Central Coast Mariners FC 2–8 Newcastle Jets FC

The 2017–18 A-League match between Central Coast Mariners and Newcastle Jets, took place on 14 April 2018. Newcastle Jets won 8–2, which is the joint highest scoring game in the history of the competition.[1][2] The record was later matched by Wellington Phoenix in the 2018–19 season, where they also beat the Mariners 8–2.

Central Coast Mariners 2–8 Newcastle Jets
Event2017–18 A-League
Date14 April 2018
VenueCentral Coast Stadium, Gosford
RefereeJarred Gillett (FFQ)
Attendance7,604

Background

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Heading into the final round of the regular season, Newcastle Jets had already secured second place, 14 points behind premiers Sydney FC and four points ahead Melbourne Victory. Central Coast Mariners were looking to avoid a second wooden spoon in three years, sitting two points ahead of Wellington Phoenix.[3]

Match

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Summary

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Joe Champness opened the scoring in the 10th minute. Ten minutes later, Roy O'Donovan scored from a through ball from Steven Ugarkovic to score Newcastle' second goal of the game. Newcastle's third goal came from Riley McGree who finished top of the box with a low left foot shot to the right of the goal. A deflection cross by Andrew Hoole had Connor Pain score one goal back with an open net for the Central Coast Mariners. In the second half of the match, the 53rd minute had Newcastle score their fourth goal by Riley McGree. In the 60th minute, a corner was awarded which Newcastle used to score their fifth goal through Lachlan Jackson for his first goal for Newcastle Jets. A penalty was awarded by Jake McGing who fouled Joe Champness, as Roy O'Donovan scored his penalty for his second goal of the match. A seventh goal came as Riley McGree completed his hat-trick by scoring his third goal in the match with a left foot shot deflecting off Wout Brama. The final ten minutes, saw Trent Buhagiar score the Mariners' second goal in the 80th minute. One minute later, Patito Rodriguez cut back the ball to Dimitri Petratos who scored Newcastle's eighth goal, with ten minutes left. This was to be the aggregate record of most goals scored in an A-League match.[4]

Details

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Central Coast Mariners2–8Newcastle Jets
  • Pain   39'
  • Buhagiar   80'
Report
Attendance: 7,604
Referee: Jarred Gillett (FFQ)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Central Coast Mariners
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Newcastle Jets
GK 1   Ben Kennedy
RB 4   Jake McGing
CB 15   Alan Baró
CB 21   Kye Rowles
LB 3   Joshua Rose   72'
DM 23   Wout Brama
AM 11   Connor Pain
DM 16   Liam Rose   63'
AM 7   Andrew Hoole
AM 24   Lachlan Wales
CF 8   Blake Powell   63'
Substitutes:
GK 18   Tom Glover
DF 2   Storm Roux   72'
MF 17   Josh Bingham   63'
MF 22   Jacob Melling
FW 12   Trent Buhagiar   63'
Manager:
  Wayne O'Sullivan
GK 1   Jack Duncan
RB 18   John Koutroumbis
CB 5   Ben Kantarovski   46'
CB 44   Nikolai Topor-Stanley
LB 17   Daniel Georgievski
DM 6   Steven Ugarkovic
RM 3   Jason Hoffman   87'
AM 7   Dimitri Petratos
LM 27   Riley McGree
CF 9   Roy O'Donovan
CF 24   Joe Champness   72'
Substitutes:
GK 20   Glen Moss
DF 16   Nick Cowburn
DF 22   Lachlan Jackson   46'
MF 32   Angus Thurgate   87'
FW 11   Patito Rodríguez   72'
Manager:
  Ernie Merrick

Assistant referees:
Paul Cetrangolo (FFSA)
James Cleal (NNSWF)
Fourth official:
Kurt Ams (FFNSW)

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • No extra time or penalties
  • Five named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Statistics

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Statistics[5] Central Coast Mariners Newcastle Jets
Goals scored 2 8
Total shots 15 15
Ball possession 54.2% 45.8%
Corner kicks 4 4
Fouls 15 9
Offsides 3 5
Yellow cards 0 3
Red cards 0 0

Aftermath

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The match set the record as the highest scoring match in A-League history, previously set at 9 when Adelaide United defeated North Queensland Fury 8–1. Newcastle Jets would go onto finish runner-up, losing to Melbourne Victory in the Grand Final, due to a controversy involving VAR.

Immediately following the match, caretaker manager Wayne O'Sullivan was sacked by the club after four games, losing all of them. Since Wellington Phoenix lost their final game, Central Coast Mariners finished bottom of the table, a feat they would repeat the following year, along with another 8–2 defeat, this time to Wellington Phoenix.

References

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  1. ^ "Records falls as Jets run riot in Gosford F3 Derby". A-League. Football Federation Australia. 14 April 2018.
  2. ^ Greco, John (14 April 2018). "Ruthless Jets thrash Mariners in F3 Derby demolition". A-League. Football Federation Australia.
  3. ^ "2017–18 A-League standings: Round 26".
  4. ^ "Hyundai A-League 2017/18 Round 27: Central Coast Mariners 2 - 8 Newcastle Jets". YouTube. My Football.
  5. ^ "Central Coast Mariners v Newcastle Jets — A-League". A-League. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
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