Sutherland Sharks FC

Sutherland Sharks Football Club is an Australian soccer club based in the suburb of Sutherland in Sydney New South Wales. The club currently competes in the National Premier Leagues NSW. The club's home games are played at Seymour Shaw Park, located in the southern Sydney suburb of Miranda.[1] It recently opened a new academy. It is incorporated as a non-profit club.[2]

Sutherland Sharks
Full nameSutherland Sharks Football Club
Nickname(s)The Sharks, Sharkies
Founded1930
GroundSeymour Shaw Park
Capacity5,000
ChairmanPaul Smith
ManagerNick Dimovski
LeagueNPL NSW
20198th
WebsiteClub website

History

The origins of Sutherland Sharks are traced back to the founding of Sutherland United SFC in 1930. By 1936, the club had grown markedly leading to a split and formation of the current-day club, albeit under a different name – Casuals Soccer Football Club. In the post-WWII era, the club grew and found success in the St George Football Association but in 1947 they stepped up to the Metropolitan Soccer League (effectively the Sydney 2nd Division, behind only the old NSW Soccer Association 1st Division). The club soon earned its stripes in this highly competitive league winning the title in just their second year and gaining promotion to the heady heights of the 1st Division but disappointingly, financial constraints forced them to let the opportunity pass. It was another 24 years before the club moved into the top flight state league.

In 1949 the club changed its name to the more representative Sutherland Shire Casuals SFC, and in 1950 the club acquired a long-term lease on the Seymour Shaw field. However the club did not move permanently to the Miranda ground until 1959, continuing to use Sutherland Oval. In 1955, the club again changed its name to Sutherland Shire Soccer Football Club. In 1961 it amalgamated with the ailing St George district club (a separate entity to the later St George Budapest) and for a brief period became 'Sutherland–St George SFC' before reverting to its previous name in 1963.[3][4]

The club made the 1967 Sydney Federation Division Two Final series after finishing the season in fourth. The club then finished second in the Final series and qualified for the Grand Final against Bankstown who finished first. Sutherland Shire lost the game 1–0.[5]

In 1971 Sutherland won the Sydney Federation Division Two, securing promotion to the NSW top league. In 1978 the club won a major trophy for the first time when they claimed the prestigious Ampol Cup. Later that year Sutherland defeated Sydney Croatia 2–1 in a replayed Grand Final at Wentworth Park. The club again won the Ampol Cup in 1981 and also achieved a 3–1 Grand Final win against Melita Eagles at St George Stadium in 1986.

In 1984, when the National Soccer League expanded by the addition of four Sydney clubs, Sutherland, who was initially tipped to join the league, was edged out by the newly formed Penrith City. During the 1990s the club recorded its first ever premiership in 1991, and followed this up with a repeat victory in 1996. The club remained in the 1st Division until the 2001/02 season, relegating for two seasons and then returning to the top flight.[6]

Current squad

As of 1 September 2018[7]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  AUS Ryan Norval
2 DF  AUS Adam Masssoud
3 DF  AUS Marc Warren
4 DF  AUS Bradley Walker
5 DF  AUS James Carli
6 MF  AUS Lachlan Everett
7 FW  AUS Peter Siminovski
8 MF  AUS Pat O'Shea
9 FW  AUS James Temelevski
10 FW  AUS Blake Powell (captain)
11 DF  NED Joey Groenbast
No. Pos. Nation Player
12 DF  AUS Blair Brown
13 MF  AUS Tom Papa
15 FW  AUS Mason Versi
16 DF  AUS Harry Sutherland
17 GK  AUS Mario Aleksic
18 MF  AUS Brodie Clarkson
19 DF  AUS Gabriel Contiagani
20 DF  AUS Connor Shaddock
21 MF  AUS Oliver Green
22 DF  AUS Jarrad Wiley
99 FW  AUS Jonathan Grozdanovski

Honours

Champions (3): 1978, 1986, 2009
Premiers (2): 1991, 2008
Champions (1): 1971
Runners-Up (1): 1967
Premiers (1): 1971
Runners-Up (1): 1970
Champions (4): 1978, 1981, 2009, 2012
gollark: Flask would look similar, but I would probably define it as:```pythonfunctions = { "get_thing": get_thing}serve_magically(functions)```
gollark: The devtools thing is nice I guess but minor.
gollark: You end up having to do extra work on each end to translate all the getThing, updateThing etc functions to and from the HTTP stuff.
gollark: You can handle resources nicely with function calls by having getThing or setThing or whatever, you can't do it the other way round.
gollark: I like the statelessness thing, but not the resource-oriented thing.

References

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