2024 Australia Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryAustralia
New Zealand
Dates9 February – 29 September 2024
Teams759 (qualifying competition)
32 (main competition)
ChampionsMacarthur FC (2nd title)
2024 Australia Cup
Tournament details
CountryAustralia
New Zealand
Dates9 February – 29 September 2024
Teams759 (qualifying competition)
32 (main competition)
Final positions
ChampionsMacarthur FC (2nd title)
Runners-upMelbourne Victory
AFC Champions League TwoMacarthur FC
Tournament statistics
Matches played31
Goals scored114 (3.68 per match)
Attendance73,650 (2,376 per match)
Top goal scorerNishan Velupillay (5 goals)
 2023
2025 

The 2024 Australia Cup was the eleventh season of the Australia Cup, the main national soccer knockout cup competition in Australia. This edition was the third under the new name of the "Australia Cup" following the renaming of Football Federation Australia to Football Australia.[1] Thirty-two teams contested the competition proper.

Sydney FC were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Oakleigh Cannons in the Round of 32.

Macarthur FC won its second Australia Cup after defeating Melbourne Victory in the final. Macarthur FC qualified to the group stage of the AFC's 2025–26 AFC Champions League Two competition.

For the first time in the competition's history, the draws for the round of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals are combined.[2][3]

Round Draw date Match dates Number of fixtures Teams New entries this round
Preliminary rounds Various 9 February–24 July 737 759 → 32 751
Round of 32 19 June 30 July–7 August 16 32 → 16 8
Round of 16 7 August 25–28 August 8 16 → 8 None
Quarter-finals 11–14 September 4 8 → 4 None
Semi-finals 21–22 September 2 4 → 2 None
Final 29 September 1 2 → 1 None

Teams

A total of 32 teams will participate in the 2024 Australia Cup competition proper.

A-League Men clubs represent the highest level in the Australian league system, whereas Member Federation clubs come from level 2 and below.[4]

A-League Men clubs
Adelaide United Central Coast Mariners Macarthur FC Melbourne City
Melbourne Victory Newcastle Jets Perth Glory Sydney FC
Wellington Phoenix Western Sydney Wanderers  
Member federation clubs
Australian Capital Territory O'Connor Knights (2) New South Wales APIA Leichhardt (2) New South Wales Blacktown City (2) New South Wales NWS Spirit (2)
New South Wales Rockdale Ilinden (2) New South Wales Edgeworth FC (2) New South Wales Lambton Jaffas (2) Northern Territory Darwin Hearts (2)
Queensland Brisbane City (2) Queensland Lions FC (2) Queensland Moreton City Excelsior (2) Queensland Olympic FC (2)
South Australia Campbelltown City (2) South Australia Modbury Jets (2) Tasmania Glenorchy Knights (2) Victoria (state) Heidelberg United (2)
Victoria (state) Hume City (2) Victoria (state) Melbourne Srbija (4) Victoria (state) Oakleigh Cannons (2) Victoria (state) South Melbourne (2)
Western Australia Olympic Kingsway (2) Western Australia Perth RedStar (2)

Preliminary rounds

Member federation teams competed in various state-based preliminary rounds to win one of 22 places in the competition proper (at the Round of 32). All Australian clubs (other than youth teams associated with A-League franchises) were eligible to enter the qualifying process through their respective member federation; however, only one team per club was permitted entry into the competition. The preliminary rounds operated within a consistent national structure whereby club entry into the competition is staggered in each state/territory, determined by what level the club sits at in the Australian soccer league system. This ultimately lead to round 7, with the winning clubs from that round entering directly into the round of 32. Slot allocations were the same as the previous year.

The top eight placed A-League Men clubs from the 2023–24 A-League Men season gained automatic qualification to the Round of 32. The remaining four teams entered a play-off series to determine the remaining two positions.

Federation Associated competition Round of 32 qualifiers
Football Australia A-League Men 10
Capital Football (ACT) Federation Cup (ACT) 1
Football NSW Waratah Cup 4
Northern NSW Football Northern NSW State Cup 2
Football Northern Territory NT Australia Cup Final 1
Football Queensland Kappa Queensland Cup[5] 4
Football South Australia Federation Cup (SA) 2
Football Tasmania Milan Lakoseljac Cup 1
Football Victoria Dockerty Cup 5
Football West (WA) State Cup 2

Bracket

Round of 32

The draw took place on 19 June.[6] The lowest ranked side that qualified for this round was Melbourne Srbija. They were the only level 4 team left in the competition.

Times are AEST (UTC+10) as listed by Football Australia (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

30 July 2024 Moreton City Excelsior (2) 5–1Campbelltown City (2)Brisbane
19:00
Report
Stadium: Wolter Park
Attendance: 869
Referee: Alireza Faghani
30 July 2024 Oakleigh Cannons (2) 3–1Sydney FC (1)Melbourne
19:30 Report
Stadium: The Home of the Matildas
Attendance: 1,200
Referee: Shaun Evans
30 July 2024 O'Connor Knights (2)1–2 Macarthur FC (1) Canberra
19:30
Report
Stadium: GIO Stadium Canberra
Attendance: 3,210
Referee: Sam Kelly
30 July 2024 Darwin Hearts (2)0–6 Hume City (2) Darwin
19:30 (19:00 ACST) Report
Stadium: Darwin Football Stadium
Attendance: 1,443
Referee: Rebecca Durcau
31 July 2024 Blacktown City (2)2–3 (a.e.t.) Adelaide United (1) Sydney
19:30
Report
Stadium: Landen Stadium
Attendance: 1,531
Referee: Jack Morgan
31 July 2024 Brisbane City (2)1–2 Western Sydney Wanderers (1) Brisbane
19:30 Report Stadium: Imperial Corp Stadium
Attendance: 1,794
Referee: Casey Reibelt
31 July 2024 Rockdale Ilinden (2)1–2 Newcastle Jets (1) Sydney
19:30 Report
Stadium: Rockdale Ilinden Sports Centre
Attendance: 1,797
Referee: Ben Abraham
31 July 2024 Perth RedStar (2)1–4 Lions FC (2) Perth
20:30 (18:30 AWST)
Report
Stadium: Percy Doyle Reserve
Attendance: 616
Referee: Daniel Cook
3 August 2024 Perth Glory (1) 5–4 (a.e.t.)Melbourne City (1)Perth
19:30 (17:30 AWST)
Report Stadium: Sam Kerr Football Centre
Attendance: 2,015
Referee: Alireza Faghani
6 August 2024 Lambton Jaffas (2)1–4 Melbourne Victory (1) Newcastle
19:30
Report
Stadium: Jack McLaughlin Oval
Attendance: 1,172
Referee: Tim Danaskos
6 August 2024 South Melbourne (2) 1–0Wellington Phoenix (1)Melbourne
19:30 Sawyer 4' Report Stadium: Lakeside Stadium
Attendance: 4,196
Referee: Jonathon Barreiro
6 August 2024 Melbourne Srbija (4) 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(4–1 p)
Modbury Jets (2)Melbourne
19:30 Report Stadium: The Home of the Matildas
Attendance: 1,069
Referee: Zijad Ahmetovic
Penalties
6 August 2024 Olympic Kingsway (2) 4–1Edgeworth FC (2)Perth
20:30 (18:30 AWST)
Report Stadium: Kingsway Reserve
Attendance: 1,405
Referee: Daniel Elder
7 August 2024 Heidelberg United (2) 3–1 (a.e.t.)Central Coast Mariners (1)Melbourne
19:30
Report
Stadium: Olympic Village
Attendance: 2,077
Referee: Alex King
7 August 2024 NWS Spirit (2) 3–0Glenorchy Knights (2)Sydney
19:30
Report Stadium: Christie Park
Attendance: 624
Referee: Nathan Shakespear
7 August 2024 Olympic FC (2) 1–0 (a.e.t.)APIA Leichhardt (2)Brisbane
19:30
Report Stadium: Goodwin Park
Attendance: 1,400
Referee: Adam Kersey

Round of 16

The draw for all remaining rounds took place on 7 August.[7] The lowest ranked side that qualified for this round was Melbourne Srbija. They were the only level 4 team left in the competition.

Times are AEST (UTC+10) as listed by Football Australia (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

25 August 2024 Newcastle Jets (1)3–4 Macarthur FC (1) Maitland
15:00
Report
Stadium: Maitland Sportsground
Attendance: 2,971
Referee: Ben Abraham
25 August 2024 South Melbourne (2) 3–2 (a.e.t.)Olympic FC (2)Melbourne
17:30
Report
Stadium: Lakeside Stadium
Attendance: 2,572
Referee: Jonathan Barreiro
27 August 2024 Hume City (2) 1–0Melbourne Srbija (4)Melbourne
19:30 Report Stadium: Hume City Stadium
Attendance: 3,163
Referee: Tim Danaskos
27 August 2024 Lions FC (2)0–4 Western Sydney Wanderers (1) Brisbane
19:30 Report Stadium: Luxury Paints Stadium
Attendance: 1,853
Referee: Daniel Elder
27 August 2024 Olympic Kingsway (2)2–3 Adelaide United (1) Perth
20:30 (18:30 AWST)
Report
Stadium: Kingsway Reserve
Attendance: 1,950
Referee: Adam Bavcar
28 August 2024 NWS Spirit (2)0–4 Melbourne Victory (1) Sydney
19:30 Report
Stadium: Christie Park
Attendance: 1,854
Referee: Daniel Cook
28 August 2024 Moreton City Excelsior (2) 3–2Perth Glory (1)Brisbane
19:30
Report Stadium: Perry Park
Attendance: 1,490
Referee: Adam Kersey

Quarter-finals

The lowest ranked sides that qualified for this round were Hume City, Moreton City Excelsior, Oakleigh Cannons and South Melbourne. They were the only level 2 teams left in the competition.

Times are AEST (UTC+10) as listed by Football Australia (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

11 September 2024 Hume City (2)2–3 (a.e.t.) South Melbourne (2) Melbourne
19:30
Report
Stadium: Hume City Stadium
Attendance: 1,758
Referee: Tim Danaskos
12 September 2024 Adelaide United (1) 2–1 (a.e.t.)Western Sydney Wanderers (1)Adelaide
19:30 (19:00 ACST)
Report Stadium: ServiceFM Stadium
Attendance: 2,906
Referee: Shaun Evans
14 September 2024 Oakleigh Cannons (2)0–1 Macarthur FC (1) Melbourne
15:00 Report Stadium: The Home of the Matildas
Attendance: 807
Referee: Jack Morgan
14 September 2024 Moreton City Excelsior (2)0–4 Melbourne Victory (1) Brisbane
18:00 Report
Stadium: Perry Park
Attendance: 1,850
Referee: Jonathan Barreiro

Semi-finals

The lowest ranked side that qualified for this round was South Melbourne. They were the only level 2 team left in the competition.

21 September 2024 Melbourne Victory (1) 1–0Adelaide United (1)Melbourne
19:30 AEST
Report Stadium: AAMI Park
Attendance: 5,131
Referee: Alex King
22 September 2024 South Melbourne (2)0–1 Macarthur FC (1) Melbourne
18:00 AEST Report
Stadium: Lakeside Stadium
Attendance: 4,138
Referee: Ben Abraham

Final

Top goalscorers

References

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