Central Football (New Zealand)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Headquarters | 46 Clyde Jeffery Drive, Park Island, Napier |
|---|---|
| FIFA affiliation | New Zealand Football |
| Chief Executive | [Darren Mason] |
| Website | official website |
Central Football is one of six federations of New Zealand Football, representing regions of Taranaki, Whanganui, Manawatū, Hawke's Bay and Gisborne.
While New Zealand Football is the governing body, unlike other sports in New Zealand, the funding model for football means each seven regional federations look after football in their area themselves, only following New Zealand Football's plan as they see fit. For the local federations, the clubs fund the federation with the rest of the money coming from Sport New Zealand funding and about three per cent from New Zealand Football.[1]
The region has also provided a women's representative team for the New Zealand Women's National League from its inaugural season in 2002 onwards.[2]
Board Members
As of 2022.[3]
- Jamie Hall (Chairperson)
- Gary Mackenzie (Deputy Chair)
- Kerry Donovan
- Rod Pelosi
- Garret Blair
- Rori Moore
- John Sigurdsson
- Rachel Ingram
Competitions
Note: Central League includes teams from the Capital Football Federation and is a lower North Island competition managed by Capital Football.
Affiliated clubs
|
|
|
|
|
Central Federation Cup
The Lotto Central Federation Cup is the premier men's knock-out trophy of the Central Football Federation and is contested annually by clubs affiliated to the Central Football Federation.
Originally launched in 2001, the Central Federation Cup in its current form relaunched in 2009, and has been competed for each season since, with the exception of the COVID-19 affected 2020 season, when the first round of matches was initially scheduled then subsequently cancelled.
Central Federation Cup Champions
- 2009 - Wanganui City AFC
- 2010 - Gisborne City AFC
- 2011 - Maycenvale United²
- 2012 - Napier City Rovers FC²
- 2013 - Havelock North Wanderers AFC
- 2014 - Gisborne United AFC
- 2015 - Hāwera FC
- 2016 - Napier City Rovers FC²
- 2017 - Massey University Football Club
- 2018 - Eltham AFC
- 2019 - Massey University Football Club
- 2020 - Not contested
- 2021 - Massey University Football Club
- 2022 - Gisborne United AFC
- 2023 - Whanganui Athletic²
- 2024 - Taradale AFC
- 2025 - Napier City Rovers FC²
- ² denotes a club reserve side