1995–96 National Soccer League

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NSL 1995-96
LeagueNational Soccer League
SportSoccer
Duration1995–96
Number of teams12
NSL season
ChampionsMelbourne Knights
Minor premiersMarconi-Fairfield
Top scorerDamian Mori (31)
National Soccer League seasons

The 1995–96 A-League season was the first year of a rebranded Australian National Soccer League (NSL) and the twentieth since the national league began in 1977. The competition was variously known as the A-League and the Ericsson Cup (as part of a sponsorship arrangement) at the time.

Background[]

After an attempt to reduce the number of NSL teams from 14 to 12, the Australian Soccer Federation announced that a new competition known as the A-League would operate in parallel to the NSL.[1] After a series of legal challenges, the A-League became the sole national league with largely the same composition of teams as the previous NSL season. The change was seen at the time as a rebranding rather than a new competition. Prior to the season beginning, the league announced a sponsorship agreement with Ericsson that was supposed to last until 2000. The sponsorship led to the league being renamed the Ericsson Cup, though the A-League and NSL names were still used in various forms.[2][3]

The commencement of the season was delayed as relegated teams Melbourne SC and Heidelberg United obtained court injunctions to prevent the league going ahead. Eventually the injunction was lifted in the Federal Court of Australia to allow the league to start, albeit several weeks late.[4][5]

Overview[]

The league was composed of 12 teams. After 33 rounds, Marconi-Fairfield were crowned minor premiers. In the final series, Marconi-Fairfield and the Melbourne Knights contested the 1996 A-League Grand Final, with Melbourne Knights prevailing 2–1.[6][7]

Regular season[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Marconi Fairfield 33 17 9 7 58 35 +23 60 1996 National Soccer League Finals
2 Melbourne Knights (C) 33 17 8 8 50 28 +22 59 1995–96 National Soccer League Champions
3 Sydney Olympic 33 17 8 8 55 41 +14 59 1996 National Soccer League Finals
4 Brisbane Strikers 33 17 6 10 54 35 +19 57
5 Adelaide City 33 15 9 9 65 40 +25 54
6 Sydney United 33 14 12 7 47 33 +14 54
7 West Adelaide 33 16 5 12 49 43 +6 53
8 South Melbourne 33 14 4 15 50 56 −6 46
9 Canberra Cosmos 33 8 11 14 48 61 −13 35
10 Morwell Falcons 33 9 8 16 35 65 −30 35
11 Wollongong City 33 5 5 23 31 63 −32 20
12 Newcastle Breakers 33 4 5 24 35 77 −42 17
Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion

Finals[]

  Semifinals Wk1 Semifinals Wk2 Preliminary final Grand final
                               
  1  Melbourne Knights  1  Marconi Fairfield  2 (2)    Melbourne Knights  2
  2  Marconi Fairfield  0  Melbourne Knights  2 (3)              Marconi Fairfield  1
                               
                     Marconi Fairfield  4        
  3  Sydney Olympic  0 0 (0)              Adelaide City  1        
  5  Adelaide City  2 1 (3)                        
             Adelaide City  1                
             Sydney United  0                
  4  Brisbane Strikers  0 1 (1)                        
  6  Sydney United  2 2 (4)                        


Grand Final[]

Melbourne Knights2 – 1Marconi-Fairfield
Marth Goal 58'
Cervinski Goal 74'
(report) Harper Goal 78'
Attendance: 14,258
Referee: Eddie Lennie

Individual awards[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Schwab, Laurie (6 August 1995). "New League Announced". The Age. The federation would, in accordance with its articles of association, launch a new competition called the Soccer Australia A League, to kick off on 30 September.
  2. ^ Cockerill, Michael (5 October 1995). "A-plus: Hill nets five-year sponsor". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  3. ^ Cockerill, Michael (5 September 1995). "Stalled A-League gets key support". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  4. ^ Cockerill, Michael (20 September 1995). "Court clears deck for A-teams". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  5. ^ Cockerill, Michael (1 October 1995). "A-League far from the big league". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015. Following an exhaustive and acrimonious legal process in which the lawyers (as usual) were the only winners, a revamped national competition - to be known as the A-League - will kick-off next weekend.
  6. ^ "4-1 win secures Marconi grand final spot". The Age. 19 May 1995. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015. Minor premier Marconi will now meet defending champion Melbourne Knights in the grand final in Melbourne next Sunday in their fifth clash this season.
  7. ^ Cockerill, Michael (26 May 1996). "It's two in a row for Knights". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015. MELBOURNE KNIGHTS 2 (A Marth 58th A Cervinski 75th) bt MARCONI 1 (A Harper 80th). Referee: E Lennie. Crowd: 14,258 at Olympic Park. For once the game matched the occasion as the Melbourne Knights confirmed their favouritism with a stylish 2-1 win over Marconi-Fairfield in yesterday's A-League grand final.
  8. ^ a b c d Schwab, Laurie (21 May 1996). "Mori tops soccer poll by record 186 votes". The Age. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 16 February 2015.

References[]

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