Capital Football

Last updated

Capital Football
Formation2005(18 years ago) (2005)
TypeTerritory Sporting Association
Legal statusActive
HeadquartersFootball House, Deakin
Location
Coordinates 35°19′36.9″S149°5′41″E / 35.326917°S 149.09472°E / -35.326917; 149.09472
Region served
ACT
Monaro, NSW
Southern Tablelands, NSW
Riverina, NSW
Membership
58,600 (2019) [1]
CEO
Ivan Slavich
Parent organisation
Football Australia
Staff
22+
Website capitalfootball.com.au

Capital Football is the trading name for the ACT Football Federation Incorporated, the state governing body for soccer in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), but also has affiliated clubs based in surrounding areas of New South Wales. It is affiliated with Football Australia, the national governing body.

Contents

History

Capital Football was founded in the 1960s as the ACT Soccer Federation Incorporated. The organisation replaced the defunct Federal Capital Territory Soccer Football Association which controlled soccer in the ACT between 1926 and 1932 and the Federal Monaro District Soccer Association which lasted two years (1932–33). The Great Depression and World War II saw soccer all but disappear in the ACT with no new federation established and the odd team playing infrequent matches in NSW. Following the conclusion of the war new migrant communities settled in Canberra and founded clubs such as Juventus, Olympic, Croatia and Hungaria. These clubs formed the backbone of the new ACT Soccer Federation in the 1960s. The new federation and the clubs adopted a policy in 1960 to remove ethnic names but by 1966 this policy was abandoned and ethnic names returned. The ACT Soccer Federation continued to serve as the state federation body of the ACT under the trading name Soccer Canberra until 2005 when the organisation went through a restructure and rebranding in accordance with the new national rebranding set down by the new national federation, Football Federation Australia (FFA). The organisation's name changed to the ACT Football Federation Incorporated and it started trading under the guise of Capital Football. [2] [3]

In 2008, then Capital Football CEO Heather Reid was instrumental in securing Capital Football a W-League franchise licence from FFA, the only licence given to an entity not associated with an A-League team. [4] Capital Football established Canberra United FC to compete in the inaugural W-League season in 2008-09. Canberra United finished the season in third place behind Queensland Roar and Newcastle Jets before going on to win their semi-final against the Jets 1-0 and losing the grand final 0-2 against the Roar. [5]

2 April 2015, it was reported that Capital Football's membership numbers had swelled to 12,500 players after recording membership numbers of 10,512 in 2013 and 11,655 in 2014. The steady increase in numbers caused Capital Football to enter into regular talks with the ACT Government regarding identifying new playing grounds as the number of players and teams had reached a breaking point. [6]

15 December 2015, Capital Football announced the amalgamation of its various elite high performance soccer programs into one entity, Canberra United Academy (CUA). The state federation additionally announced the Academy program would compete in the 2016 National Premier Leagues Capital Football season, increasing the total number of teams in the ACT's top men's division to ten. [7] 17 December 2015, the eight ACT NPL clubs swiftly voiced their concerns regarding the new academy and its proposed ‘user pay’ system. [8] 4 January 2016, Capital Football technical director, Warren Grieve, announced the intention for the state federation to push for the newly established academy to be granted a National Youth League licence by the FFA. Grieve noted this became the federation's responsibility due to the absence of an A-League team in the region. [9] 10 February 2016, Canberra's NPL teams announced they would boycott all matches involving the Canberra United Academy including pre-season fixtures unless Capital Football removed CUA from the NPL and gave all eight clubs voting rights on the Capital Football board. [10] 11 February 2016, FFA technical director, Eric Abrams, met with ACT NPL club presidents to discuss their ongoing concerns with the Canberra United Academy. Fairfax Media reported discussions had occurred regarding a break-away league being established if the impasse was not overcome. [11] 31 March 2016, outgoing Capital Football CEO, Heather Reid, revealed ongoing discussions had been taking place between the federation and NPL club presidents regarding the CUA issue. She reiterated, along with board member Mark O’Neill that they were confident a resolution would be found shortly. [12] 7 April 2016, Capital Football and the NPL clubs came to an agreement not to boycott matches against CUA in the first half of the season as a sign of good-faith to the new CF CEO. Meetings would continue to take place during this time to determine the long-term future. [13] 27 May 2016, Cooma president, Harry Hovasapain, confirmed all NPL teams would play CUA for the rest of the 2016 season, noting the clubs, the federation board, the CEO and the competition manager were all now working closely and moving in the right direction. [14] 27 February 2017, CF announced that CUA would continue to operate but would align with the FFA Centre of Excellence for the 2017 NPL season, freeing up a league place for Riverina Rhinos to join the league. [15]

Headquarters

Capital Football's headquarters is located at Football House in the south-central Canberra suburb of Deakin, ACT (address: 2/3 Phipps Cl, Deakin ACT 2600). [16] The first public mention of building a home for football in the ACT named "Football House" came on 14 September 1948 when Canberra Football League president, C A Donnelly, mentioned the idea in an article for local newspaper The Canberra Times. Mr Donnelly suggested the total costs of building the headquarters would be £8,000. [17]

Administration

Capital Football Board, as of 16 March 2023 [18]

Capital Football Board
RoleStaff
Chair & Director Flag of Australia (converted).svg Angelo Konstantinou
Deputy chair & Director Flag of Australia (converted).svg Fran Sankey
Director Flag of Australia (converted).svg Kim Ward
Director Flag of Australia (converted).svg Gary Vandeburgt
Director Flag of Australia (converted).svg Justin Webb

Competitions

Capital Football runs a number of men's, women's and junior competitions: [19]

Capital Football Competitions
Men'sWomen'sJuniorsMixed
NPL Capital Football Men's NPL Capital Football Women'sNPL BoysPSFA
Capital Premier League Men's State League 1-6 CPL BoysANU Mixed Social Futsal
State League 1-3 Women's Federation CupNPL GirlsDiplomatic Corps Cup
State League Reserves 1-3 Charity Shield Women's Kanga Cup Walking Football
Community League 1-5 Masters 1ACT MiniRoosPowerchair League
Federation Cup Futsal 1-3ACT Junior Leagues
Charity Shield Men's
Masters 1-3
Masters Over 45s
Futsal 1-5

Associated clubs

Owned and operated teams

Capital Football owns and operates the A-League Women franchise team Canberra United Football Club since its inception in 2008 into the then W-League. [20]

Affiliated clubs

As of 2021, Capital Football has a total of 31 affiliated senior men's and women's clubs, listed below. [21] 23 clubs are from the ACT with and 8 clubs from the Monaro, Southern Tablelands and Riverina regions of NSW (including two clubs from Queanbeyan and one club each from Goulburn, Cooma, Yass, Palerang, Wagga Wagga and Griffith).

ACT
ADFA Vikings
ANU FC
Belconnen United
Belnorth FC
Belsouth FC
Belwest Foxes
Brindabella Blues
Burns FC
Canberra FC
Canberra City
Canberra Olympic
Gungahlin United
Lanyon United
Majura FC
Narrabundah FC
O'Connor Knights
South Canberra FC
Tuggeranong United
UC Pumas
White Eagles FC
Weston-Molonglo FC
Woden Valley FC
Woden Weston FC
NSW
Cooma FC [lower-alpha 1]
Monaro Panthers
Palerang United
Queanbeyan City
Riverina Rhinos
Southern Tablelands United
Wagga City Wanderers
Yass FC
  1. The official name of Cooma Football Club's National Premier Leagues side is "Tigers FC". [22]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Belconnen United FC</span> Football club

Belconnen United Football Club is an Australian semi-professional association football club based in the northern Canberra region of Belconnen, ACT. The women's First Grade team currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Capital Football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Soccer in the Australian Capital Territory</span>

Soccer in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) is predominantly amateur with a local, interstate, national and international history. Football in the ACT is organised and administered by Capital Football and involves teams from within the ACT and surrounding NSW regions, Monaro, Southern Tablelands and Riverina.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canberra Croatia FC</span> Football club

Canberra Croatia Football Club is an Australian semi-professional soccer club based in the suburb of Deakin in the south of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory founded in 1958. The club currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Capital Football.

The National Premier Leagues Capital Football 1 is a soccer competition contested by clubs affiliated to Capital Football. The league is the highest level competition in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) region. It is a subdivision of the National Premier Leagues and sits in Level 2 in the overall Australian league system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">West Canberra Wanderers FC</span> Football club

West Canberra Wanderers Football Club, previously known as Woden-Weston FC is a semi-professional football club based in Canberra, Australia. The club currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Capital Football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canberra United FC</span> Football club

Canberra United Football Club is an Australian professional soccer club based in the southern Canberra suburb of Wanniassa, Australian Capital Territory. Founded in 2008 by Capital Football, the club was an inaugural member of the W-League and the only club not affiliated with an A-League Men team. Canberra United currently competes in the A-League Women, A-League Youth and NPLW leagues. Canberra's home stadium is McKellar Park and the club is a two-time champion and three-time premier of the W-League.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canberra Olympic FC</span> Football club

Canberra Olympic FC is an Australian semi-professional Association football club based in the suburb of O'Connor in the north of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. The club was founded in 1956, and currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Capital Football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tuggeranong United FC</span> Football club

Tuggeranong United FC are an association football club based in the southern Canberra region of Tuggeranong, ACT, Australia. The club competes in the highest level of football in the ACT, NPL Capital Football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cooma FC</span> Football club

Cooma Tigers Football Club is an Australian semi-professional association football club based in Cooma, New South Wales. The club is affiliated with Capital Football and currently competes in the Community State Leagues Capital Football in the ACT. Cooma's home venue is Nijong Oval.

The 2013 Capital Football season was the first season under the new competition format in the Australian Capital Territory. The competition consisted of two divisions across the ACT, created from the teams in the previous structure. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gungahlin United FC</span> Football club

Gungahlin United Football Club is an Australian semi-professional football club based in the Canberra district of Gungahlin, ACT. Gungahlin currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Capital Football with home matches played at the recently constructed Gungahlin Enclosed Oval.

The 2015 Capital Football season was the third season under the new competition format in the Australian Capital Territory. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2015.

The Federation Cup is a soccer competition established in 1962 that is held between clubs who are affiliated with Capital Football in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) and surrounding areas of New South Wales. It is the premier cup competition in the region. Since 2014, the Federation Cup has concurrently served as the ACT competition for the preliminary rounds of the FFA Cup, now known as the Australia Cup, with the cup winner representing the ACT.

Clubs affiliated with Capital Football in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) – and surrounding areas of New South Wales – competed in 2014 for the Capital Football Federation Cup. Teams from the same Club playing in multiple divisions were allowed to compete. This knockout competition was won by Tuggeranong United, their 4th title.

Clubs affiliated with Capital Football in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) - and surrounding areas of New South Wales - competed in 2014 for the Capital Football Federation Cup. Teams from the same Club playing in multiple divisions were allowed to compete. This knockout competition was won by Belconnen United, their 4th title.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gungahlin Enclosed Oval</span>

Gungahlin Enclosed Oval is a multi-use stadium located in the north Canberra region of Gungahlin, Australian Capital Territory. It is the home ground for Gungahlin United, Gungahlin Jets, Gungahlin Bulls and Gungahlin Eagles. The venue has a seating capacity of 1,150 people and an overall capacity of 5,000.

The 2016 Capital Football season was the fourth season under the new competition format in the Australian Capital Territory. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Deakin Stadium</span> Football ground in Australia

Deakin Stadium is an association football ground located in the south-central Canberra suburb of Deakin, ACT. It is the home ground of Canberra Croatia FC in the NPL ACT.

The 2018 Capital Football season was the sixth season under the new competition format in the Australian Capital Territory. The league premier for the new structure qualifies for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation premiers in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2018.

The 2019 Capital Football season saw a new competition format for the top two men’s divisions in the Australian Capital Territory. The Capital League became linked to the National Premier League with the introduction of a two-step plan to establish promotion and relegation between the two divisions, as well as a re-branding of both divisions to National Premier League 1 (NPL1) and National Premier League 2 (NPL2). The NPL1 Premier qualified for the 2019 National Premier Leagues final series and the Federation Cup winner qualified for the 2019 FFA Cup.

References

  1. "Football confirmed as the largest club-based participation sport in Australia". Capital Football. 7 November 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  2. "Football in the ACT - A Brief History". www.capitalfootball.com.au. Archived from the original on 20 March 2017. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  3. "Archived copy of 2005 Capital Football Annual Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  4. Gaskin, Lee (5 February 2016). "Women's sport pioneers leave wonderful legacy for future generations". The Age . Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  5. "Queensland claims inaugural W-League title". 17 January 2009. Archived from the original on 20 January 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  6. Gaskin, Lee (2 April 2015). "Soccer reigns supreme in junior ranks in Canberra among four football codes". The Canberra Times . Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  7. Gaskin, Lee (15 December 2015). "Soccer: Canberra United Academy given green light to play in 2016 National Premier League". The Canberra Times . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  8. Gaskin, Lee (17 December 2015). "Soccer: Canberra NPL clubs unite to voice concerns about Canberra United Academy". The Canberra Times . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  9. Stamocostas, Con (4 January 2016). "Canberra United Academy push for National Youth League". www.fourfourtwo.com. Archived from the original on 21 March 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  10. Polkinghorne, David (10 February 2016). "Canberra's NPL teams to boycott Canberra United Academy games". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  11. Polkinghorne, David (11 February 2016). "Rebel league an option in Canberra NPL disagreement with Capital Football". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  12. Gaskin, Lee (31 March 2016). "Soccer: Capital Football hopeful of resolution with clubs for Canberra United Academy". The Canberra Times . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  13. Gaskin, Lee (7 April 2016). "Soccer: Capital Football NPL clubs agree on truce to play against Canberra United Academy". The Canberra Times . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  14. Tuxworth, Jon (27 May 2016). "Soccer: NPL clubs content to play CU Academy for rest of season". The Age . Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  15. "PS4 NPL Capital Football structure & teams". www.nationalpremierleagues.com.au. 27 February 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  16. "Contact Us". www.capitalfootball.com.au. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  17. "Football House Proposed for Canberra". The Canberra Times. 14 September 1948. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  18. "Capital Football Board". www.capitalfootball.com.au. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  19. "Competitions - Capital Football" . Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  20. "Reid, Heather". www.trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  21. "Affiliated Club Websites". www.capitalfootball.com.au. Archived from the original on 18 March 2017. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  22. "National Premier League". Cooma FC . Retrieved 20 July 2021.