Melbourne City FC

Melbourne City
Full nameMelbourne City Football Club
Nickname(s)City, Hearts, Heart, City Boys, City Blues
Founded12 June 2009 (2009-06-12) (as Melbourne Heart)
GroundAAMI Park
Capacity30,050
OwnerCity Football Group
ChairmanKhaldoon Al Mubarak
Head coachAurelio Vidmar
LeagueA-League Men
2023–246th of 12
Websitehttps://www.melbournecityfc.com.au/
Current season

Melbourne City Football Club is an Australian professional soccer club based in the south–eastern Melbourne suburb of Cranbourne East but playing matches in Melbourne CBD, that competes in A-League, the highest division of soccer in Australia, under licence from Australian Professional Leagues (APL).[1]

Founded in 2009 as Melbourne Heart, the club competed under that name from its inaugural 2010–11 season until they were rebranded in mid-2014 by the City Football Group (CFG), in partnership with Holding M.S. Australia.[2] In August 2015, City Football Group, a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi United Group, bought out the Holding M.S. Australia consortium to have 100% ownership of the club.[3]

Since forming in 2009, Melbourne City has claimed three A-League Men premierships and one championship, as well as one Australia Cup title (in 2016).

Melbourne City is run from the City Football Academy, a facility located within the Casey Fields sports precinct, in the south-east Melbourne suburb of Cranbourne East.[4] The club plays home matches at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, commercially known as AAMI Park, a 30,050 seat multi-use venue in Melbourne's City Centre. The club also has an affiliated youth team which competes in both the A-Leagues Youth (league has not been held since 2019) and in VPL1, which serves as the second tier of Victorian football, as well as a senior women's team which competes in the A-League Women.

  1. ^ "A-League owners to be offered far longer licences by Football Federation Australia". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 28 October 2013. Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  2. ^ "Manchester City buy A-League's Melbourne Heart". The Guardian. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  3. ^ John Stensholt (2 August 2015). "Manchester City buy out wealthy Melbourne City investors". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  4. ^ "Melbourne City FC to move into Casey Fields". casey.vic.gov.au. 15 December 2020.

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