Soaring to new heights: Melbourne Victory name new sponsor from 2024/25 season

Melbourne Victory have announced their latest primary sponsor for the upcoming three seasons, with both parties unveiling the newly found agreement at AAMI Park.

Turkish Airlines, to be the Principal Partner and on the front of men’s, women’s and academy shirts, are considered as one of the best flight carriers across the globe, and have garnered a reputation within the Sporting World. Their major sponsors vary across multiple sports, sharing agreements with three different codes involving basketball, golf and football.

The airline has quite the portfolio within their football sponsorships. Their most significant sponsorship is undeniably their primary agreement with the UEFA Champions League, arguably one of the most coveted prizes within the Sport. Within Turkiye, the Airline are major sponsors of five Turkish clubs, including the likes of Galatasaray, and also sponsor the Turkish National Football Team.

This follows on from the airline’s venture outside of Europe, with the airline flying directly from Australia to Turkey as of February 2024.

The partnership between both enterprises showcases a universal understanding, surrounding the importance of being competitive. Melbourne Victory are arguably one of the best clubs within Australia. 2 Australian Cups, 3 Premierships and 4 Championships across 19 years of operation, the winning mentality surrounding the club made the prosperity of a partnership more lucrative for the Turkish Outfit.

The passion intertwined with the club and their fan base, although controversial, is undeniable. Acknowledging the current rivalry shared between Sydney and Melbourne off the field. It has been combatted with a rich history of Football Australia figures having debarcles with Melbourne based footballing figures within Australian football. A prime example rolls back the years to when Socceroo manager, now current Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou, who throughout his time as Australian National Team manager was under constant scrutiny within the media.

The largest Melbourne-based club somewhat amplifies that personification.

In a way, the grit, determination and club message Melbourne Victory live and breathe, has swayed the interest of a company in whom immerse themselves with athletic achievement. Can the new merger be the catalyst in perhaps, the renaissance of more success, at the Melbourne-based club?

Previous ArticleNext Article

Football Victoria recognised in Pride in Sport Index 2026

The Silver Status shows Football Victoria‘s commitment to providing Victorians with a safe, inclusive landscape for all to enjoy the beautiful game.

Everyone’s game

Earlier this month, the Australian Pride in Sport Awards recognised several organisations and individuals across the nation who continue to champion inclusive spaces in the world of sport.

Among the nominees was Football Victoria, who received the Silver Status. FV Executive Manager Equity, Programs and Government Relations, Karen Pearce, expressed her pride at the achievement.

“Achieving Silver Status in the Pride in Sport Index is an important reflection of the work being done across Football Victoria to ensure LGBTQ+ people feel safe, welcomed and included in our game,” Pearce said via official press release.

“We remain committed to embedding inclusive practices across all levels of football, and continuing to create environments where everyone can belong, participate and thrive.”

 

Inclusion matters

While recognition is always a positive reflection of successful work behind the scenes, it is important to remember what the work intends to achieve.

Football – and sport in general – is a unique opportunity to bring diverse communities together, and to compete, spectate and enjoy the game on an equal playing field.

Furthermore, as custodians of ‘the world’s game’, governing bodies, fans and players around the world all share the responsibility to empower marginalised groups to feel included.

Two months ago, The Premier League introduced their own initiative – Premier League With Pride – reflecting their own commitment to ensuring football grounds, schools and academies remain welcoming.

 

Final thoughts

There is no place for hate or abuse in football, whether on a grassroots field or professional stadium.

Football Victoria will continue its journey and commitment to supporting the LGBTQ+ community – at all levels of the game – for many seasons to come.

Football Queensland to celebrate Female Football Week with statewide events, awards and coaching programs

Brighton women's football motion

Football Queensland will mark the 2026 Female Football Week with a program of statewide events, competitions and professional development opportunities running from May 8-17, as the governing body continues to push for broader access and representation across all levels of the women’s game in Queensland.

The nationwide initiative, now a fixture on the Australian football calendar, provides a concentrated period of visibility for female participation across playing, coaching, officiating and administration: areas where structural underrepresentation has historically limited both the growth of the game and the opportunities available to women and girls within it.

“Female Football Week provides us with a valuable opportunity to celebrate the contributions of women and girls across our game while continuing to increase the accessibility of football in Queensland,” said Football Queensland CEO Robert Cavallucci. “We encourage our clubs to host their own Female Football Week events and activations for female participants.”

 

Elite Competition Meets Community Access

The centrepiece of Football Queensland’s program is the return of the NPL Women’s Magic Round to Nudgee Recreation Reserve on May 8 and 9, featuring five NPL Women’s Round 13 clashes alongside a Girls United Junior Carnival and family-friendly activations. Each Magic Round game will feature an all-female refereeing panel, a deliberate and visible commitment to developing the next generation of female match officials at a moment when referee shortages are among the most pressing structural challenges facing the game nationally.

A Women in Football networking event will be held on the opening night of Magic Round, bringing together coaches, match officials and administrators. The inclusion of that event alongside elite competition is significant because it positions professional development and community building not as supplementary activities but as core components of what Female Football Week is for.

The Central Coast region will host its own Magic Round on May 16, featuring a Youth Girls game and three FQPL Central Coast Women’s matches, while a Darling Downs Junior Girls Day will take place at Captain Cook Park on the same day, extending the reach of the week’s programming beyond the southeast corner of the state into regional Queensland.

 

Coaching access as a structural priority

Football Queensland will deliver a series of female-only coaching courses around Female Football Week, with clubs also able to express interest in hosting their own. The initiative addresses one of the most persistent barriers to female representation in football administration- its coaching pipeline.

Female coaches remain significantly underrepresented at all levels of the game in Australia, and the barriers to accreditation, including cost, availability and the cultural environment of mixed coaching courses, compound one another in ways that individual ambition alone cannot overcome. Female-only courses create environments where women can develop without those barriers, and their delivery during Female Football Week signals that the commitment extends beyond celebration into structural change.

The Girls United Carnivals, running in both Metro and Far North and Gulf regions alongside the Q-League Schools program at Meakin Park, extend that access to players at the earliest stages of their football journey.

Most Popular Topics

Editor Picks

Send this to a friend