Macarthur Football Club is an Australian professional soccer club based in South Western Sydney, New South Wales. It competes in Australia's premier soccer competition, the A-League, under licence from Australian Professional Leagues (APL). On 13 December 2018, it was announced that the club would be accepted into the A-League as part of the new expansion process.[2]
History
Formation
On 1 December 2017, Campbelltown City Council informed the Football Federation Australia (FFA) of their plans to be part of an expanded A-League by gaining entry into the competition in two years.[3] Initially called the South West Sydney Football Bid, the bid was intended, by the 2019–2020 season, to have a men, women and youth team playing in a national competition with games hosted at Campbelltown Sports Stadium.[3] It was also proposed to grow the football community in the region and ensure young players a pathway into the professional league for both boys and girls.[4] The proposal by the council soon gained support from other committees in the ensuing months, namely Camden and Wollondilly Shire, and from the Macarthur Football Association, which represented dozens of community clubs and over 10,000 registered players in the region.[4]Brett Emerton, who was raised in Macquarie Fields, Campbelltown, became the bid ambassador and Lang Walker, billionaire and executive chairman of Walker Corporation, was named business ambassador in April 2018.[5][6] Walker pledged to financially invest in the club if the bid succeeded, including upgrades towards Campbelltown Sports Stadium and its facilities.[7] The bid was dubbed "United for Macarthur" and launched that month to allow local businesses and people to support a community-based and owned team proposal.[4]
By the deadline date for expression of interest on 25 May 2018, 15 were submitted with three Sydney-based proposals being introduced.[8][9] The "United for Macarthur" campaign gained further support from A-League club Sydney FC and its chairman, Scott Barlow, who also issued criticism towards the Southern Expansion (Sutherland-St George Illawarra regions) proposal that he stated was "deeply flawed".[10] On 29 June 2018, Macarthur was accepted into the reduced ten-bid shortlist to compete for two new places in the expanded A-League from 2019–20.[11][12] Macarthur merged with South West Sydney Football Club to increase their chances of being selected, following an agreement between South West Sydney director Gino Marra and Macarthur bid chairman Chris Redman, who would act as co-chairmen from there.[13] The merger was announced on 21 August 2018 and was named "Macarthur South West Sydney".[14] On 17 October 2018, The FFA again accepted the Macarthur South West Sydney bid into another reduced shortlist of six proposals with now only one other New South Wales bid remaining: Southern Expansion.[15] Prior to the final decision, the Southern Expansion bid attempted a merger with Macarthur which included $20 million in the offer that was rejected by Gino Marra.[16] The FFA announced on 13 December 2018 that Macarthur South West Sydney alongside Western Melbourne were confirmed to be the two new expansion clubs in the next two A-League seasons.[17][18][19]
While the Melbourne side was set to start in the 2019–20 season, Macarthur South West Sydney was given 12 months to prepare before their inaugural season in the 2020–21 season.[20] It wasn't until April 2019 that the club registered their first potential name, which was initially thought to be "Dharawal Bulls Football Club". Two other draft names under the moniker of Dharawal were found, such as Dharawal Football Club or Dharawal FC, linking to the original custodians of their land, the Dharawal.[21] In spite of this, the club announced on 15 May 2019 in a function at Campbelltown Catholic Club, revealing the official name to be "Macarthur FC", with its official colours to be black, gold and white, a notion to the diverse cultures of the area, and their logo to signify a bull in its centre, a sign of the club's physical power.[22][23][24] Macarthur also announced their home ground to be Campbelltown Sports Stadium and its training headquarters to be based at a new Centre of Excellence, which was under construction at the time. The facilities at the University of Western Sydney in Campbelltown were instead used temporarily as the training headquarters.[22] On the same day as their unveiling, Ante Milicic was announced as the inaugural head coach of Macarthur FC and was set to start in the club's first season.[25][26][27] A week prior, Milicic signed an extension with the Matildas for the Summer Olympic in Tokyo. He was also rumoured to have rejected the contract by Macarthur due to this.[28]
Milicic era (2020–2022)
Ante Milicic officially joined Macarthur FC as the inaugural head coach on 22 January 2020;[29] Ivan Jolić was the inaugural assistant coach under Milicic and was hired in October 2019 prior.[30] Macarthur also secured the signing of their first player with Central Coast Mariners' winger Tommy Oar.[31][32] The club announced his signing on 4 February 2020, alongside the appointment of former Socceroos striker Mile Sterjovski as second assistant coach.[33][34] Macarthur went through significant changes in the next month. Lang Walker sold his 50% ownership stake in the club to a consortium of two local Sydney businessmen. Michael Gerace, who owns Sydney Trucks and Machinery, and Roy Mammone, a Sydney property developer, bought the 50% stake for an undisclosed fee of over $7 million.[35] The departure of Lang followed with chairman Rabieh Krayem resigning from his position and football director Ken Stead, who had been leading Macarthur's football department, was made redundant from the club.[36] Gino Marra soon took over as chairman of Macarthur FC.[37][38] On 2 June 2020, Macarthur was taken to court after being sued by former employees at the club, who are accusing them of having suffered mental health damage during their employment. Due to the change in ownership in February, both Ken Stead and Neil Favager, who was a chief executive at the club, took legal action in accusing the club of inconsideration of their mental health and positions at the club, with Favager stating that it caused "significant health and safety issues" for him and heightened stress and anxiety for his spouse, which was aggravated by a pre-existing medical issue. Macarthur later denied these allegations.[39][40][41]
Macarthur FC played their first league match on 30 December 2020, in a derby match against Western Sydney Wanderers at Western Sydney Stadium. The Bulls went on to win 1–0 over the Wanderers, with Mark Milligan scoring the first league goal for the club in the 72nd minute of the match, assisted by Beñat from a free kick.[70][71] Macarthur then played their first league match at Campbelltown against Central Coast Mariners on 3 January 2021, losing 2–0 in front of a home crowd of 4,538.[72][73] The club would go winless in their next three home matches before a 4–0 win over Adelaide United led the Bulls to achieve their first victory at home. Matt Derbyshire scored the first hat-trick for the club. Notably, NSW PremierGladys Berejiklian was unveiled as Macarthur’s number 1 ticket holder prior to the match.[74][75][76] Milicic led his side towards top 6 of the A-League ladder, peaking at second to third place by March,[77] and finishing at 6th by the end of the league season.[78] From the end of March to early April, Macarthur achieved three consecutive victories, triumphing over Western United, Wellington Phoenix and Perth Glory, leading them to take second place behind the Mariners.[79][80] In their first finals series match, Macarthur FC defeated Central Coast Mariners 2–0 in extra time. The club went down to 10 men after James Meredith was sent off in the 75th minute before a goal each in extra time by Charles M'Mombwa and Michael Ruhs sealed the Bulls qualification to the semi-final.[81][82][83] Macarther would fall to a 2–0 defeat against eventual champions Melbourne City in that semi-final stage on 20 June 2023.[84] The venue was set at Jubilee Stadium, instead of City's home ground in Melbourne, due to crowd restrictions imposed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Victoria.[85][86]
Following the conclusion of the season, Mark Milligan announced his retirement on 2 June 2021, making 24 competitive appearances for the Bull prior to the announcement.[87] Both Beñat Etxebarria and Markel Susaeta would later announce their retirement on 29 June 2021.[88] Four days prior, Macarthur FC confirmed the departure of Ivan Franjic, Loic Puyo, Walter Scott, Yianni Nicolaou, Milislav Popovic and Kyle Cimenti from their squad.[89] Denis Genreau became the first recipient of the Macarthur Medal as part of Macarthur FC’s inaugural end of season award ceremony.[90] Matt Derbyshire finished as top goalscorer for the club, having scored 14 goals during the season,[91] with 7 of those in his first 12 A-League games.[92]
The logo designed by twosomecreative.com.au depicts a black and gold ochre bull which is contained in a crest where the inner border is black and the outer gold ochre with the club's name written in the aforementioned colours above the bull and three federation stars at the bottom. The bull makes reference to the region where a runaway herd of cattle was discovered in its past.[94] The federation stars symbolise the soccer community in Australia, the National Premier Leagues and the A-League. The logo features mainly black and white with the addition of gold ochre to highlight the Dharawal heritage of the area.[94]
Macarthur FC has a rivalry with the Western Sydney Wanderers. The rivalry is largely based on geography, with both teams based in Greater Western Sydney. The two clubs first met in the opening round of the 2020–21 A-League season on 30 December 2020, with Macarthur winning the match 1–0 after a goal scored by Mark Milligan. On 6 February 2021, in the following derby, Macarthur drew 2–2 at home with goals by Aleksandar Jovanovic and Aleksandar Šušnjar.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.