Adelaide United FC 8–1 North Queensland Fury FC

The 2010–11 A-League match between Adelaide United and North Queensland Fury at Hindmarsh Stadium, Adelaide, took place on Friday, 21 January 2011. Adelaide United won 8–1, which at the time was the joint biggest win in the history of the competition.

Adelaide United 8–1 North Queensland Fury
The match took place at Coopers Stadium in Adelaide.
Event2010–11 A-League
Date21 January 2011
VenueHindmarsh Stadium, Adelaide
RefereePeter Green (FFQ)
Attendance10,986

North Queensland Fury disbanded at the end of the season, after finishing bottom of the table, whereas Adelaide United finished 3rd in the regular season, qualifying for the AFC Champions League qualifying play-off, and reaching the semi-finals of the finals series.

Background edit

Going into round 24 of 30 of the 2010–11 A-League season, known as flood relief round,[1] Adelaide United were fighting Central Coast Mariners for 2nd place, with league leaders Brisbane Roar out of sight, which would reward them with a spot in the upper semi-finals. Their last match saw them defeat rivals Melbourne Victory 4–1, their first win over Victory in nearly 3 years. At the other end of the table, North Queensland Fury were battling with Perth Glory and Sydney FC to avoid the wooden spoon.[2] Prior to this match, North Queensland Fury had only defeated Adelaide United once in a competitive fixture, and this would be the final time the two teams would ever play each other.

Pre-match edit

Team selection edit

Adelaide United made two changes to their starting line-up, after defeating their rivals Melbourne Victory 4–1, swapping out goalkeeper Mark Birighitti for Eugene Galekovic, and defender Robert Cornthwaite for Nigel Boogaard.[3]

North Queensland Fury made four changes to the team that lost to fellow expansion side Gold Coast United 0–4, changing out Sebastian Usai, Lorenzo Sipi, Ramazan Tavsancioglu and Isaka Cernak for Justin Pasfield, Ufuk Talay, Jason Spagnuolo and David Williams.[4]

Match edit

Summary edit

Marcos Flores opened the scoring for Adelaide United after 4 minutes, with Travis Dodd doubling the lead at the 28th minute. Flores and Iain Ramsay scored at the 37th and 42nd minute to put Adelaide United 4–0 up at half time. Sergio van Dijk scored a second half hat-trick, and Marcos Flores scored his third in the second half, with North Queensland Fury midfielder Panny Nikas scoring a consolation goal at 6–1.[5]

Adelaide United8–1North Queensland Fury
[5][6][7] Nikas   72'
Attendance: 10,986
Referee: Peter Green (FFQ)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Adelaide United
 
 
 
 
 
 
North Queensland Fury
GK 1   Eugene Galekovic
RB 14   Cameron Watson
CB 3   Nigel Boogaard   70'
CB 4   Iain Fyfe
LB 6   Cássio
RM 8   Adam Hughes
CM 10   Marcos Flores
LM 21   Francisco Usúcar   64'
RW 13   Travis Dodd
CF 9   Sergio van Dijk
RW 17   Iain Ramsay   75'
Substitutions:
GK 20   Mark Birighitti
MF 12   Paul Reid   64'
DF 2   Robert Cornthwaite   70'
FW 19   Matthew Leckie   75'
Head coach:
  Rini Coolen
GK 1   Justin Pasfield
RB 2   Jack Hingert
CB 5   Mark Hughes
CB 4   Eric Akoto
LB 13   André Kilian   46'
RM 12   Panny Nikas
CM 6   Ufuk Talay   80'
CM 14   Chris Grossman   53'
LM 3   Brad McDonald
AM 11   David Williams
CF 21   Jason Spagnuolo
Substitutions:
GK 28   Sebastian Usai
DF 19   Isaka Cernak   46'
MF 22   Lorenzo Sipi   60'
MF 18   Brett Studman   80'
Head coach:
  František Straka

Assistant referees:[6]
Daniel Goodwin (FFSA)
Curtis Wordsworth (FFSA)

Match rules
  • 90 minutes
  • Four named substitutions
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Aftermath edit

Adelaide United broke the record for the number of goals scored by a single team in a game, previously being six, the largest winning margin, and the most goals scored in a single game, which allowed them to regain second place from Central Coast Mariners.[1] By the end of the season they fell back into third behind the Mariners after winning just one of their last four games. Defeating Wellington Phoenix in the first week of finals, their season ended with a 3–2 defeat to Gold Coast United in the semi-finals.

North Queensland Fury ended the season bottom of the table, losing all of their remaining games, capping off an 8-game losing streak and winning just 2 of their last 20. One month after the conclusion of the regular season, their A-League license was revoked and the club folded.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Reds score record breaking eight in Fury rout". Adelaide United. 22 January 2011.
  2. ^ "2010–11 A-League table after round 23". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  3. ^ "Melbourne Victory vs Adelaide United, round 22, 2010–11". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  4. ^ "Gold Coast United vs North Queensland Fury, round 23, 2010–11". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Adelaide United vs North Queensland Fury, round 24, 2010–11". Ultimate A-League. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  6. ^ a b "Adelaide United vs North Queensland Fury – 21 January 2011". Soccerway. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  7. ^ "Adelaide United vs North Queensland Fury live score, H2H and lineups". SofaScore. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  8. ^ "North Queensland Fury axed from A-League". Sydney Morning Herald. 1 March 2011.