle. The club's first competitive home game would also prove to be the club's first win on 30 July 2005 in a 3–0 against
Perth Glory in the cup's second round at
Olympic Park.[12]
The league's inaugural season of
2005–06 proved to be a disappointment in conclusion but also a glimpse into the glory that would follow in
2006–07 and
2008–09 seasons, with the club being first on the ladder mid-season but ultimately finishing second last.[13] Future team of the decade players
Danny Allsopp,
Leigh Broxham,
Archie Thompson,
Grant Brebner,
Adrian Leijer,
Rodrigo Vargas,
Michael Theoklitos under captain
Kevin Muscat and manager
Ernie Merrick would achieve glory in winning its first league premiership and championship in the 2006–07 season, qualifying for its inaugural
AFC Champions League. Archie Thompson in A-League history is synonymous with the glory of famously scoring the first five goals in the
6–0 grand final win over
Adelaide United in front of a current record crowd for a grand final of 55'436 at
Docklands Stadium.[14][15] The heavy defeat for Adelaide as well as an altercation between Muscat and manager
John Kosmina earlier in the season[16][17][18][19] is culturally seen as the beginning of the rivalry,[20][21] earning the nicknames 'the cross-border rivalry'[22] and 'the original rivalry'.[23]
The
2007–08 season proved to be another disappointment with Victory narrowly missing the finals.[24] Hindered by multiple injuries throughout the season and the inexperience of time & energy management whilst trying to compete in the club's inaugural
AFC Champions League campaign of
2008 at full strength, Melbourne narrowly missed the finals but the season did bring long term positives. The acquisition of future team of the decade players
Carlos Hernández,
Matthew Kemp, and
Tom Pondeljak would ensure on-field strength for next three seasons. The
2008–09 season brought more success for the club in achieving its first treble. The last
A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup of
2008,[25] finishing top of the ladder as premiers resulting in qualifying a second time in the
AFC Champions League for the
2010 campaign, and being crowned champions after defeating Adelaide United a
second time in a grand final in front of a crowd of 53,273, which as of January 2019, is still the second largest attendance for an A-League grand final behind the
2007 final.[26] The
2009–10 season saw Victory be serious competitors for first position but would ultimately and narrowly finish behind
Sydney FC, whom Victory would lose 2–4 on penalties in
the grand final weeks later. It would prove to be the last grand final for manager
Ernie Merrick and for
Kevin Muscat as captain, with Victory finishing fifth for the
2010–11 season, and losing to
Gold Coast in first round of the finals.
Exit Lord, enter Di Pietro, and the rebuild (2011–2013)
The conclusion of the
2010–11 A-League season saw inaugural president
Geoff Lord resign from the club, hailing from the success of two championships, two premierships and the last pre-season challenge cup. Fruit and vegetable heavyweight and shareholder
Anthony Di Pietro became the second president in the club's history, hired internally after being an inaugural director alongside Lord from the beginning. Di Pietro was also an occasional stand-in president when Lord was unable to perform duties due to illness on multiple occasions in 2011, making his first public speech ever being stand in chairman at the time during a Victory in Business luncheon at the Crown Palladium Ballroom. Along with the resignation of Lord, inaugural chief executive officer Geoff Miles also resigned from the club, with mortgage firm businessman, shareholder and inaugural director
Richard Wilson being hired internally prior to the 2011–12 season alongside Di Pietro.
Ernie Merrick would depart as coach after Di Pietro & Wilson quickly sacked Merrick following multiple missed targets both on & off the field, with the 5–1 loss to
Gamba Osaka in the
2011 AFC Champions League campaign being the last straw.[27]Merrick would be replaced by
Mehmet Duraković[28] and later
Jim Magilton[29] for the
2011–12 season.
[30][31][32] Kevin Muscat had announced during the respective season that he would retire as a player, and immediately became an assistant coach replacing Aaron Healy. Along with Merrick & Healy's departures would be inaugural director of football
Gary Cole, and would be replaced by former team
South Melbourne and
Socceroo teammate,
Francis Awaritefe.[33]
The two new-coming executives famously won the race against
Sydney FC and other soccer clubs world-wide to sign
Socceroos hero
Harry Kewell to the club, being declared at the time 'the biggest signing in the history of Australian sport' at the time.[34] With much anticipation for the lead up to the
2011–12 A-League season, the season proved to be a disappointment in missing the finals for the time third in the club's history. Multiple aged players, a less experienced revamped coaching team led by
Mehmet Durakovic who was promoted by default that would later be replaced mid-season by
Jim Magilton, and a high maintenance
Harry Kewell[35][36] all contributed to the team falling short on multiple match day results. Late in the season, Magilton would sign future team of the decade players
Mark Milligan and
Adama Traoré. Durakovic's unsung legacy on the club would be the signing of then nineteen year-old
Lawrence Thomas, who would later win multiple championships with the club under
Kevin Muscat. Despite the disappointment, the lessons were learned and the club would have its most improved season to date as of 2019, finishing third in the
2012–13 season from eighth in the season prior, narrowly losing the preliminary final to premiers and eventual champions
Central Coast Mariners 0–1.[37] The season started with a major sense of optimism by signing by multiple
Brisbane Roar and
National Soccer League premiership and championship-winning coach
Ange Postecoglou on a three-year deal,[38] revamping the playing squad with the departure of fourteen players and the signings of fifteen players, including
Gui Finkler and
Nathan Coe who would achieve multiple club and personal accolades respectively in their own rite in the years to come.
Coaching Disruptions (2013–14 season)
Prior to the season, coach
Ange Postecoglou had just begun the second year of his three-year contract with the club, but had also been cited as a possible replacement for departing
Australian national team coach
Holger Osieck, in the lead-up to the
2014 FIFA World Cup. This possibility became a reality the day before the round three clash against Postecoglou's former club
Brisbane Roar on 25 October, which was his last match in charge.[39] Victory were denied a compensation claim of one million Australian dollars for the early departure.[40][41][42]
The era of
Kevin Muscat becoming the first former player and captain to become manager began sooner than anticipated, but it would be an era that would restore the former early glory of Australia's biggest
association football club. The era officially began following the untimely departure of
Ange Postecoglou in round four of the
2013–14 season on 4 November 2013, in a 3–2 home victory over
Wellington Phoenix at
Docklands Stadium.[43] Future grand final winners
James Troisi,
Kosta Barbarouses and
Rashid Mahazi were signed to the club and would help strengthen the playing squad in the years to come. Muscat's first season would end in both heartbreak and controversy as Victory were denied obvious penalty decisions in the last minutes of both the
A-League finals clash against
Brisbane Roar,[44][45] and in the last group stage clash against
Jeonbuk in the
2014 AFC Champions League,[46][47][48] when in both games one extra goal was needed to win. Both controversial moments occurred only days in between each other, resulting in Muscat heavily criticizing referees in general.[49]
The
2014–15 season saw a major recruiting drive in the signings of
Besart Berisha,
Carl Valeri,
Daniel Georgievski,
Fahid Ben Khalfallah and
Mathieu Delpierre, who would all go onto achieve multiple personal and club accolades respectively. Late in the season on 28 March 2015, the club announced its team of the decade at the
Crown palladium ballroom[50][51] with five of the announced players still contracted to victory at the time, with then coach
Kevin Muscat also being listed. This time of the season also saw captaincy of the club change with
Adrian Leijer departing the Victory for
Chinese Super League club
Chongqing Lifan on an undisclosed transfer for a major salary increase,[52] with teammate
Mark Milligan becoming interim captain for the remainder of the season.[53] After a six-year wait, Victory would finish first on the ladder[54] and would later defeat
Sydney FC 3–0 in
the grand final.[55] Team of the decade substitute goalkeeper
Nathan Coe, who would miss the grand final due to injury announced his retirement shortly after the achievement.
The
2017–18 season ended in glory but would see multiple difficulties in the lead up to the finals. In the preseason, 2017 grand final
Johnny Warren medalistDaniel Georgievski departed the club willfully, with
Marco Rojas and
Nick Ansell both being sold.
Rhys Williams and
Leroy George signed in the preseason and would prove to be crucial players. With mixed results throughout the season, coach
Kevin Muscat was criticised for his 'stale' game plan.[60][61] Mid-season, captain
Mark Milligan and defender
Jason Geria would both be sold, and
Terry Antonis would join the club on a two and a half-year deal. Despite pressure, the squad gained form towards the end of the season despite losing to premiers
Sydney FC away at
Sydney Football Stadium in the last round and finished fourth.[62] Victory would beat
Adelaide United in the elimination final 2–1, led by future coach
Marco Kurz at
Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, to then face
Sydney FC in the semi-final away. In the lead up to the clash, Sydney captain
Alex Brosque told the Sydney Morning Herald when asked regarding the reverse fixture with victory that "I know they'll be thinking about it as much as they'll try to forget about it." also stating that "It gives us a lot of confidence and psychologically I'm sure it will be playing on their minds,".[63] In the warm up of the game, crucial defender
Rhys Williams suffered an ankle injury that would rule him out of the game and the grand final if Victory would win.[64] The Victory as underdogs would beat Sydney 3–2 in extra time, with victory physically scoring all five goals, with own goals by
Stefan Nigro and
Terry Antonis. Despite the unfortunate error, Nigro's efforts in the match being a late replacement for the injured Williams would secure him a start in the
grand final. Antonis, a former youth product and five seasoned player of Sydney, conceded the own goal in the last minute of regular time to bring the score to 2–2, leading to extra time. In the 117th minute, loanee teammate
Kenny Athiu would pass the ball to Antonis, surviving three tackle attempts in running from the centre line to within Sydney's eighteen yard box to score the winning goal, in what would later be recognised as the club's 2017–18 goal of the season. Victory would travel to
Newcastle to face second placed
Newcastle Jets, led by former and inaugural Victory manager
Ernie Merrick. It would be the A-League's first ever regional grand final as well as one manager versing his former player as a manager in a grand final, and would be remembered for its controversy. Victory scored the earliest ever goal in a grand final from a
Leroy George free kick that would be headed into the centre of the eighteen yard box by
James Donachie then scored by
Kosta Barbarouses in the ninth minute. Replays had shown that Donachie was offside upon George kicking the ball, but with the views of the linesman deceived by a Newcastle defender, the goal was allowed to stand as the
video assistant referee had temporarily failed.[65][66] Victory would win 1–0 against a ten men Newcastle after striker
Roy O'Donovan desperately attempted to volley a high altitude ball from a free kick that infamously resulted in goalkeeper
Lawrence Thomas being kicked in the face causing an altercation to follow.[67][66] The incident resulted in a ten match ban for O'Donovan going into the
2018–19 season despite an appeal. Thomas later told The Guardian that he had accepted O'Donovan's immediate apology after full-time.[68] The achievement made Victory leaders in the number of championships won by an A-League club, as well as being the first team to win a grand final after finishing fourth place in the regular season, the lowest ladder position. Weeks later, six grand final players departed the club, including
Besart Berisha being sold for an undisclosed fee to
Sanfrecce Hiroshima.[69]
Despite the unexpected grand final achievement, Muscat would commence a recruiting drive that would see eight players join preseason, including
2018 World Cup players and
Keisuke Honda[70] and
Ola Toivonen.[71] Mid-season transfers saw the undisclosed sale of
Nick Ansell, and the recruitment of
Elvis Kamsoba and
Anthony Lesiotis, this first ever former
Melbourne City player to represent Victory. Despite being more competitive than the season prior considering that Honda was sidelined more over a third of the season with injury, it would ultimately end in disappointment. The squad would finish third by one point behind the second placed and eventual champions
Sydney FC, meaning that Victory would not receive direct entrance into the group stage of the
2020 AFC Champions League, but would have to enter a play-off first. The true realization of the disappointment in finishing third would be realised in the semi-final against Sydney away, who would exact revenge for their 2017–18 semi final upset in which Victory were defeated 1–6 away.[72] Despite having one more season on his contract, Muscat resigned from the club weeks later for personal reasons,[73][74] closing a fourteen-year stint at the club as a player, captain, assistant manager, and head coach.
Post-Muscat era (2019–2021)
Following Muscat's early departure, the Melbourne Victory board interviewed multiple foreign and local coaches for the senior role.[75] It was announced in late June 2019 that former
Adelaide United coach
Marco Kurz was signed on a two-year deal.[76] During the recruitment process, nine players departed the club, including the retirement of captain
Carl Valeri who would become an office administrator for the club. Eight senior players were signed including the return of team of the decade defender
Adama Traoré, and the
youth academy had promoted defensive players
Benjamin Carrigan and
Brandon Lauton.[77] In early October, weeks before the first round of the
2019–20 season,
Ola Toivonen was appointed captain.[78]
In January 2020, after just 6 months in the role Kurz was dismissed by the club. Kurz left having managed the Victory for just thirteen competitive matches, for four wins, three draws and six losses. The six defeats were the most losses the Victory had suffered after thirteen games of a season.[79] At the time of his dismissal, the Victory were sixth on the league ladder with fifteen points, their equal lowest points tally after thirteen games alongside the
2007–08 and
2011–12 seasons.[80] Assistant coach
Carlos Pérez Salvachúa was appointed as caretaker manager of the Victory until the conclusion of the season.[81] However, on 30 May 2020, with 5 regular season A-League matches remaining in Melbourne Victory's season, Salvachúa departed the club to return to Europe to be closer to his family.[82] Assistant coach and former player
Grant Brebner was appointed as the Victory's caretaker manager for the remainder of the season;[83] he was later appointed promoted to permanent manager on 24 August 2020.[84]
Brebner's tenure as Melbourne Victory manager coincided with the worst run of results in Melbourne Victory's history. He was sacked as head coach shortly after Victory's 7–0 loss to local rivals
Melbourne City in April 2021, a result which came only a month and a half after losing 6–0 to the same team.[85] On 19 April 2021, Victory assistant coach
Steve Kean was appointed as interim coach for the remainder of the
2020–21 A-League season as Victory plummeted to 12th place, becoming the first ever A-League side to finish 12th and Victory won their first ever wooden spoon.[86][87]
On 22 April 2021, the Victory announced that
Tony Popovic will take over as the club's manager from the beginning of the 2021–22 season.[88] On 5 February 2022, the Victory defeated the
Central Coast Mariners2-1 at AAMI Park to win the
2021 FFA Cup, achieving Popovic's first trophy as manager of the club, as well as the Victory's second FFA Cup title.[89] This was the last edition of the competition under the FFA Cup name; from 2022, the competition will be known as the Australia Cup.[90]
In the lead up to the
2022–23 A-League Men season, the club announced the signing of former
Manchester United and
Portugal national team great
Nani on Tuesday 12 July 2022, on a two-year contract, and was allocated the number seventeen jersey.[91] On the following Friday 15 July 2022, the club played against
Manchester United at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground, as participant in United's 2022 pre-season tour of
East Asia. Nani made his unofficial debut as substitute in front of the 74,157 spectators present, with the match finishing in 1–4 loss.[92][93][94][95][96][97]
In the lead up to the opening 2022-23 A-League round, commentator
Michael Zappone stated that 'for me, they're
Melbourne Victory the favourites to win the title this season.'[98]
Following the World Cup break, on 12 December 2022, preceding the Christmas Melbourne Derby fixture, the
Australian Professional Leagues announced an agreement with
Destination NSW that would see the 2023, 2024, and 2025 A-League Men Grand Finals hosted in
Sydney, as opposed to the traditional format of being hosted by the finalist that finished higher during the regular season.[99] This announcement was met with widespread opposition from fans. A 20th minute walkout was staged by the former active groups of both clubs, Original Style Melbourne and City Terrace.[100] In the 20th minute, the match was suspended by referee Alex King as flares were thrown onto both sides of the pitch. Tom Glover threw one of a flare back into the crowd of Victory supporters, sparking a pitch invasion where Glover was struck with a metal bucket. Security, a Channel 10 Cameraman, and referee Alex King were also subject to the violence. The pitch invasion forced the Derby's abandonment in the 22nd minute (score being 1-0 to City) due to concerns with player safety.[101]
On December 18, 2022, Football Australia issued Melbourne Victory with a show cause notice, for the club to show cause on why they should not face serious sanctions for bringing the game into disrepute.[102]
On December 23, 2022, Football Australia imposed interim sanctions on Melbourne Victory while the show cause process was worked through. These sanctions included:
On January 9, 2023, following interim sanctions by FA which restricted active support, purchase of tickets to the general public and total North end blockage with tarps, the FA handed down the final sanctions to Melbourne Victory for the events at the Christmas Derby, after Melbourne Victory's show cause response was considered.
Football Australia found that Melbourne Victory FC brought the game into disrepute. Sanctions include:
A total financial sanction of $550,000 AUD
No organised seating for away fans for the remainder of the season and finals series.
No organised home active support for the remainder of the season and finals series.
A suspended 10 point deduction triggered if fan behaviour results in the suspension of a game, ending at the conclusion of 2025/26 A-League season.[104]
In response to the show cause determination by FA, the Club stated that they would not appeal the decision and separately stated that they were ‘committed to the disbandment of any A-League Men's active supporter groups that were recognised at the time of the incident’.[105] The Christmas Derby was resumed on Wednesday 5 April 2023 at the 21st minute, with the game ending 2-1 in favour of Melbourne City.[106]
777Partners invested into Melbourne Victory FC in October 2022.[107] In early February, Melbourne Victory's board approved 777Partners’ purchase of 70% of the club for 5 years.[108]
The first half of Melbourne Victory's 2022-23 season was the worst in the club's history. They would only pick up 12 points in 14 matches and were at the bottom of the ladder.[109]
Consequently, the Club looked to improve the squad in the January transfer window, signing Bruce Kamau, Damien Da Silva, Connor Chapman, Fernando Romero, the permanent signing of Bruno Fornaroli, and resignings of William Wilson, Matthew Bozinovski, and Ben Folami.[110]
On 23 April 2023, Michael Zappone revealed that the Melbourne Victory board had supposedly chosen not to activate a second season clause in
Luis Nani's contract, meaning that the marquee player who suffered a partial ACL tear would not return to the club in season 2023-24. However, head coach
Tony Popovic stated that a decision has not been made on Nani's future.[111]
Melbourne Victory completed the 2022-23 A-League Men's season with a 1-0 home loss to eventual 8th place Brisbane Roar,[112] narrowly missing out on the wooden spoon which was avoided through a 94th-minute winner by
Lleyton Brooks in the previous game against eventual wooden spooners and reigning Australia Cup winners
Macarthur FC.[113] Melbourne Victory finished the regular season in 11th place, condemning the club to a third bottom two finish in four years and another Australia Cup qualifier.[114]
On May 3, 2023, the club hosted its annual Victory Medal. Former Melbourne City striker
Bruno Fornaroli won the Player's Player of the Year and the TAC Golden Boot. Mid season
Ligue 1 import
Damien Da Silva won the prestigious Victory Medal, only playing 12 games in the season, a club record.
Matthew Bozinovski won the Young Player of the Year award.[115]
On May 4, 2023, almost 5 hours after the departure of four Victory players were announced, the Club confirmed that
Fabrizio Cammarata,
Luciano Trani and Goalkeeper Coach,
Peter Zois would not continue with the senior men's side in the 2023-24 season. The group of coaches were appointed by Tony Popovic when he joined the Club at the start of the 2021-22 season.[120]
Main Melbourne Victory fan podcast
For Vucks Sake stated that, in their opinion, the 2022-23 A-League Men's season was 'the worst in the club's history'.[121]
Colours and badge
Melbourne Victory's colours are navy blue, white and silver, which encompass the traditional state sporting colours of
Victoria. The club's home kit is traditionally all-navy blue, with a white
chevron design. Known colloquially as the "big V", it is a symbol associated with the
Victoria Australian rules football team. The Victory's away kits have often featured a reversed colour scheme, with white shirts, shorts and socks, alongside a navy blue chevron. Grey and fluorescent yellow have both featured as away kit colours as well.
Currently, the home kit consists of a navy blue shirt with a
chevron which fades from white at the bottom to navy blue at the top, paired with navy blue shorts and socks. The away kit is all white, with the shirt featuring a yoke consisting of a design reminiscent of the club's home ground
AAMI Park, set inside an off-centre chevron.
A new kit was introduced for the 2008 AFC Champions League[122] due to AFC rules requiring kits to have player numbers on the front of the uniform as well as the back, which would not fit well with the 'V' on the Victory's regular kit. For the 2009–10 season, Melbourne changed their away shirt to be a reverse of their home shirt; white with a blue chevron.[123] In 2010, Melbourne wore the
TAC 'seatbelt' shirt against
Perth Glory in a charity event to raise awareness for the necessary use of seat belts in cars.
Adidas were announced as the club's official kit manufacturer for five years[124] beginning in the 2011–12 season, after the initial deal for
Reebok to supply all A-League clubs had expired. The new kits were announced via the club's
YouTube channel,[125] and featured a controversial change to a fluoro yellow away shirt. For their 2013–14 kits, Melbourne Victory received backlash from supporters, as the away kits featured a much lighter blue, bearing a large resemblance to fierce rivals
Sydney FC.[126]
On white backgrounds, the positive, silver-keyline version must be used.
On coloured backgrounds, the reversed, white-keyline version must be used.
Simplified logo - white mono
Simplified logo - navy mono
On coloured backgrounds, a simplified logo can only be used when logo size needs to appear smaller than minimum size or when working with alternative finishes ie. Foiling, embossing and embroidery.
On white backgrounds, a simplified logo can only be used when logo size needs to appear smaller than minimum size or when working with alternative finishes ie. Foiling, embossing and embroidery.
Sponsorship
On 5 December 2005, South Korean electronics giant
Samsung became the club's major sponsor in a two-year deal,[127] giving Samsung logo placement on the front and the back of Victory's home and away kits. Prior to the 2006–07 season,
KFC were announced as Victory's sleeve sponsor, with their logo appearing on the sleeve of Victory's home and away kits.[128] On 28 January 2009, Samsung announced that they would not renew their sponsorship for the 2009–10 A-League season.
Intralot became the Melbourne Victory's new major sponsor when they signed a two-season $2 million contract on 4 May 2009. Their logo subsequently featured on the front of Melbourne Victory's playing strip, starting from the 2009–10 season.[129] On 6 August 2010, it was announced that law firm Florin Burhala Lawyers would be Melbourne Victory's official shorts sponsor for the 2010–11 season.[130] On 1 June 2011, it was announced that human resources company
Adecco Group signed a three-year deal as the club's major sponsor, replacing Intralot. As part of the deal, Adecco's logo appeared on the front of the club's playing strip.[131] Melbourne Victory announced on 16 June 2011 that they had signed a five-year deal with global sportswear giant
Adidas as the club's official kit manufacturer.[124]
A number of different songs have become synonymous with Melbourne Victory, being both sung by supporters and played over the PA at different moments before, during and after games.
"
Stand By Me" by
Ben E. King. This is sung as the team enters the pitch prior to kick-off, with fans holding their scarves above their heads throughout.[132]
"
Seven Nation Army" by
The White Stripes. The chorus melody is chanted as a goal celebration, with fans waving their scarves in the air as they sing. It has also been adapted as a player chant for former striker
Besart Berisha.
"
Freed from Desire" by
Gala. In January 2022, Melbourne Victory ran a fan poll to choose a post-match victory song to be played after every Melbourne Victory home win;[134] Freed from Desire received the most votes in the post, becoming the post-match victory song of the club,[135] with the song played after the conclusion of Victory the Brave.
Melbourne Victory currently plays all of its home games at
Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, known as AAMI Park for sponsorship purposes.[136]
Olympic Park Stadium
The club was originally based at the 50-year-old
Olympic Park Stadium, where they played all home matches during the
2005–06 A-League season. This stadium had seated areas only on the wings, with standing-room sandy terraces on the north and south ends. The average crowd during the first year was 14,158, 77% of its capacity of 18,500. As a result, the match-day atmosphere would prove to be a marketing asset not just for Melbourne Victory, but also for the rest of the league. It also proved to be a major factor in the club's decision to relocate home games to Docklands Stadium, then known as 'Telstra Dome', from the
2006–07 season onwards, for both safety reasons, and simplicity in membership and match-day attendance expansion. Despite the club permanently relocating to Docklands Stadium, the venue was still used occasionally for both the
2006–07 and
2007–08 seasons, until being permanently closed in 2009.
Docklands Stadium
On 2 September 2006, Melbourne Victory played its first ever match against
Sydney FC at the 56,000 capacity Marvel Stadium in a 3–2 victory. The match proved to be a runaway success in terms of crowds, with 39,730 in attendance.[137] As a result, the club moved all but one of their home games to the ground.[138] This move to such a large stadium proved to be an outstanding success, with the Grand Final held there. The average attendance rose to 27,728 for the 2006–07 season, 10,000 above the next highest in the A-League.
During the construction of the
Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Marvel Stadium continued to serve as the club's only home ground until the completion of the club's new permanent home, which began hosting games from the 2010–11 A-League season. On 11 March 2016, it was announced that th club had committed to a further lease of 10 years for the continued use of limited blockbuster matches at the venue, ending at the conclusion of the 2026–27 season.[139] This agreement was mutually ended in July 2021, when the club announced it would no longer play any further home matches at Docklands Stadium and would play every future home match at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium.[140]
To date, Melbourne Victory have celebrated the
2006–07 and
2008–09 premiership and championship victories at the venue. The stadium was also the permanent venue and operational base of the club during the
2008 Pre-Season Cup, although the grand final was won in
Wellington,
New Zealand.
Melbourne Rectangular Stadium
Prior to the 2006–07 season the club had planned to move to a new $190 million stadium being built to the east of the current Olympic Park complex.[141] The
new stadium was originally expected to sit approximately 20,000 spectators (expandable to 25,000) and was to be completed by 2009.[141]
These plans were revised after the Victory refused to commit to playing at such a small capacity stadium. On 23 May 2007, the club announced it had signed as a founding co-tenant of the new stadium, which would now be built to accommodate a maximum of 30,050 spectators with further renovations to 50,000 possible. However, further expansion in the near-term is unlikely as it was discovered during
Australia's World Cup Bid process that to build such an expansion would be prohibitively expensive.[142]
Today, the venue is the home of the club's operations, administration, and the majority of the senior team's home matches, as well as occasional home matches of the
NYL/NPL &
W-League teams. The club currently holds the highest attendance of any
association football (soccer) match played at the venue, and second overall for any sporting event at the venue.[143] The record was set in the
2015 A-League Grand Final on 17 May 2015, with an attendance of 29,843 witnessing Melbourne win its third title, and first at the venue in the club's history. The venue was also the place of celebration with club celebrating the
2014–15 premiership and the
2015 FFA Cup victories.
On 15 February 2014, Melbourne Victory was forced to play at the
Geelong-based stadium, in playing their Asian Champions League qualifying game against
Muangthong United at
Simonds Stadium due to AAMI Park and Marvel Stadium being unavailable.[145]
Prior to the start of the
2014–15 season, Melbourne Victory signed a three-year deal to play one home game a year at the venue for the
2014–15,
2015–16 and
2016–17 seasons.[146] In January 2017, the deal was extended to the conclusion of the
2018–19 season.[147]
In 2007 Melbourne Victory had the largest supporter base in Australia. Known for their extreme passion and atmosphere, the North End are the largest of the active support groups associated with Victory.[165]
In January 2011, the Victory supporting Horda group was suspected to have stolen a banner from Melbourne Heart's Yarraside active group.[166] In the following games, Horda banners were banned, which led to great protest from the Northern Terrace active members.[167]
Fans anger further escalated as they were subjected to a rising police presence at games. In response, on 2nd February 2011, the fans from the North Terrace organised a silent protest for the Melbourne Victory – Newcastle Jets match. They left the North Terrace empty, and had a banner saying "No fans no past no future – without us you are nothing NT United". The banner was later confiscated by the police.
In February 2011,
Victoria Police said they were reluctant to cover Melbourne Victory games because of behaviour by fans that they claimed was unacceptable. Problems included violence, anti-social behaviour and the lighting of
flares.[168][169]
On 3 January 2014,
Football Federation Australia charged both Melbourne Victory and
Western Sydney Wanderers with bringing the game into disrepute following violent fan behaviour before and during their game on 28 December 2013.[170]
Melbourne City (
Melbourne Derby): Melbourne Victory's local rival is Melbourne City, which entered the competition in the 2010–11 season (as Melbourne Heart, before the name change in 2014), becoming the 2nd club in Melbourne. The rivalry reached a whole new level when Victory skipper Kevin Muscat was red carded for a tackle on Heart player Adrian Zahra.[177] Currently six former Victory players have switched to Melbourne Heart (City), with Mate Dugandžić doing the first ever direct switch from Victory to City in 2011.
Anthony Lesiotis is currently the only play to have ever gone the other way (City to Victory). In the 2020-21 A-League season, City beat Victory 6–0 at Marvel Stadium,[178] then 7–0 in the return leg at AAMI Park, with striker
Jamie Maclaren scoring 5 goals in the latter, along with former Victory player
Andrew Nabbout scoring the opener.[179] The
40th Melbourne Derby on 17 December 2022 was unprecedented in its volatility, with the match marred with poor crowd behaviour, including multiple flares ignited and thrown onto the pitch by supporters of both teams. In the 20th minute of the match, Melbourne City goalkeeper
Tom Glover threw back a flare sent from the crowd, sparking a pitch invasion which saw both Glover and referee Alex King assaulted by pitch invaders, and causing the match to be abandoned.[180][181][182] In response Football Australia implemented interim sanctions closing active supporter bays for both clubs for all matches up to and including 15 January 2023.[183]
Sydney FC (
The Big Blue): Sydney is considered Melbourne's major interstate rival, due to Melbourne and Sydney being Australia's two largest cities (see
Melbourne-Sydney rivalry). Matches between the two teams are regularly the league's most spiteful encounters with narratives spanning from the inception of the A-League itself. Supporters from both sides cite each other as their most hated and competitive rivals due to the extensive history of the fixture while also acknowledging both their positions as the biggest teams in the league. The rivalry between the two teams first intensified beyond being just an interstate feud after Sydney beat Melbourne in the final match of the 2009–10 season to claim the A-League Premiership over the Victory by a single point. This was followed up with another Sydney triumph in the 2010 A-League Grand Final where the Sky Blues became the first team to win the league's Championship as the away team. However, in season 2014/15, Victory reversed these defeats, by first pipping Sydney to the A-League Premiership during the league season and weeks later beat them in the 2015 A-League Grand Final. In the 2016/17 grand final, Melbourne Victory succumbed to a 4–2 penalty shootout defeat to Sydney FC (losing to Sydney in a penalty shootout for the second time). Victory avenged that loss on 28 April 2018 in a semifinal encounter with their old rivals with a 117th minute extra time strike from Terry Antonis to win 3–2 on the night. Melbourne would meet Sydney in the following season again in the A-League semifinals where a rampant Sydney would deliver a devestating 6-1 humbling, marking the end of Victory club legend, Kevin Muscat's, managerial tenure.
Adelaide United (
The Original Derby / The Original Rivalry): Melbourne Victory also has a rivalry with Adelaide United. This rivalry stems from the other football codes, where the interstate rivalry is big between Victorians and
South Australians (see
South Australia-Victoria rivalry). There have also been altercations between sets of opposing fans in Melbourne and Adelaide. The rivalry has built up from previous encounters, when an incident between the then Adelaide United manager,
John Kosmina, and Victory skipper Kevin Muscat took place during a sideline altercation during a match in the 2006–07 season,[184] and when Victory striker Ney Fabiano spat in the direction of Adelaide defender
Robert Cornthwaite during Round 4 in the 2008–09 season. Fabiano was banned for nine matches; but this was reduced to six after a successful appeal.[185] Victory and Adelaide contested both the 2006–07 and
2008–09 Grand Finals, with Melbourne winning both.[186]
Western United (
The Westgate Derby / The Battle of the Bridge): Melbourne Victory has developed a rivalry with Western United, which entered the competition in the 2019–20 season, becoming the 3rd club in Melbourne.[187][188][189][190][191][192][193][194] Despite the rivalry's short existence, it has garnered a reputation for producing talking points, controversy, tension, goals and drama.[195] In the team's first meeting, in November 2019 at Marvel Stadium, Western United won 3-2 despite going 2-0 down within the first 7 minutes. In February 2021 at Marvel Stadium, despite conceding the first goal of the match and despite being reduced to 10 men for the final half-hour of the match, Western United won 4–3, with Victor Sanchez scoring in the final minute of stoppage time. For the first 5 meetings between the two teams, Western United had 4 wins and a draw. On 28 May 2021, Melbourne Victory ended their losing run against Western United in emphatic fashion, winning 6–1 at AAMI Park. Currently six former Victory players have played for Western United (four have played for the Victory senior team, two have represented the Victory's youth or NPL teams without making an appearance for the senior team).
Prior to the establishment of the
A-League Men, the newly established club struggled to raise the initial $5 million equity capital to join the League in its
first season, resulting in
Football Australia contributing approximately $500,000 to secure the club's position in the league, with the eventual intention to sell its stake.[212] As a result, the federation took a ten per cent holding in the club in return, as well as having a representative on the Victory board.[11] From humble beginnings, the club has become a commercial success, with the club's value increasing from 19.2 million AUD in November 2014[213] to 40 million in 2018,[214] with the most recent evaluation being 50 million AUD following the 2022 partial purhcase of the club by 777 Partners.[215]
Inaugural club captain, and first captain to win a premiership and championship as both a player, captain, and manager at the same club in
A-League history
^Adelaide 1, Michael Lynch Melbourne 0 (16 October 2006).
"Kosmina grabs a throat as well as points". The Sydney Morning Herald.
Archived from the original on 7 October 2021. Retrieved 7 October 2019.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
^Lynch, Michael (12 March 2011).
"Asian failure doomed coach". The Sydney Morning Herald.
Archived from the original on 23 January 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
^Lynch, Michael (16 October 2006).
"Muscat and Kosmina in fiery clash". The Age. Melbourne: Fairfax Media.
Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 28 June 2011.