Newcastle United Jets FC

Newcastle United Jets FC
Newcastle United Jets
Newcastle United Jets logo
Full name Newcastle United Jets Football Club
Nickname(s) The Jets
Founded 2000
Ground Ausgrid Stadium,
Newcastle
(Capacity: 33,000)
Owner Nathan Tinkler
Chairman Ken Edwards
Manager Australia Gary van Egmond
League A-League
2010–11 7th (league)
DNQ (finals)
Home colours
Away colours
Current season

Newcastle United Jets Football Club is a professional football (soccer) club based in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. The club competes in the A-League and plays its home games at Ausgrid Stadium (EAS). The Jets have won one A-League championship, defeating arch rivals the Central Coast Mariners 1–0 in the 2007–08 Grand Final.[1] In 2009, Newcastle played in the AFC Champions League for the first time, reaching the Round of 16.

The club was formed in 2000 when it joined the National Soccer League (NSL) as Newcastle United,[2] and is one of only four former NSL clubs to appear in the A-League.

Contents

History

Newcastle United

Newcastle United Strip 2000–04

Newcastle United was formed in 2000 by Cypriot-Australian businessman Con Constantine from the remnants of the Newcastle Breakers club.[3] The Breakers were dissolved when Soccer Australia revoked its NSL license at the conclusion of the 1999/2000 season. At the formation of Newcastle United the home ground was moved back to where Newcastle KB United played, now known as Ausgrid Stadium.

The Newcastle United club were reasonably successful, competing in two of the last three Final Series and finishing 2nd in the League behind Perth Glory in the 2001–02 season.[4] The clubs colours were Blue and Red, somewhat traditional colours of the region also worn by the Newcastle Knights Rugby League team.

Newcastle United Jets

Newcastle United was renamed as Newcastle United Jets when it joined the A-League in its inaugural 2005–06 season. The club was renamed to project a new image and to prevent confusion with the Premier League club Newcastle United F.C.. The name "Jets" is a reference to RAAF Base Williamtown, located just 20 kilometres north of Newcastle. The club's logo depicts three F/A-18 Hornets, which the Royal Australian Air Force has based at Williamtown. During the A-league the Jets continued their successful form from the NSL by making all but one finals series, and wining one Championship (2007–08).

The club found themselves in desperate financial times shortly after the start of the 2010-11 A-league Season, Resulting in the sale of the club to mining magnate Nathan Tinkler after the license was stripped from former owner Con Constantine. As a result of Tinklers ownership (until at least 2020), a football advisory board was set up in place of Con's Autocratic system of ownership.

The Culina Saga

On 4 October 2011 the club sensationally terminated the contract of coach Branko Culina, as well commencing the process of applying to the FFA to have the 3-year 'Marquee' contract of (Branko's son) Jason "set aside".[5] Although no one reason sited for the decision it is believed that an argument took place between Branko, CEO Robbie Middleby and owner Nathan Tinkler regarding the nepotist nature of Jason's signing as well as "medical advice".

Middleby stated, “The decision to terminate the contracts was made after a long deliberation by the Newcastle Jets’ Advisory Board.” While Tinkler stated “Jason’s injury could mean the Jets are without their marquee player for up to three seasons – not a good result for the club, supporters, sponsors and players.”

Colours and badge

Newcastle United's jersey for the 2009–10 season will retain the gold colour jersey, with navy socks and shorts and red trimming. The alternate jersey will, however, revert to something a little more historic, in light of the club's 10th year celebrations in 2010. The clash jersey will feature blue and red, with white and blue shorts and socks, in line with the old Newcastle United strips. The Tinkler Sports Group revealed in early 2011 that the Newcastle Jets colours will revert back to the Blue and Red worn by Newcastle United and Breakers. This is also to combined colours with the Newcastle Knights who will become a cousin club in 2011.

Stadium

Western stand of Ausgrid Stadium

Ausgrid Stadium is the home ground of the Newcastle United Jets and the Newcastle Knights. It has a capacity of 33,000.

The record crowd for a football match in Newcastle was set at Ausgrid Stadium on 2 February 2007 in the second leg of the A-League 2006-07 minor semi final against Sydney FC, in front of 24,338 people.[6] This broke the record set earlier that season on New Years Day, where a crowd of 20,980 turned up to see a 2–0 loss against the same opposition.[7] Prior to that game the football attendance record for a match in Newcastle stood for 52 years, set when Australia played Rapid Vienna.

In the next few years, the stadium will be turned into a modern, state-of-the-art 33,000-seat ground.[8] This upgrade is as a result of plans to hold the 2015 AFC Asian Cup and 2018 FIFA World Cup in Australia. Newcastle may be one of the venues for these event, and minimum standards set by FIFA mean EAS is inadequate for this role. The next upgrade will involve demolishing the western grandstand and replacing it with one similar to the east, as well as placing seated areas on the hill at either end of the ground. This upgrade will cost around $60 million, of which $50 million is being provided by the State Government.[9] This upgrade means the Jets attendance figures can grow immensely, and will also qualify the Jets to host any Grand Finals they reach in the future.

Supporters

Ante Čović in front of The Squadron, Round 2 of the 2007–08 season

The main supporter base of the Newcastle Jets is known as the Squadron Novocastria, which was formed in anticipation of the first ever A-League game between Newcastle and Adelaide United. The Squadron begun standing behind the goals on the Southern Hill, however because of the layout of the stadium, they moved to Bay 2 of the Eastern Grandstand at Ausgrid Stadium, in a successful attempt to increase group co-ordination and noise level. Standard songs/chants include, “We go by land and sea”, “The Newy Boys go one by one” and “When The Jets Go Flying In”. The Squadron have also started a new tradition of singing the chorus to the INXS song “Never Tear Us Apart” before the start of the game and second half. As the club's performances improved throughout the 2006–07 season the Squadron grew rapidly and continued to grow throughout the 2007–08 season.

Rivalries

Due to its geographical proximity, Newcastle shares a strong rivalry with both NSW A-League clubs.

  • Central Coast Mariners: Known as The F3 Derby, the first meeting between the teams resulted in a tough semi-final tie in the 2005 Oceania Club Championship qualification competition (held in May 2005, prior to the start of the inaugural A-League season), when star Mariners striker Nik Mrdja broke the leg of Newcastle defender Andrew Durante,[10] earning him a tag as Newcastle's "hate-boy". In the 2007–08 season, the Newcastle Jets beat the Mariners 2–0 in the first leg of the Major Semi-Final, before being beaten 3–0 in extra time in the second leg at Bluetongue Stadium.[11] After beating Queensland Roar 3–2 in the Preliminary Final, the Jets then went on to defeat the Mariners 1–0 in the 2007/08 A-League Grand Final. In round 17 of the 2008/09 season, the Jets and Mariners faced each other at Ausgrid Stadium. The Mariners won the game 2–1 courtesy of a Matt Simon goal in the 80th minute. After the full time whistle, star Jets striker Joel Griffiths grabbed Mariners midfielder John Hutchinson around the neck causing players from both sides to intervene. Referee Peter O'Leary red carded Mariners' striker Dylan Macallister for abusive language. This was the most fiery meeting in the F3 Derby's short history.
  • Sydney FC: Originally only considered rivals due to their locations, the two clubs are now bitter competitors. The Jets set their all-time record attendance of more than 24,000 at the home leg of the semi-final tie between the two in the competition's second season. In the A-League 2007-08 season, Sydney won all three games with close 1–0 victories. The two teams battled to secure a 0–0 draw in Newcastle in Round Four of the A-League 2008-09 season.


Current squad

Senior squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Australia GK Ben Kennedy
2 Australia DF Taylor Regan
3 Australia DF Mario Šimić
4 Australia DF Nikolai Topor-Stanley
5 Brazil DF Tiago
6 Australia MF Ben Kantarovski
7 Australia MF Kasey Wehrman (Vice-Captain)
8 New Zealand FW Jeremy Brockie
9 England FW Michael Bridges
10 Australia MF Ruben Zadkovich
11 Australia DF Tarek Elrich
12 Australia MF Jobe Wheelhouse (Captain)
No. Position Player
13 South Korea DF Byun Sung-Hwan
14 Australia FW Labinot Haliti
15 Australia FW Chris Payne
16 Australia DF Sam Gallaway
17 Australia MF James Virgili
18 Australia FW Marko Jesic
19 Australia GK Matthew Nash
20 Australia MF Jason Culina
22 Iraq MF Ali Abbas Al-Hilfi
23 Australia FW Ryan Griffiths
24 England FW Francis Jeffers

Youth squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
30 Australia GK Jack Duncan
Australia GK Luke Turnball
25 Australia DF Jacob Pepper (Captain)
Australia DF Daniel Laiman
Australia DF Nick Cowburn
Australia DF David Vrankovic
Australia DF Laaris Jagessar-Barnett
Australia MF Luke Remington
Australia MF David Talevski
No. Position Player
Australia MF Kyle Ewart
Australia MF Abe Wheelhouse
Australia MF Louis Bozanic
Australia MF Scott Pettit
Australia MF Andrew Hoole
Australia FW Blake Green
Australia FW Joel Hochstetter
Australia FW Alex Read
Australia FW Kale Bradbery
+ up to four senior squad players

Former notable players

Australia

 

Brazil

Colombia

Denmark

Ecuador

England

Italy

Korea Republic

 

Netherlands

New Zealand

Uruguay

 

Captains

Managers

Staff

[12]

Owner

Board

  • Australia Ray Baartz : Head Chairman, Former Socceroo
  • Australia Ken Edwards : Executive Chairman, Owners Representative
  • Australia Joe Senkalski: Former Socceroo
  • Australia Keith Harris: Newcastle KB United Player
  • Australia Jeffrey Green: President Northern NSW Football
  • Australia Neil Jameson: Newcastle Herald Journalist
  • Australia Cheryl Salisbury: Former Matilda

Administration

  • Australia Robbie Middleby: CEO
  • Australia Aaron Abela: Chief Financial Officer
  • England Mark Duffield-Thomas: Business Development Manager
  • Australia Richard Fisk: Membership and Commercial Manager
  • Australia Stephen Watson: Commercial Manager
  • Australia Jarrod Johnstone: Commercial Manager
  • Australia Dani Potterh: Community Events Manager
  • Australia Craig Lambert: Marketing Manager
  • Australia Sarah Cukier: Administration Officer
  • Australia Craig Deans: Football Operations Manager
  • Australia Brent Anderson: Youth Operations Manager
  • Australia Alison Senkalski: Women's Operations Manager
  • England Michael Bridges: International Football & Business Development Manager

Football department

Medical

  • Australia Dr. Matthew McDonald: Club Doctor
  • Australia Adam Leslie: Physiotherapist
  • Australia Paul Hazell: Physiotherapist
  • Australia Rob Dingle: Youth/Women's Physiotherapist

Honours

Year by year history

A-League

Brackets indicate statistics including A-League finals.

Newcastle United Jets A-League History
Season P W D L F A Teams Minor Ladder
Position
Finals
Position
ACL Qualification ACL Placing
2005–06 21 (23) 9 (9) 4 (5) 8 (9) 27 (28) 29 (31) 8 4th Minor Semi-Final DNQ n/a
2006–07 21 (24) 8 (9) 6 (6) 7 (9) 32 (36) 30 (33) 8 3rd Preliminary Final DNQ DNQ
2007–08 21 (25) 9 (12) 7 (7) 5 (6) 25 (31) 21 (26) 8 2nd Champions Qualified for 2009 DNQ
2008–09 21 4 6 11 21 39 8 8th DNQ DNQ Round of 16
2009–10 27 (29) 10 (10) 4 (5) 13 (14) 33 (34) 45 (48) 10 6th Minor Semi-Final DNQ DNQ
2010–11 30 9 8 13 29 33 11 7th DNQ DNQ DNQ
2011–12 5 3 0 2 7 7 10 TBD TBD TBD
Totals 141 (122) 49 (44) 35 (29) 57 (49) 167 (149) 235 (212) Champions* 1** Round of 16*

* Shows the best finish achieved ** Shows number of qualifications

Pre Season Cup

Newcastle United Jets Pre Season Cup History
Season P W D L F A Teams Placing
2005–06 3 0 2 1 3 4 8 7th
2006–07 6 0 2 4 5 10 8 4th
2007–08 5 3 0 2 5 7 8 5th
2008–09 3 0 2 1 1 2 8 5th

AFC Champions League

Newcastle United Jets AFC Champions League History
Season P W D L F A Placing
2009 7 3 1 3 6 11 Round of 16

National Soccer League

The Jets competed in the last four seasons of the National Soccer League under the name Newcastle United

Brackets indicate statistics including NSL finals.

Newcastle United NSL History
Season P W D L F A Teams Minor Ladder
Position
Finals
Position
2000–01 28 5 9 14 37 56 15 14th DNQ
2001–02 24 (27) 10 (11) 12 (12) 2 (4) 33 (36) 21 (26) 13 2nd Preliminary Final
2002–03 24 (33) 10 (12) 7 (8) 7 (13) 37 (46) 25 (42) 13 4th 6th †
2003–04 24 6 6 12 18 33 13 11th DNQ

† For season 2002–03 a round robin contest between the top six was undertaken to see who would be Grand Finalists. Newcastle were placed sixth and last in this competition, although a washed out game against Northern Spirit was never played as it did not affect the outcome of the top two.

Records

(All records as of round 19 2009–10)

Club

  • Record defeat:
    • Pohang Steelers 6 def. Newcastle Jets 0, 24 June 2009 (Round of 16 – AFC Champions League 2009)
  • High scoring game (6)
    • Perth Glory 5 def. Newcastle Jets 1, 8 October 2005 (Round 7 – 2005–06)
    • Newcastle Jets 4 def. Adelaide United 2, 14 October 2005 (Round 8 – 2005–06)
    • Newcastle Jets 4 def. New Zealand Knights 2, 4 November 2005 (Round 11 – 2005–06)
    • Adelaide United 5 def. Newcastle Jets 1 8 September 2006 (Round 3 – 2006–07)
    • Perth Glory 3 drew Newcastle Jets 3, 14 January 2007 (Round 20 – 2006–07)
    • Perth Glory 3 drew Newcastle Jets 3, 22 August 2008 (Round 2 – 2008–09)
    • Newcastle Jets 4 def. Melbourne Victory 2, 19 December 2008 (Round 16 – 2008–09)
    • Pohang Steelers 6 def. Newcastle Jets 0, 24 June 2009 (Round of 16 – AFC Champions League 2009)
  • A-League Streaks (Including Finals)
    • Winning Streak: 4
      • Round 19 2007–08 (4 January 2008) – Major Semi Final (leg 1) 2007–08 (27 January 2008)
      • Round 16 2009–10 (29 November 2009) – Round 20 2009–10 (20 December 2009) – Note: Round 19 played at a later date.
    • Losing Streak: 3
      • Round 5 2005–06 (25 September 2005) – Round 7 2005–06 (8 October 2005)
      • Round 17 2008–09 (26 December 2008) – Round 19 2008–09 (9 January 2009)
      • Round 6 2009–10 (12 September 2009) – Round 8 2009–10 (25 September 2009)
    • Games without losing: 7 Round 8 2005–06 (14 October 2005) – Round 14 2005–06 (25 November 2005)
    • Games without winning: 11 Round 20 2005–06 (26 January 2006) – Round 7 2006–07 (8 October 2006)
  • A-league Regular Season Placings
    • Highest Placing 2nd 2007–08
    • Lowest Placing 8th 2008–09
  • A-League Regular Season Attendance: 20,980 (vs Sydney FC – 1 January 2007)
  • A-League Finals Series Attendance: 24,338 (vs Sydney FC – 2 February 2007)
  • Record Average Regular Season Attendance: 13,209 (A-League 2007-08)
  • Record Regular Season Total Attendance: 145,303 (A-League 2007-08)

Player

Top goal scorers

Name Goals Games Average Years
1 Australia Joel Griffiths 28 59 0.47 2006–09
2 Australia Matt Thompson 15 111 0.14 2005–10
3 Australia Labinot Haliti 13 69 0.30 2005–07, 2009–
4 Australia Mark Bridge 12 47 0.26 2005–08
5 New Zealand Vaughan Coveny 8 36 0.22 2005–07
6 Australia Ante Miličić 7 20 0.35 2005–06
7 Colombia Milton Rodriguez 7 21 0.33 2006–07
8 England Michael Bridges 7 22 0.32 2008–10

References

  1. ^ Ritson, John (24 February 2008). "Jets 1 – Mariners 0: Minute by Minute". AU FourFourTwo. http://au.fourfourtwo.com/news/70724,jets-1-mariners-0--minute-by-minute.aspx. Retrieved 12 April 2008. 
  2. ^ "Newcastle Jets History". Newcastle United Jets FC. http://www.newcastlejets.com.au/default.aspx?s=njfc_history. Retrieved 14 September 2007. 
  3. ^ Cockerill, Michael (2 November 2007). "Con's old style autocracy the wind beneath Jets' wings". The Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/news/a-league/cons-old-style-autocracy-the-wind-beneath-jets-wings/2007/11/01/1193619055941.html. Retrieved 2 November 2007. 
  4. ^ Thompson, T: "One Fantastic Goal", pages 300–302, ABC Books/Griffin Press Australia, 2006, ISBN 0 7333 1898 3
  5. ^ http://www.newcastlejets.com.au/default.aspx?s=newsdisplay&id=41234
  6. ^ "Minor Semi Final – 2nd Leg – 2 February 2007". Football Federation Australia. 2 February 2007. http://stage.footballaustralia.com.au/scoreboard_HAL/0000780017/scoreboard.html. Retrieved 14 September 2007. 
  7. ^ "Newcastle Jets V Sydney – 1 January 2007". Football Federation Australia. 1 January 2007. http://stage.footballaustralia.com.au/scoreboard_HAL/0000430146/scoreboard.html. Retrieved 14 September 2007. 
  8. ^ Strachan, Julieanne; Jones, Jacqui (2 February 2007). "Soccer cups in stadium vision". The Newcastle Herald. http://theherald.yourguide.com.au/news/local/general/soccer-cups-in-stadium-vision/1174444.html. Retrieved 2 February 2007. 
  9. ^ Cronshaw, Damon (27 May 2008). "State's $20m Grandstand". The Newcastle Herald. http://theherald.yourguide.com.au/news/local/news/general/states-20m-grand-stand/777208.aspx. Retrieved 27 May 2008. 
  10. ^ "Nick sick over tackle". Fox Sports. 10 May 2005. http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,15234369-23215,00.html. Retrieved 14 September 2007. [dead link]
  11. ^ SBS The World Game – Griffiths settles fiery derby
  12. ^ Board and Management

External links

Preceded by
Melbourne Victory
A-League Champions
2007/08
Succeeded by
Melbourne Victory


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