A-League clubs to be given only $530k in funding for next season

The Australian Professional Leagues (APL) have confirmed the annual grants distributed to A-League clubs will be slashed close to 75 per cent for the upcoming 2024/25 season.

After an APL board meeting, clubs were informed that next year’s distribution would total to just $530,000, from $2 million the season before.

The A-League Men minimum spending floor is $2.25 million with a salary cap limit of $2.6 million.

For wealthier clubs such as Melbourne City, they would be able to cover the remaining costs to reach the minimum spending floor. However, this would leave smaller clubs in the A-League in a much more complex financial position.

Back in 2018, before separating from Football Australia, the annual club distribution was around $3.6 million.

APL Chair Stephen Conroy released a statement concerning the significant financial cuts.

“The decision, which has been under discussion with league and Board representatives over the past few months, aligns with the Board’s commercial review of the A-Leagues since the original three-year strategy came to an end,” Conroy said via the A-Leagues website.

“We are committed to right-sizing the A-Leagues which is why we’ve been focused on cutting costs across the leagues, growing our core football product and uniting the football pyramid to support the growth of our game.

“The Board, the Leagues and the Clubs are committed to continuing to deliver the best football possible. We have our eye firmly on the future. Our core metrics are positive, with three years of growth, which will position the league for revenue growth in the future.”

These recent deductions raise many questions about how the APL and A-Leagues ended up in this financial conundrum and where has their money gone over the last couple of years?

One of the main reasons the APL was forced to make these financial cuts was due to overspending on its website, KEEPUP.

Launched in 2021 during the peak of COVID, the former APL CEO Danny Townsend said the cost to set up the league’s digital content production arm was estimated to be around $30 million. However, the site was not popular with the fans who criticised the app and website for not solely focusing on Australian football.

Despite showing potential, the APL went overboard very early and now has to deal with the consequences of it.

Another key event that has contributed to the recent financial issues dates back to December 2022, where the league signed a controversial deal with Destination NSW to host the A-Leagues Grand Finals in Sydney regardless of which teams qualified. The deal – which was worth an estimated eight-figure sum – received a lot of backlash from fans leading to protests such as the infamous pitch invasion during the Melbourne Derby.

Even former Adelaide United player and Socceroo Craig Goodwin, who was involved in the promotional video for Destination NSW and the A-League Grand Finals, posted a tweet saying he did not support the partnership. However, the league eventually turned their back on the deal after just one season.

The A-Leagues has also struggled to gain revenue from its current TV-rights deal with Paramount+ and Network 10 due to the numerous targets that the A-Leagues must meet to guarantee funding from their broadcast partner. The initial deal which was signed before the 2021/22 A-Leagues season was worth $200 million over five years.

After one season these goals were not met, it led to the Destination NSW deal. Also the decrease in subscribers due to issues with Paramount+, such as the inability to pause and rewind as well as significant streaming issues, combined with the lack of popularity and publicity of the league resulted in the APL only taking $5 million from the deal last season.

With broadcasting deals being such an integral aspect of generating income in the footballing world, the fact the APL only received such a small sum from a deal where they could have received much more is a big reason for their financial difficulties.

Despite the APL chair Stephen Conroy claiming the reductions in central distribution has come as no shock to clubs, this is a worrying time for the A-Leagues. The APL will need to find quick and responsible solutions to combat their financial difficulties if they want the leagues to continue to be operational and have some sort of future to expand and grow.

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Two CEOs, One Code: Why Alignment Between Football Australia and the A-Leagues Matters More Than Ever

The NSL didn’t fail because of football. It failed because of structure, money and misalignment. With new CEOs at Football Australia and the A-Leagues, the sport now stands at a crossroads it has faced before.

Australian football finds itself at a rare inflection point. Not because of a single appointment, but because of two. With Martin Kugeler set to commence as CEO of Football Australia on 16 February 2026, and Steve Rosich now installed as CEO of the Australian Professional Leagues, the code has, perhaps for the first time in a long while, a genuine opportunity to align governance, commercial ambition and strategic execution across its two most powerful institutions.

This moment matters. Not symbolically, but structurally.

Kugeler arrives at Football Australia with a background that is markedly different from many of his predecessors. As former CEO of Stan and a senior leader across finance and strategy roles, he brings a media-native, commercially fluent mindset into a federation grappling with modern realities. Football Australia’s most recent financials tell a complex story: record revenues of $124 million, alongside a record $8.5 million loss. Chair Anter Isaac has been clear that grassroots programs and national teams will not be impacted, and projections suggest a return to surplus by 2026. But the message beneath the numbers is unmistakable: football can no longer rely on participation alone to sustain its future.

This is where Kugeler’s skillset becomes relevant. His mandate is not simply to steady the ship, but to modernise how Football Australia thinks about audiences, digital platforms, commercial partnerships and long-term value creation. Increasing commercial revenue, improving digital engagement and strengthening the federation’s market relevance are not optional objectives; they are existential ones.

Crucially, Kugeler does not inherit Football Australia in isolation. His tenure begins alongside Steve Rosich’s leadership of the A-Leagues, and that duality could become Australian football’s greatest advantage, if handled correctly.

Rosich, as previously outlined in my last CEO opinion, is not a caretaker. He is a commercial operator forged in high-pressure environments: the AFL, the Melbourne Cup Carnival and elite corporate sport. He understands sponsorship activation, broadcast value, governance discipline and the language of major brands. Where Kugeler brings media and platform intelligence, Rosich brings commercial deal-making and entertainment-led strategy.Together, they represent something Australian football has often lacked: complementary leadership at the federation and league level.

 

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For too long, the relationship between governing bodies and professional leagues has oscillated between tension and tolerance.

The recent Football Australia AGM made clear that, at least publicly, the relationship with the APL is currently characterised by “complete cooperation and collaboration.”

That sentiment must now be operationalised, not merely stated.

The $4.1 million expected credit loss linked largely to monies owed by the APL is a reminder that financial alignment, transparency and shared accountability are not abstract governance ideals. They are practical necessities. Disagreements over historical balances cannot be allowed to morph into structural dysfunction. Kugeler and Rosich must treat alignment not as diplomacy, but as strategy.

The real test of that alignment may arrive sooner than expected in the form of the Australian Championship.

The inception of a national second-tier competition is, in principle, a positive and necessary evolution for the game. But early signs should concern anyone paying attention. Clubs have already borne the brunt of operational and travel costs. Broadcast timings have been questionable, with examples such as Heidelberg United playing 1pm Sunday matches that clash directly with family and community priorities. There has been no major commercial sponsor announced, no broadcast-led narrative strategy, and no licensed merchandise program attached to the competition.

This is not sustainable.

Australian football has lived this movie before. The National Soccer League did not fail because of a lack of passion or history. It failed because of structure, economics and misaligned responsibility. The Crawford Report in 2003 was unequivocal in its findings: when Soccer Australia directly controlled the NSL’s operations, funding and commercial arrangements, inherent conflicts emerged. The governing body lacked the specialist commercial expertise to run a financially viable league, while the league itself became a financial burden that distracted from core responsibilities such as governance, development and national teams.

The solution then was clear: a licensed, semi-independent league model, aligned but not controlled. The A-Leagues were born from that logic.

The Australian Championship must not drift into the same structural grey zone that doomed the NSL. Kugeler will need to assess, early and decisively, where this competition sits within the ecosystem. Who carries the commercial risk? Who controls broadcast strategy? How are clubs protected from cost blowouts? And critically, where does the revenue model come from?

This is where alignment with Rosich becomes essential. Football Australia should not be attempting to commercialise a national competition in isolation, just as the APL should not be expected to absorb costs without strategic clarity. Joint sponsorship frameworks, coordinated broadcast planning and shared commercial storytelling are not nice-to-haves. They are safeguards against repeating history.

More broadly, the opportunity for knowledge-sharing between Kugeler and Rosich extends well beyond one competition. Both bring deep corporate networks. Both understand boardrooms, not just dressing rooms. Both speak the language of partners who expect return on investment, not goodwill.

If leveraged properly, this dual leadership can reshape how football presents itself to government, broadcasters, sponsors and global stakeholders ahead of the 2026 World Cup cycle. It can also restore confidence internally, among clubs, administrators and fans who have grown weary of fragmented strategy and reactive decision-making.

The warning is simple: alignment must be intentional. History shows that Australian football suffers most when roles blur, responsibilities overlap and commercial logic is secondary to sentiment. The promise, however, is equally clear. With Kugeler focusing Football Australia on governance, national teams and commercial modernisation, and Rosich driving the A-Leagues as a serious entertainment product, the code finally has the chance to operate as a coordinated system rather than competing silos.

Two CEOs. Two institutions. One code.

If they learn from the past, share expertise openly and resist the temptation to repeat structural mistakes, this period could mark not just a reset, but a genuine maturation of Australian football.

The opportunity is there. The question now is whether the game is ready to take it.

The Footballing Figures Recognised in January 26 Honours List

In an announcement made on Monday, four individuals were celebrated in the January 26 Honours List for their respective services to the football industry in Australia. 

The cohort included Football Tasmania CEO, Tony Pignata, PFA Founder and former CEO, Brendan Schwab, former Football Australia CEO, Ian Holmes and former player and Matildas’ manager, Alen Stajcic. 

 

Leaders of Australia’s football landscape

Tony Pignata

Recipient of the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) is Football Tasmania CEO, Tony Pignata. 

From beginnings as a player for Box Hill Inter, to several leadership roles with clubs like Wellington Phoenix, Sydney FC and Perth Glory, Pignata has dedicated his life to the game. Since 2023, he has led Football Tasmania and helped to develop high-performance pathways and expand participation to ensure football has a long-term future in the region. 

Brendan Schwab

PFA Founder and former CEO, Brendan Schwab, was recognised with the Member of the Order of Australia (AM). 

Schwab’s contributions to football are undeniable, not only as a key figure in the creation of the PFA in 1993 and the A-League, but as an accomplished lawyer who advocated for Australian footballers on the global stage. As a Football Australia Hall of Fame Inductee and PFA Champion, Schwab has undoubtedly woven his name into the fabric of Australia’s football industry. 

Ian Holmes

Former Football Australia CEO, Ian Holmes, was another recipient of the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM). 

With contributions to football in Australia spanning five decades, Holmes stands as an essential figure in the industry. His work has covered various levels of the game, including as President of New South Wales Amateur Soccer Federation, Football Australia CEO, and Director of Football New South Wales. His leadership and commitment has been pivotal to the growth of football at state and national levels. 

Alen Stajcic

Former player and football manager, Alen Stajcic, was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for his services as a coach. 

In both the men’s and women’s game, Stajcic has forged a successful record on the international stage for the Matildas and the Philippine Women’s National team, as well as at club level for Sydney FC, Central Coast Mariners, Perth Glory and Western Sydney Wanderers. As Head Coach from 2014-2019, Stajcic helped the Matildas reach new heights on the pitch and thus pave the way for the development of the women’s game across the nation. 

 

Acknowledging dedication and commitment 

Whether in Australia or beyond, the football industry can be an unforgiving and ruthless sphere in which to work. This is why recognising the people who have made valuable contributions to the nation’s footballing landscape is so important. Through consistent hard work and commitment, they collectively helped to bring the football industry in Australia to where it is today. 

While development is constant and improvements can always be made, it is reassuring to know that the foundations were built with the help of four dedicated individuals deservedly recognised in this year’s January 26 Honours List.

 

See the full 26 January Honours List here.

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