Category: News

  • Vale Michael Lalos

    Vale Michael Lalos

    Tuesday, 7 September 2010 10:09 AM

    South Melbourne FC is saddened to learn of the recent passing of Mr Michael Lalos, the last surviving founding member of the Club. Mr Lalos passed away at the age of 85.

    Mr Lalos was born on 17 July 1925 and helped form South Melbourne FC (then the South Melbourne Hellas Soccer Club) in 1959. He was on the committee from 1959 until 1966, overseeing the glorious Victorian State League championships of 1962, 1964, 1965 and 1966. His son Louis continued the tradition by serving on the South Melbourne FC committee from 1989 until 1995 and overseeing the 1991 National Soccer League championship.

    Mr Lalos was buried late last week. South Melbourne FC provided a Club scarf to the Lalos family for the funeral as a mark of respect.

    South Melbourne FC wishes to extend its deepest sympathies to the Lalos family at their time of grieving and wishes to thank Mr Michael Lalos for all the hard work that he did in helping to establish our great Club 51 years ago.

    SMFC President, Leo Athanasakis told smfc.com.au “we are deeply saddened by the loss of one of our club founders. Mr Lalos’ hard work and contribution to the Club will never be forgotten”.

  • Fernando wins 2010 Marmaras Medal

    Fernando wins 2010 Marmaras Medal

    Tuesday, 7 September 2010 9:19 AM

    By John Kyrou

    Fernando De Moraes capped off a superb individual season by winning the 2010 Theo Marmaras Medal last Thursday night. The midfielder completed a clean sweep of the awards by also winning the 2010 Golden Boot award.

    De Moraes finished on 63 votes in the Marmaras Medal count, four ahead of vice captain Steven O’Dor and Peter Zois, who both finished equal second on 59 votes. In the Golden Boot tally, De Moreas finished with 13 league goals from 19 league games, six clear of second-placed Gianni De Nittis (7). Even more remarkable was the fact that De Moraes claimed both awards having missed three league matches during the season and that his goals during 2010 elevated him to equal eighth with Doug Brown (1983-1985) on South’s all-time leading league goal scorers list (48 goals each).

    In his speech after accepting the awards, De Moraes spoke glowingly of the fact that South Melbourne FC was like a second family from him, and that all he wanted to do was play as many matches and score as many goals as possible for the team. De Moraes also spoke highly of his team-mates, noting that “football is a team game and it takes great team-mates to work hard to set you up for goal scoring opportunity…and I am lucky to play in a great team.”

    South Melbourne FC congratulates Fernando De Moraes on winning the 2010 Theo Marmaras Medal and the Golden Boot award and looks forward to seeing his outstanding form continue in the 2010 RHB Singapore Cup before the 2011 Victorian Premier League season.

    smfcTV – Fernando De Moraes 2010 Highlights

  • Eddie Krncevic appointed South Melbourne FC Senior Coach for 2011

    Eddie Krncevic appointed South Melbourne FC Senior Coach for 2011

    Friday, 3 September 2010 4:21 PM

    South Melbourne FC Logo

    South Melbourne FC is pleased to announce the appointment of Eddie Krncevic as the new Senior Coach, with Joe Montemurro retaining his current position as Assistant Coach.

    Both men will be in charge for South’s remaining fixtures in the 2010 RHB Singapore Cup before leading the team into the 2011 Victorian Premier League season.

    Eddie, a former Socceroo, is a coach with a wealth of experience, having coached Carlton Soccer Club and Marconi Fairfield in the National Soccer League.

    Eddie also coached South Melbourne FC in the 2001/02 NSL season, introducing young players such as Massimo Murdocca and Vince Lia into the senior side as he lead South to the finals. The Club believes that Eddie’s experience and intimate knowledge of Victorian football makes him the ideal choice for the senior coaching position.

    Eddie replaces departing Senior Coach Vaughan Coveny who has the honorable distinction of serving the club as both player and coach. South Melbourne FC thanks Vaughan for his efforts in 2010 and wishes him all the best in his future endeavors.

  • Join us at the 2010 SMFC MVP Night @ Honey Bar

    Join us at the 2010 SMFC MVP Night @ Honey Bar

    Friday, 27 August 2010 11:41 AM

    Join the South Melbourne FC senior team for the annual MVP night. The event to be held at Honey Bar on Clarendon Street will look over the 2010 season in a casual and relaxed environment, where the 2010 Most Valuable Player will be announced.

    With all the 2010 senior team and coaching staff in attendance it promises to be a wonderful night.

    Bookings are essential, so please contact Nicki at the club on 9645 9797 to book your place.

  • South Wins Supreme Court Case, FFV Appeals Board Reinstates 6 point Deduction

    South Wins Supreme Court Case, FFV Appeals Board Reinstates 6 point Deduction

    Friday, 20 August 2010 5:53 PM

    South Melbourne FC Logo On Tuesday 17 August 2010, Justice Pagone of the Supreme Court of Victoria ruled that South Melbourne Football Club was denied procedural fairness and not afforded natural justice by the FFV Appeals Board during its Hearing on 5 May 2010 of an appeal by the Club against some of the decisions made by the FFV Tribunal on 21 April 2010. 

    The Supreme Court ordered the FFV to reconstitute the Appeals Board for the purposes of hearing and determining what penalty or sanction should be imposed upon the Club in relation to the incident which occurred at Bob Jane Stadium on 11 April in the 91st minute of the match between the Club and Heidelberg United Football Club.  Broadly speaking, the incident involved approximately 20 to 40 of the Club’s supporters running onto the ground in the 91st minute, immediately after South Melbourne scored its equalising goal, which ultimately resulted in the match being abandoned by the referee.

    The Appeals Board was quickly reconstituted, compromised of the same members as on 5th May 2010, on the same day the decision was delivered by the Supreme Court and the Club called such evidence and made such submissions as it could given the short period of time it had to prepare.  The Club is extremely disappointed in the decision of the Appeals Board to deduct six championship points as penalty for the incident. 

    South Melbourne Football Club maintains, as it submitted to the Appeals Board, that the penalty is inappropriate and excessive.  The Club also has serious concerns about the way in which the FFV Tribunal and Appeals Board conducted the three hearings.  The Club will be taking up these concerns with the FFV directly and will say more on this topic in due course.

    It does not appear that the FFV has fully grasped the problems with the operations of its disciplinary system including the Rules of Competition, the GDT By-Law, the FFV Tribunal and the Appeals Board.  This is evident from the disappointing article which appeared on the FFV website under the heading “Independent Appeals Board Deducts Six Points from South Melbourne FC”.  The Club wishes to make the following comments in response to that article:

    • The FFV refers to the Appeals Board as the “Independent Appeals Board”.  It is called the Appeals Board and we do not see what the FFV is trying to achieve by seeking to style this body as the Independent Appeals Board.
    • The Club is unaware if the FFV is seeking to use the word ‘Independent’ to allay any concerns which may be held by the FFV due to the fact that the Chairman of the Appeals Board (in the present case) has also previously represented the FFV such as in the 2009 Supreme Court  case between the Whittlesea Juventus Intl. Football Club Inc vs Football Federation Victoria Inc.
    • The Club felt that the conduct of the Appeals Board Hearing on 5 May 2010 (not 17 May 2010 as referred to in the FFV article) was unfair to the Club.  As a result, before taking Court action, the Club engaged in extensive discussions with both the FFV and FFA to try and have its matters resolved internally, within the football environment.  Unfortunately, its efforts fell on deaf ears.  As late as 30 July 2010, the Club wrote to the FFV offering to resolve its grievance by the FFV reconstituting the Appeals Board and the matter proceeding on the basis that the Club was guilty of an MFP9 offence and the Club being afforded the opportunity to properly address the Appeals Board on penalty in relation to that offence.  The FFV declined the Club’s offer.
    • The Club then reluctantly commenced Court action having exhausted its options.  It was entirely successful in its bid to have the Appeals Board decision made on 18 May 2010 set aside.  The outcome of the Supreme Court Case was exactly as offered by the Club in its proposal to the FFV on 30 July 2010.
    • The Club is therefore surprised to read that FFV is disappointed the matter was taken so far.  It was within FFV’s power to agree to the Club’s reasonable proposal to have the matter resolved without going to Court.  It chose not to accept the Club’s proposal and the Court’s orders were consistent with the Club’s proposal.
    • In its article, the FFV claims that the Supreme Court did not criticize the FFV’s GDT By-Law or the various processes embodied in it.  That wasn’t the main subject of the case.  The Club argued, successfully, that it was denied procedural fairness and natural justice by the FFV Appeals Board.  In its reasons for decision, the Court said, in part, that:

    “This, in my view, is a breach of procedural fairness in failing to provide the Club with an opportunity to make submissions on penalty or sanction.  Natural justice requires that a person know the substance of the case to be met”. 

    The Court went on to say that:

    “What was denied to the Club, and what the Appeals Board denied to itself, was submissions about what penalties or sanctions were appropriate upon findings on those terms”. 

    In essence, the Court found that the Club was not informed of which facts constituted the charge of which it was found guilty at a time at which it could meaningfully make submissions about penalty and sanction in relation to those facts.

    • The Club was a victim of this failure by the FFV Appeals Board to afford it procedural fairness and natural justice.  As a result, the Club has suffered in a number of ways.  The Club does not propose to detail all the effects upon it now, but points out that it has been required to spend considerable time and resources in rectifying this failure by the FFV Appeals Board and has had to do so during the course of the season whilst its players and coaching staff have laboured under the resulting uncertainty.  It has had to apply its limited financial and voluntary manpower resources to redress this wrong.
    • The FFV seeks to make much of the fact that the Court did not interfere with the Appeals Board decision and its findings in favour of the Club were limited to the questions of procedural fairness and natural justice.  The Club contends that the major points to come out of the Court’s decision was that the Court has jurisdiction to hear such matters in circumstances in which the FFV has failed to comply with its contractual obligation to the Clubs (such as in this case) and secondly, that the Club was not afforded procedural fairness and natural justice.  The Club did not seek to agitate all the rights and wrongs of the Appeals Board decision before the Court.  
    • The Supreme Court of Victoria ordered the FFV to pay the Club’s legal costs.
    • The Club is also deeply troubled by a number of other factors arising out of this whole process which include:
      1. That the FFV Tribunal, chaired by an eminent senior barrister and comprising two other lawyers found that the appropriate penalty for this offence was $2,500 whilst, on essentially the same facts, the Appeals Board, which was similarly constituted and qualified, founded that it was appropriate to deduct the Club six championship points, a “substantially increased… penalty” as characterised by the Supreme Court.  The Club could have had no basis for expecting such an increase in the penalty in these circumstances and was taken entirely by surprise.  In the Club’s view, that is entirely unfair.
      2. The FFV did not appear to prosecute the case at the FFV Tribunal and it did not appeal the $2,500 fine imposed by the FFV Tribunal on the basis that it was too lenient.  The FFV gave no notice that it would appear at the Hearing by the FFV Appeals Board of the Club’s appeal on 5 May 2010,  until it actually appeared and then could not articulate with sufficient clarity (by its own admission) the meaning of MFP10, the offence with which the Club had been charge and which was then under appeal.
      3. The FFV did not arrange for any witnesses to be present at the FFV Appeals Board Hearing on 5 May 2010, yet the FFV Appeals Board indicated that it would receive evidence by telephone, if required by the Club, from Heidelberg players who were at training.  The FFV and the FFV Appeals Board insisted this was a very serious matter and yet were prepared to take evidence by telephone from players who were at training and presumably did not have with them the relevant statements and statutory declarations which they had filed with the FFV. 
      4. The Club was motivated to appeal the FFV Tribunal decision because two of its supporters had been given life bans (an excessive penalty which was accepted as such by the FFV Appeals Board) in their absence because they were not notified by the FFV that they were required to attend the FFV Tribunal, they had not been personally charged and were unaware they were facing the possibility of a penalty.   
      5. Neither the FFV nor the FFV Appeals Board were aware, on the Hearing of this matter on 5 May 2010, that those supporters who had been given life bans by the FFV Tribunal had not been notified by the FFV that they could be penalised by the FFV Tribunal and that they could attend the Hearing, of which they had not been notified.   
      6. Those supporters who were given life bans were not directly charged and were sanctioned pursuant to a charge (MFP10) brought against the Club. 
      7. At their request, the Club lodged the appeal in relation to charge four (MFP10 offence), in respect of which the Club had been found guilty, had been fined $2,500 and the life bans were imposed.
      8. Because it lodged the appeal, the Club decided to also argue that it was not guilty of the MFP10 offence and that the substitution of a 3-0 result in favour of Heidelberg in place of the 1-1 score line at the conclusion of the match, was inappropriate.  The Club did not seek to take issue with the fine of $2,500 imposed as a penalty for the incident which was the subject of the MFP10 offence.
      9. The FFV Appeals Board reinstated the result, reduced the life bans substantially and agreed with the Club that it was not guilty of the MFP10 offence.  It then found a different offence was applicable for the incident in question and went on to impose a drastically more severe penalty of six championship points in place of the fine.
      10. In finding the Club guilty of the offence of ‘Other Misconduct’, the Appeals Board relied principally on the rule that Clubs are responsible for the behaviour of their spectators.  Our Club takes the behaviour of its spectators seriously and in its efforts to comply with the zero tolerance and other crowd behaviour approaches recently adopted by the FFV, it is important that the Club builds and maintains strong relationships with its members and supporters so that it has their trust and support.  In that context, it would have been remiss of the Club not to lodge an appeal on behalf of its two supporters who received life bans and who wish to appeal those life bans.  By doing this and taking the opportunity at the same time, to rectify the fact that the Club had been charged under the wrong MFP offence, the Club was effectively punished because for the same conduct, it was deducted six championship points in place of a $2,500 fine.  So, not only does the Club contend that the deduction of six points is a manifestly excessive penalty for the conduct in question, but just as importantly, that it was placed in a position where it exposed itself to the Appeals Board and its views because of the manner in which the FFV prosecuted the Club and its supporters. 
      11. The Club considered the whole process resulting in the deduction of 6 points to have been wholly unfair.
      12. The Club maintains that the deduction of 6 points by the Appeals Board again in the early hours of 18 August is a manifestly excessive penalty. 
    • The Club is extremely concerned that the only action which the FFV has taken following this saga is to make it clear to its Tribunal and Appeals Board members that they must advise a party of the particulars of the conduct forming the basis of any given offence before offering it the opportunity to make submissions on the issue of penalty, prior to the determination of any penalty.  In the Club’s view, that is the minimum the FFV should do, following the findings of the Supreme Court and it should not have needed the Supreme Court to point out this obvious matter. 
    • Finally, the Club notes the final sentence in the FFV article and says only that it agrees that there should not be any tolerance to inappropriate behaviour at FFV fixtures.  The Club has been doing all it can to support that approach and has a very good record during its 50 years of competing at the top level of football.  The issue, of course, in this case was not whether or not there should be zero tolerance to inappropriate behaviour but what ought be the penalty and the appropriate process in arriving at the penalty. 

    The Appeals Board indicated in the early hours of Wednesday 18 August 2010, when it determined this matter, that it would provide brief, verbal reasons for its decision and then publish the reasons the following day.  The Club has not been provided with the Appeal Board’s written reasons for decision and to the best of its knowledge, they have not yet been published.  It reserves all its rights pending the publication of those reasons and its consideration of them.

    Despite its disappointment at the process and the outcome, the Club proposes to seek to work with Government, the FFV and with other Clubs to improve the Rules of Competition, the GDT By-Law and the processes adopted by the FFV Tribunal and the FFV Appeals Board.

  • Gala Ball 2010 announced

    Gala Ball 2010 announced

    Monday, 16 August 2010 4:30 PM

    South Melbourne is pleased to announce that the 2010 Gala Ball will be held at Studio 3 at Crown on Saturday 16th October 2010.

    The night will once again bring together the South Melbourne family in what promises to be another memorable event.

    Tickets are strictly limited, so we recommend you book your place by calling Nicki in the SMFC Office on (03) 9645 9797

  • South surge into top five contention

    South surge into top five contention

    Monday, 16 August 2010 3:50 PM

    Sunshine-South


    By John Kyrou (Photo by Cindy Nitsos)

    South Melbourne FC has climbed into the top five following a 0-4 away win over Sunshine George Cross at Knights Stadium in the final round of the VPL season on Sunday afternoon. South’s win, along with other results in the League, means that George Cross has been relegated whilst South currently sits in fifth spot.

    Both sides had early chances, with both goalkeepers called into action on a very wet and slippery Knights Stadium pitch. Fernando De Moraes eventually opened the scoring on 13 minutes with a beautifully taken left-footed shot from outside the area that gave Martin John no chance of saving. Sunshine almost replied instantly but missed a one-on-one opportunity. Sunshine almost gifted South a second goal with a defensive header that beat John but not the left goal post, with the ball going out for a corner.

    In the second half, Sunshine’s urgent need to press forward and score suited South fine, with the away side happy to soak up the pressure and play counter-attacking football. South missed a few good chances to seal the result before De Moraes eventually did so in the 61st minute, when a stinging shot by Gianni De Nittis hit the crossbar and fell perfectly for De Moraes to volley past John for his second of the afternoon.

    Carl Recchia added another nail in Sunshine’s coffin with a brilliantly taken free kick twenty minutes from time after a foul on Daniel Vasilevski. Recchia’s wicked shot looped perfectly over the Sunshine wall and into John’s top left corner of the net, leaving the George Cross custodian with no chance. Rama Tavsancioglu ended the rout with South’s fourth goal, after John saved the initial shot but was unable to hold onto the ball, allowing South’s captain to force the ball over the line. Former Georgies player and South substitute Kyle Joryeff could have scored a fifth for South but his attempted chip over John went wide for a goal kick.

    FINAL SCORE: SUNSHINE GEORGE CROSS 0-4 SOUTH MELBOURNE (HT: 0-1)

    Sunshine George Cross
    Martin John, Shaun Romein, Fidel Richards, Leo Shin, Craig Sweeney, Andy Bourakis, Ben Cogger, Tex Apostolikas (Andrew Nabbout 66′), Evan Christodoulou, Barry Devlin, James Blackburn (Peter Koutsoupias 72′)

    South Melbourne
    Peter Zois, Rama Tavsancioglu, Eddie Cetkin, Steven O’Dor, Rhodri Payne, Joe Keenan, Carl Recchia (Joseph Youssef 74′), Marinos Gasparis, Daniel Vasilevski (Sebastian Petrovic 87′), Fernando De Moraes (Kyle Joryeff 66′), Gianni De Nittis
    (Scorers: De Moraes 13′, 61′, Recchia 69′, Tavsancioglu 83′)

    SMFC Man of the Match: Fernando De Moraes
    Venue: Knights Stadium
    Date: Sunday 15 August 2010
    Crowd: 500

  • Media Release: South await outcome of court action to recover points

    Media Release: South await outcome of court action to recover points

    Friday, 13 August 2010 3:11 PM

    South Melbourne Football Club’s action against the FFV in relation to the FFV Appeal Board’s decision to deduct it six points earlier this year, was heard by the Supreme Court on Thursday 12 August 2010.

    The Court reserved its decision and indicated it would try and decide the matter by early next week. The Club will release the outcome as soon as it is known.

  • southRadio Episode 23 now available

    southRadio Episode 23 now available

    Friday, 13 August 2010 1:36 PM

    On this week’s episode of southRadio, we review the Round 22 clash between South Melbourne FC and Oakleigh at Jack Edwards Reserve, as well as preview the upcoming game between South Melbourne FC and Sunshine George Cross.

    southRadio is proudly brought to you by Homes Now and Monash Hire.
    Should you have any ideas, suggestions or feedback for southRadio please email the club at multimedia@smfc.com.au

    Click here to download episode 23 of southRadio (MP3) – Right Click and Save As

    Click here to download the show directly from iTunes

     

  • SMFC TV this Saturday on Channel 31

    SMFC TV this Saturday on Channel 31

    Friday, 13 August 2010 12:11 PM

    On Saturday’s episode on SMFC TV, we review and show extended match highlights of the clash at Jack Edwards Reserve between South Melbourne FC and Oakleigh. Furthermore, we hear from Fernando De Moraes, Eddie Cetkin and Head Coach Vaughan Coveny  in the post-match interviews.

    The show will also contain our new segment, where John and David will review this week’s action.

    SMFC TV

    Channel 31
    Every Saturday 10.00am -10.30am

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