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List of A-League Men clubs

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(Redirected from List of A-League clubs)

The following is a list of clubs who have played in the A-League Men since its formation in 2005 as the A-League to the current season.

Twelve of the fifteen clubs to have participated in the A-League Men are competing in the 2022-23 season. Seven (Adelaide United, Brisbane Roar, Central Coast Mariners, Melbourne Victory, Newcastle Jets, Perth Glory and Sydney FC) have contested every season in the A-League Men.

Five clubs, Macarthur FC, Melbourne City, Wellington Phoenix, Western Sydney Wanderers and Western United are not founding members of the A-League Men, but have not been disbanded since their debuts.

Table

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All statistics here refer to time in the A-League Men only. A-League Men teams playing in the 2024–25 season are indicated in bold, while founding members of the A-League Men are shown in italics.

Club Location Total
seasons
Seasons Highest
finish
Most recent
finish
Adelaide United Adelaide 19 2005–present 1st 3rd
Auckland FC Auckland 1 2024–present TBC TBC
Brisbane Roar Brisbane 19 2005–present 1st 8th
Central Coast Mariners Gosford 19 2005–present 1st 2nd
Gold Coast United Gold Coast 3 2009–2012 3rd 10th
Macarthur FC Sydney
(Gregory Hills)
4 2020–present 6th 12th
Melbourne City Melbourne
(Cranbourne)
14 2010–present 1st 1st
Melbourne Victory Melbourne
(Swan Street)
19 2005–present 1st 11th
Newcastle Jets Newcastle 19 2005–present 2nd 10th
New Zealand Knights Auckland 2 2005–2007 8th 8th
North Queensland Fury Townsville 2 2009–2011 7th 11th
Perth Glory Perth 19 2005–present 1st 9th
Sydney FC Sydney
(Surry Hills)
19 2005–present 1st 5th
Wellington Phoenix Wellington 17 2007–present 3rd 6th
Western Sydney Wanderers Sydney
(Rooty Hill)
11 2012–present 1st 4th
Western United Tarneit 5 2019–present 3rd 7th

As of the 2007–08 season, New Zealand Knights were disbanded from the A-League, as they were replaced by the Wellington Phoenix.[1]

In 2009, the A-League marked the addition of two new teams both from Queensland which was the Gold Coast United and North Queensland Fury who made their debuts for the 2009–10 season.[2]

In late 2009 Sydney Rovers FC were awarded the license rights to join the A-League provisionally for the 2011–12 season, which would have made them the 11th team in the league, with a 12th team license to be awarded at a later date to even the numbers of participants. One year later the Rovers license was withdrawn due to financial concerns.

The North Queensland Fury only lasted two seasons in the A-League and Gold Coast United lasted three. In Gold Coast's third and final season, new Melbourne club, Melbourne Heart joined the league which brought the total number of teams to 11. In 2012 Gold Coast United were disbanded after low crowds from the A-League and Clive Palmer withdrawing his funding from the team after clashing with the FFA.

New Sydney team Western Sydney Wanderers joined the league in 2012–13 season.[3]

The number of teams in the A-League stayed the same for six years until it was announced that Western United will play in the A-League in 2019 with Macarthur FC joining in 2020.[4][5]

Auckland will once again host an A-League team from 2024–25 onwards, with Bill Foley being awarded a licence to own the club in November 2023.[6] The Australian Professional Leagues also plans to introduce a Canberra team in the same season.[7] In June 2024, the APL announced that the Canberra team would not be ready for the 2024–25 season.[8]

Chart

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Timeline

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League member Former member

Location of all A-League Men clubs

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References

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General

  • "A-Leagues Clubs". A-Leagues.

Specific

  1. ^ "Kiwis alive as Townsville b pulls pin". Fox Sports. 19 March 2007. Retrieved 19 March 2007.
  2. ^ "Gold Coast And Townsville Set For A-League". FourFourTwo. 28 August 2008. Retrieved 5 April 2009.
  3. ^ "New Hyundai A-League club for Western Sydney". Football Federation Australia. 11 April 2012. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
  4. ^ "FFA announce A-League expansion to 12 teams but clubs are wary of 'smokescreen'". Sydney Morning Herald. 16 February 2018.
  5. ^ Davutovic, David (5 December 2016). "A-League expansion plans revealed with two new teams to join in 2018-19". Herald Sun. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  6. ^ "Auckland expansion team awarded full A-Leagues license". A-Leagues. 21 November 2023. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  7. ^ "A-Leagues set to expand to Canberra and Auckland for 2024-25 season". ABC News. 14 March 2023. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  8. ^ "Update: Canberra expansion bid". A-Leagues. 12 June 2024. Retrieved 12 June 2024.