The Football South Australia Federation Cup, more commonly known as the Federation Cup and referred to as the Australia Cup South Australian preliminary rounds until the semi-finals, is an annual knockout cup competition in South Australia by Football South Australia. The competition is the second longest-running cup competition in Australia, only behind the Football West State Cup, founded 8 years earlier.
Organising body | Football South Australia |
---|---|
Founded | July 1907 |
Region | South Australia |
Number of teams | 46 (2023) |
Qualifier for | Australia Cup |
Current champions | Campbelltown City (3rd title) |
Most successful club(s) | Adelaide City (18 titles) |
Television broadcasters | YouTube (Semi-finals and final only) |
Website | Football SA |
2024 FSA Federation Cup |
The competition includes all clubs from the top three tiers of South Australian soccer, as well as numerous clubs from level four and outside the pyramid.
Since 2014 the Federation Cup has been incorporated as one of the qualification tournaments to determine participants in the national Australia Cup. Adelaide City are the most successful club in the competitions history, winning the competition a total of 18 times, including a run of five in a row from 1969 until 1973.
History
editIn July 1907, the Webb-Harris Cup was presented by Messrs. Charles Webb and J Harris as an annual competition with the stipulation that the first team to win the tournament three times would become the outright winners.[1] The first edition consisted of six teams: Cambridge, North Adelaide, Norwood, Port Adelaide, South Adelaide and West Adelaide, and was won by Cambridge, who defeated Hindmarsh 2–0 in the inaugural final.[2] Hindmarsh won the 1908 and 1909 finals, defeating Port Adelaide and Sturt, and Cambridge won the 1910 and 1911 finals, becoming outright winners in the competition's fifth year. After becoming the permanent owners of the trophy, the Cambridge club presented it to the South Australian British Football Association for it to be contested perpetually and to be known as the Cambridge Cup.[3]
From 1926, the cup was presented by Victorian clothing brand Pelaco until 1954, when South Australian tabloid newspaper The Advertiser took over. In 1961, eight clubs broke away from the federation and contested their own version of the cup, known as the Jaxen Cup. Following the reamalgamation of the South Australian Soccer Federation, the cup was renamed as the Federation Cup, and has since has had different sponsors since, including Willis, P.G.H., Dairy Vale, Mutual Community, West End, Best Pavers, Top Corner and Coca-Cola.
Since 2014, the competition has also decided the South Australian representatives in the Australia Cup. Adelaide City qualified for the inaugural season of the competition after defeating rivals West Adelaide 4–1 in the final.[4] Since 2021, the two finalists have qualified for the Australia Cup after South Australia earned a second slot due to an increase in preliminary round participants.[5][6]
Format
editThe competition is a single-elimination tournament. Depending on the number of teams that enter the competition, it may begin from various stages. The first round of the competition includes all teams excluding the 11 eligible National Premier Leagues South Australia teams. The teams who are drawn last receive byes to the second round. All teams play from the second round onwards. The semi-final and final are played at a neutral venue, as decided by Football South Australia.
The 2024 competition began from the 2023 Australia Cup third preliminary round, with 52 teams participating, and the 11 eligible National Premier Leagues South Australia teams entering in the following round.[7]
Federation Cup | Australia Cup | No. of teams |
---|---|---|
First round | Third preliminary round | 52 |
Second round | Fourth preliminary round | 32 |
Third round | Fifth preliminary round | 16 |
Quarter-finals | Sixth preliminary round | 8 |
Semi-finals | Seventh preliminary round | 4 |
Final | — | 2 |
Eligible teams
editAll teams that play in Football South Australia sanctioned competition are required to participate. Teams outside of FSA competitions may apply to enter. Adelaide United Youth are ineligible to participate, as youth teams cannot play in the Australia Cup preliminary rounds.
Venues
editAll matches are played at the venue of the home team, who is always the team that is drawn first. The semi-finals and final are played on a neutral ground, which since 2022, has been the State Centre for Football. Excluding 2015 and 2021, which used The Parks Football Centre as the neutral venue, the cup final was historically played at Hindmarsh Stadium.
Finals
editNo. | Year | Cup Name | Date | Winner(s) | Score | Runner-up | Venue[8] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1907 | Webb-Harris | 24 August | Cambridge | 2–0 | Hindmarsh | Hindmarsh Oval |
2 | 1908 | 15 August | Hindmarsh | 4–1 | Port Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
3 | 1909 | 28 August | Hindmarsh | 4–1 | Sturt | Hindmarsh Oval | |
4 | 1910 | 8 October | Cambridge | South Adelaide | |||
5 | 1911 | 12 August | Cambridge | 2–0 | Port Adelaide | Alberton Oval | |
6 | 1912 | Cambridge | 7 September | Adelaide | 2–1 | Tandanya | Jubilee Oval |
7 | 1913 | 6 September | Adelaide | 3–0 | Hindmarsh | Hindmarsh Oval | |
8 | 1914 | 19 September | Adelaide | 2–1 | Hindmarsh | Hindmarsh Oval | |
9 | 1915 | 4 September | Hindmarsh | 4–1 | Cheltenham | Park 18 | |
1916–18 | No competition due to World War I | ||||||
10 | 1919 | Cambridge | 23 August | Hindmarsh Sturt[a] |
1–1 | — | Hindmarsh Oval |
11 | 1920 | 4 September | Cheltenham | 2–1 | South Adelaide | Hawthorn Oval | |
12 | 1921 | 17 September | South Adelaide | 3–2 | Cheltenham | Hindmarsh Oval | |
13 | 1922 | 16 September | Cheltenham | 1–0 | Sturt | Kensington Oval | |
14 | 1923 | 13 October | Prospect | 2–1 (rep.) | South Adelaide | Jubilee Oval | |
15 | 1924 | 18 October | Holdens United | 1–0 (a.e.t.) | Prospect | Camden Oval | |
16 | 1925 | 19 September | West Torrens | 3–1 | Sturt | Jubilee Oval | |
17 | 1926 | Pelaco | 25 September | Port Adelaide | 2–1 | Sturt | Jubilee Oval |
18 | 1927 | 1 October | West Torrens | 4–3 | West Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
19 | 1928 | 15 September | West Torrens | 2–1 | West United | Hindmarsh Oval | |
20 | 1929 | 14 September | West Torrens | 3–2 | Railways | Mortlock Park | |
21 | 1930 | 13 September | Railways | 3–2 (a.e.t.) | Port Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
22 | 1931 | 3 October | Lancashire | 4–2 (rep.) | Port Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
23 | 1932 | 1 October | Lancashire | 2–0 | Railways | Jubilee Oval | |
24 | 1933 | 16 September | Port Adelaide | 2–1 | West Torrens | Hart Street Reserve | |
25 | 1934 | 15 September | Port Thistle | 3–2 | West Torrens | Hindmarsh Oval | |
26 | 1935 | 14 September | Kingswood | 4–2 | Port Thistle | Hindmarsh Oval | |
27 | 1936 | 12 September | Sturt | 4–2 | Port Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
28 | 1937 | 11 September | Sturt | 3–2 | Port Thistle | Hindmarsh Oval | |
29 | 1938 | 24 September | Birkalla Rovers | 2–0 | Kingswood | Hindmarsh Oval | |
30 | 1939 | 30 September | West Torrens | 2–0 | Birkalla Rovers | Hindmarsh Oval | |
31 | 1940 | 28 September | West Torrens | 5–1 | South Adelaide | Hindmarsh Oval | |
32 | 1941 | 27 September | Sturt | 3–1 | Birkalla Rovers | Hindmarsh Oval | |
1942 | No competition due to World War II | ||||||
33 | 1943 | Pelaco | 25 September | Northumberland & Durham | 2–1 | British Tube Mills | Mortlock Park |
34 | 1944 | 16 September | Birkalla Rovers | 2–1 | Northumberland & Durham | Allenby Gardens Reserve | |
35 | 1945 | 29 September | Port Adelaide | 3–2 | Birkalla Rovers | Allenby Gardens Reserve | |
36 | 1946 | 28 September | West Torrens | 4–3 | Kingswood | Railway Oval | |
37 | 1947 | 11 October | Cumberland United | 3–2 (a.e.t.) | Port Adelaide | Rowley Park | |
1948–49 | Not held | ||||||
38 | 1950 | Pelaco | 7 October | Birkalla Rovers | 4–1 | Port Adelaide | Mortlock Park |
39 | 1951 | 29 September | Birkalla Rovers | 1–0 | Juventus | Mortlock Park | |
40 | 1952 | 27 September | Polonia Adelaide | 3–1 | Beograd Woodville | Norwood Oval | |
41 | 1953 | 3 October | Juventus | 4–3 | Prospect United | Alberton Oval | |
42 | 1954 | 9 October | Polonia Adelaide | 3–1 | Juventus | Mortlock Park | |
43 | 1955 | The Advertiser | Juventus | 2–1 | Polonia Adelaide | ||
44 | 1956 | USC Lion | 3–2 | Cumberland United | |||
45 | 1957 | Juventus | 5–1 | USC Lion | |||
46 | 1958 | 27 September | Juventus | 1–0 | Polonia Adelaide | ||
47 | 1959 | Juventus | 1–0 | Adelaide Croatia | Norwood Oval | ||
48 | 1960 | Adelaide Croatia | 4–0 | Cumberland United | Hindmarsh Stadium | ||
49 | 1961 | The Advertiser (SASFA) Jaxen (SASL) |
7 October (SASFA) 30 September (SASL) |
Victoria (SASFA) USC Lion (SASL) |
2–1 3–2 |
Enfield City (SASFA) Orange (SASL) |
|
50 | 1962 | Federation | Adelaide Croatia | 2–1 | Burnside Budapest | ||
51 | 1963 | 14 September | Adelaide Juventus | 5–1 | West Adelaide Hellas | ||
52 | 1964 | 24 October | West Adelaide Hellas | 6–2 (rep.) | Polonia Adelaide | ||
53 | 1965 | 25 September | Adelaide Juventus | 1–0 (a.e.t.) | Enfield City | Olympic Sports Field | |
54 | 1966 | 24 September | Polonia Adelaide | 1–0 | Victoria | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
55 | 1967 | 23 September | West Adelaide Hellas | 3–0 | Adelaide Juventus | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
56 | 1968 | 28 September | Polonia Adelaide | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | Adelaide Juventus | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
57 | 1969 | 20 September | Adelaide Juventus | 4–1 | USC Lion | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
58 | 1970 | 29 August | Adelaide Juventus | 3–2 | West Adelaide Hellas | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
59 | 1971 | 18 September | Adelaide Juventus | 1–0 | West Adelaide Hellas | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
60 | 1972 | 2 September | Adelaide Juventus | 2–0 | West Adelaide Hellas | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
61 | 1973 | Willis | 1 September | Adelaide Juventus | 1–0 | West Adelaide Hellas | Hindmarsh Stadium |
62 | 1974 | 7 September | Adelaide Croatia | 4–3 | Cumberland United | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
63 | 1975 | 6 September | Polonia Adelaide | 2–0 | USC Lion | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
64 | 1976 | 18 September | Adelaide Juventus | 4–0 | Campbelltown City | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
65 | 1977 | 3 September | Adelaide Croatia | 1–0 | Campbelltown Budapest | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
66 | 1978 | Federation | 2 September | Cumberland United | 3–0 | Campbelltown Budapest | Hindmarsh Stadium |
67 | 1979 | 9 September | Port Adelaide | 2–0 | Eastern Districts Azzurri | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
68 | 1980 | 27 September | Beograd Woodville | 4–0 | Enfield Victoria | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
69 | 1981 | Eastern Districts Azzurri | 3–0 | Polonia Adelaide | Hindmarsh Stadium | ||
70 | 1982 | Adelaide Croatia | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | Para Hills | Hindmarsh Stadium | ||
71 | 1983 | P.G.H. | 17 September | Beograd Woodville | 1–0 | Salisbury United | Hindmarsh Stadium |
72 | 1984 | Eastern Districts Azzurri | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | Campbelltown City | Hindmarsh Stadium | ||
73 | 1985 | 7 September | Campbelltown City | 3–2 (rep.) | Cumberland United | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
74 | 1986 | 6 September | Eastern Districts Azzurri | 0–0 (5–4 (p)) | Para Hills | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
75 | 1987 | 5 September | West Torrens Birkalla | 1–0 | Campbelltown City | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
76 | 1988 | Adelaide Croatia | 3–2 | Polonia Adelaide | Hindmarsh Stadium | ||
77 | 1989 | 2 September | Modbury Jets | 2–0 | Para Hills | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
78 | 1990 | 31 August | Adelaide Croatia | 4–2 | West Adelaide Hellas | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
79 | 1991 | Adelaide Croatia | 1–0 | Salisbury United | |||
80 | 1992 | Federation | Adelaide Croatia | 3–1 | Eastern Districts Azzurri | ||
81 | 1993 | White City Woodville | 1–0 | Olympians | |||
82 | 1994 | Dairy Vale | Campbelltown City | 3–0 | Salisbury United | ||
83 | 1995 | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 4–2 (a.e.t.) (rep.) | Port Adelaide Lion | |||
84 | 1996 | Mutual Community | White City Woodville | 3–0 | Croydon Kings | ||
85 | 1997 | 9 June | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 2–1 | West Torrens Birkalla | Thebarton Oval | |
86 | 1998 | 7 June | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 3–1 | Adelaide Raiders | ||
87 | 1999 | West End | 17 October | West Adelaide | 2–1 | Elizabeth City | Hindmarsh Stadium |
88 | 2000 | 22 July | Croydon Kings | 1–1 (7–6 (p)) | North Eastern MetroStars | Marden Sports Complex | |
89 | 2001 | 1 September | Playford City Patriots | 3–0 | Adelaide Blue Eagles | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
90 | 2002 | 26 June | Adelaide Galaxy | 3–0 | Croydon Kings | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
91 | 2003 | Federation | 5 July | Adelaide Raiders | 5–2 | North Eastern MetroStars | Hindmarsh Stadium |
92 | 2004 | 2 October | North Eastern MetroStars | 5–2 | Modbury Jets | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
93 | 2005 | 20 August | White City Woodville | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | Adelaide Raiders | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
94 | 2006 | 24 September | Adelaide City | 4–1 | Adelaide Blue Eagles | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
95 | 2007 | Best Pavers | 25 August | Adelaide City | 1–0 | North Eastern MetroStars | Hindmarsh Stadium |
96 | 2008 | 23 August | North Eastern MetroStars | 1–0 | Adelaide City | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
97 | 2009 | Top Corner | 15 August | Cumberland United | 0–0 (5–4 (p)) | Campbelltown City | Hindmarsh Stadium |
98 | 2010 | Federation | 21 August | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 3–2 | North Eastern MetroStars | Hindmarsh Stadium |
99 | 2011 | Coca-Cola | 20 August | Western Strikers | 1–1 (6–5 (p)) | Adelaide Blue Eagles | Hindmarsh Stadium |
100 | 2012 | 25 August | North Eastern MetroStars | 3–1 | Para Hills Knights | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
101 | 2013 | 10 August | Adelaide City | 1–1 (5–4 (p) | White City Woodville | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
102 | 2014 | 31 June | Adelaide City | 4–1 | West Adelaide | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
103 | 2015 | Federation | 28 June | Croydon Kings | 2–0 | Adelaide City | The Parks Football Centre |
104 | 2016 | 25 June | North Eastern MetroStars | 1–0 | Adelaide Comets | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
105 | 2017 | 24 June | North Eastern MetroStars | 2–0 | Adelaide City | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
106 | 2018 | 11 June | Adelaide Comets | 2–1 | Croydon Kings | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
107 | 2019 | 22 June | Adelaide Olympic | 3–2 | Adelaide City | Hindmarsh Stadium | |
2020 | Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia[9] | ||||||
108 | 2021 | Federation | 14 July | Adelaide Olympic | 2–1 | Adelaide City | The Parks Football Centre |
109 | 2022 | 16 July | Adelaide City | 5–0 | Modbury Jets | State Centre for Football | |
110 | 2023 | 24 June | North Eastern MetroStars | 3–2 (a.e.t.) | Campbelltown City | State Centre for Football | |
111 | 2024 | 6 July | Campbelltown City | 3–0 | Modbury Jets | State Centre for Football |
- ^ Hindmarsh and Sturt shared the cup in 1919, with both teams holding it for 6 months each, as they were unable to organise a replay.
Statistics
editTeams
editMost successful teams | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rank | Team | Wins | Last |
1 | Adelaide City | 18 | 2022 |
2 | Adelaide Croatia Raiders | 10 | 2003 |
3 | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 7 | 2010 |
West Torrens | 1946 | ||
5 | Croydon FC | 6 | 2015 |
North Eastern MetroStars | 2023 | ||
West Torrens Birkalla | 2002 | ||
8 | FK Beograd | 5 | 2005 |
9 | Hindmarsh | 4 | 1919 |
Port Adelaide Pirates | 1979 | ||
Sturt-Orange | 1941 |
Most finals appearances | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rank | Team | Apps | Last |
1 | Adelaide City | 27 | 2022 |
2 | Croydon FC | 15 | 2018 |
3 | Adelaide Croatia Raiders | 13 | 2005 |
4 | Adelaide Blue Eagles | 12 | 2011 |
Port Adelaide Pirates | 1995 | ||
6 | Campbelltown City | 10 | 2024 |
North Eastern MetroStars | 2023 | ||
West Adelaide | 2014 | ||
West Torrens Birkalla | 2002 | ||
10 | Sturt-Orange | 9 | 1941 |
Venue
editFinals hosted | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rank | Venue | No. | Last |
1 | Hindmarsh Stadium[a] | 64 | 2019 |
2 | Jubilee Oval | 5 | 1932 |
Mortlock Park | 5 | 1954 | |
4 | State Centre for Football | 3 | 2024 |
5 | Alberton Oval | 2 | 1953 |
Allenby Gardens Reserve | 2 | 1945 | |
Norwood Oval | 2 | 1959 | |
Olympic Sports Field[b] | 2 | 1965 | |
The Parks Football Centre | 2 | 2021 | |
Unknown | 16 |
References
edit- ^ "The Observer, Adelaide". The Advertiser. 27 July 1907.
- ^ "South Australia Webb-Harris Cup 1907 – Results". Socceraust. Archived from the original on 10 March 2022.
- ^ Harlow, Denis (2003). History of Soccer in South Australia. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0975060902.
- ^ "Adelaide City claim 2014 Coca-Cola Federation Cup Final". Gameday. Football South Australia. 31 May 2014. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024.
- ^ "Football South Australia secure a second FFA Cup spot". Football South Australia. 17 December 2019. Archived from the original on 17 December 2019.
- ^ "FFA Cup 2020 preliminary rounds to commence this weekend alongside regular live streaming initiative". Australia Cup. 14 February 2020. Archived from the original on 19 March 2020.
- ^ "Last chance to enter the 2024 Australia Cup South Australian Preliminary Rounds". Football South Australia. 15 January 2024.
- ^ Peppas, Dimitri (15 October 2023). "South Australian Football Honours". Internet Archive.
- ^ "Coronavirus forces FFA Cup to be cancelled". The World Game. SBS. 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.