Football Victoria CEO Chris Pehlivanis on the 2024-2028 Strategic Framework: “We’ll either succeed or fail together”

Football Victoria (FV) has released its ‘Our Football’ Strategic Framework for the next four years, with CEO Chris Pehlivanis at the heart of its creation.

Having been with Western United as CEO for four years between 2019-2023 prior to joining FV, Pehlivanis is now heading towards his first full year in the member federation.

Knowing what it takes to lay the foundations and see it grow from an A-League club’s inception, it is now set to start again through a dedicated Strategic Framework.

In an interview with Soccerscene, Pehlivanis discusses his footballing journey so far, each of the strategic pillars and how he will work to support the needs and requirements of the game.

A general shot of The Home of the Matildas in Bundoora from the Dockerty Cup Final. Image credit: Mark Avellino Photography

What led you into football and ultimately the CEO role at FV?

Chris Pehlivanis: I’ve been involved in football a long time, where I initially started playing for East Bentleigh Soccer Club when I was a young tucker, for about 10 years. I was also involved with Bentleigh United Cobras.

For 20 years I was also a referee, and then through my professional career I landed a job at Football Australia as finance manager. That was my first taste of sport where I went on to spend 8-9 years with the Essendon Football Club in a CFO role.

I love my football and the ability to help shape the game in this state is why I’m excited about being CEO.

I’ve also got a young boy who also plays and he’s 10 years old. He’s a goalkeeper and I still enjoy it from a parent’s point of view but also seeing the future of the sport first-hand in this state which is growing at substantial rates.

It’s very fun going back to grassroots; goalkeeper is the position my son has chosen, and he loves it. We’re going on a journey with him so it’s exciting.

What did you see in FV to make that jump?

Chris Pehlivanis: I thought it was a good opportunity to really help shape the game at a larger level, with clubs having nearly 100,000 registered participants in this state.

For the first time we also have a key asset, being The Home of the Matildas and commercialising it. Mainly, working with all the different levels of football in this state is the exciting part.

The Home of the Matildas is an asset which we haven’t had in the past, and everyone is just coming to terms with what that actually means and how we can use it for the benefit of the game.

It’s a good opportunity for government to see what they’ve contributed towards and the benefit at all different levels.

For example, we recently hosted the 2024 Girl’s National Youth Championships, showcasing our world-class facility and giving participants from across Australia a memorable experience.

Victoria and Queensland in a battle of the states during the 2024 National Youth Championships Girls’ Tournament. Image credit: Mark Avellino

What is the potential growth going to be like in Bundoora?

Chris Pehlivanis: We’re working with the Victorian State Government, Federal Government, and La Trobe University to look at what Stage 2 of this facility holds. It’s early days, but we’ve got some plans that we’re discussing with all the relevant parties.

The real opportunity is to work with everyone to develop something that delivers on a lot more for the football community, which can be increased capacity or additional pitches for the football family. It really makes it feel like a home for football.

On the Strategic Framework, one of the pillars is clubs and competitions, can you share more on the service proposition and delivery to regional football?

Chris Pehlivanis: It’s really helping our clubs become stronger and supporting them.

Each club is uniquely different, so there’s not one size fits all, but what is important is our ability to work with those clubs to really enhance the value proposition to their members and to their football community, and that’s what our role is, no matter what league they play in.

Equally as important is to increase the value proposition to the football family, because historically we haven’t really focused on retention. It will be important to understand why people are exiting the pyramid at whatever stage they do, and doing everything we can to keep them engaged with the game for longer periods.

Oakleigh Cannons and South Melbourne in the 2024 Dockerty Cup Final. Image credit: Mark Avellino.

Another pillar is the participation with a focus on gender equity. What do you hope to achieve?

Chris Pehlivanis: Off the back of the Women’s World Cup, we’ve seen enormous growth, and with that becomes a lot of opportunity.

What is critical is to make sure that we’re ready to do that in the right way.

It needs to be done in a manner that is really engaging, safe, and ensures our female participants have a great experience.

Our growth is more than 20% overall in the game, and for females it increases to 30% – with that will still come some growing pains, especially around facilities.

I think it’s a big competitive advantage we have in the female game. The foundations of our sport are solid for female participation, so our job is to take that and really use it to provide a genuine, engaging and high-performing pathway for females and be the sport of choice in this state and country.

Our job is to make sure we continue to drive additional value – be it through coaching, extra facilities, better competitions – where all that needs to come to the forefront. Because the game will continue to grow, and the future is very bright.

There is also an emphasis on pathways for emerging players, can you elaborate?

Chris Pehlivanis: We want to bring a real sense of pride back into representing Victoria and being part of the state programs.

I think that’s been lost in our journey in the last couple of years which will mean a really big focus on high performance on and off the field – through technical coaching, physios, nutrition and all areas that we’re going to focus on to provide a genuine pathway and we’re looking to produce as many future stars as we can.

Maja Markovski in action during the 2024 Nike FC Cup Final at The Home of the Matildas. Image credit: surbevskiphotography.

Are there any initiatives you would bring in for that?

Chris Pehlivanis: It would be done through our NTC program and the expansion of it. The foundations in these programs are very solid, it’s about taking them to the next level – which in the NTC Review gave us a lot of recommendations.

There are key elements that we want to implement into our programs that will drive the user experience to a very much higher standard.

When you do play for your state, it’s all about showing pride and you’re representing every footballer in the state.

You mentioned that facilities are a sticking point, what’s been done so far?

Chris Pehlivanis: In the first six months of my role, I’ve did a lot of club visits, and I would say nine out of 10 clubs have put this as the number one priority to support facilities.

Every time I hear this, it means clubs are turning away participants and I think that’s unacceptable for a variety of reasons. Our role is to support the clubs in that journey and work with all levels of government to secure additional facilities.

What I say to clubs is quite simple; we’ll either succeed or fail together. But be assured we’re going to do this together and we’re going to provide you as much support as we can to secure more infrastructure for our game.

However, we’ve had success in this space so it’s also important to show people we care.

There’s room for a lot of improvement and plenty of opportunities to secure facilities to allow us to play a game that keeps growing at a strong rate.

The 2024 National Youth Championships Boys’ Tournament, hosted in Wollongong. Image credit: Damian Briggs / Football Australia.

What do you see in the game’s future and FV’s role to play?

Chris Pehlivanis: We are going to build unity within the game, where there has been a lack of it and hasn’t given us the best opportunity to be successful.

It ensures that we all work together for a common goal and not have an individual mindset which has been at the forefront of our game for many years.

In my short time here, I’ve brought in a GM of Commercial with a real focus on creating additional revenue streams for our game.

This is so we can reinvest in initiatives that will future-proof the game, but also continue to grow it.

The Home of the Matildas also needs to be commercialised. It gives us more relevance in that space and secure some decent funding for our game for the first time.

We’ve got people & culture and capability, making sure we’ve got the right employees here to deliver our strategy.

From a culture point of view, we want to make sure that everyone’s aligned and living the values.

One of the big things that I’ll enforce in this Strategic Framework will be accountability, because that’s the only way we can go forward and will be an area that I’ll continue to drive.

To view the Strategic Framework in full, you can do so here.

Previous ArticleNext Article

Northern Motor Group joins FV as Official Automotive Partner

In an announcement made last week, Football Victoria (FV) announced the Bundoora-based company as its Official Automotive Partner for the next three years, ushering in a new partnership driven by local identity.

Built in Victoria

The alliance betwen FV and Northern Motor Group stands as the latest locally-backed partnership in Victoria’s football landscape.

Furthermore, FV Executive Manager of Commercial, Chris Speldewinde, outlined why a connection with Northern Motor Group is an exciting step forward for the organisation.

“Northern Motor Group are one of the biggest and most respected automotive businesses in Melbourne and we look forward to working with them as our official automotive partner,” Speldewinde explained.

“It’s been an exciting offseason here at FV, with several key partnership signings coming on-board, and we are thrilled to welcome Northern Motor Group to the family.”

This season, partnerships within the Football Victoria pyramid have highlighted immense support from local businesses. With shared identity, values and commitment to the community, partnerships like this are set-up for success.

 

What the partnership will bring

The three-year partnership will look to provide Melbournians and FV staff with a range of benefits, from vehicle access to offers including:

  • 2-years free servicing
  • $500 cash back
  • $500 worth of accessories

Thus, the partnership will look to help locals and participants across FV, reflecting both parties commitment to giving back to the community.

“As enormous supporters of football in Victoria, signing on as Football Victoria’s official automotive partner is something we are very proud of,” said Northern Motor Group Dealer Principal, Nick Soklev.

“For over 40 years, we have been helping Melbournians find the car that is right for them, and we look forward to welcoming he Victorian football community to our dealerships.”

 

Final thoughts

Helping the community, providing exceptional service and creating a welcoming environment – the common values shared by both parties.

For FV and all its participants, Northern Motor Group can be the driving factor which propels football in Victoria to new standards in the years to come.

How Football Victoria’s Opens Board Nominations will Address the Game’s Rapid Growth Demands

Football Victoria has opened nominations for two board director positions ahead of its Annual General Meeting on May 25, with the governing body explicitly seeking candidates with expertise in investment and fundraising, digital innovation, and people and culture to meet the modern challenges facing football administration in Australia’s most populous football state.

Nominations close at 6pm on Monday April 20. All candidates will be assessed by an Independent Nominations Committee against the requirements of FV’s 2024-2028 strategic framework, which is built around five pillars: clubs and competitions, participants, pathways, facilities, and the organisation’s future direction.

The appointments arrive at a moment when football in Victoria, and nationally, is navigating a participation boom that has significantly outpaced the infrastructure, governance and financial frameworks built to support it. The game is growing faster than the systems designed to manage it, and the people who sit at the top of those systems will determine whether that growth becomes sustainable or starts to work against itself.

A Sport at Crossroads

Football is now Australia’s largest club-based sport, and Victoria sits at the centre of that story. Participation numbers have climbed sharply in the years since the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, and more recently the successful AFC Women’s Asian Cup, with junior registrations in particular placing pressure on community facilities, volunteer workforces and competition structures that were not designed to absorb growth at this pace.

The consequences are visible at ground level. Councils across Victoria, many of which did not anticipate the scale of football’s expansion when planning their sporting infrastructure, are now confronting a facilities gap that is measurable in cancelled training sessions, overloaded grounds and clubs turning away players for want of adequate space. Drainage, lighting, changeroom access and pitch availability, have become pressure points that no amount of elite-level visibility can resolve from above.

The incoming board directors will inherit that problem directly. Football Victoria’s strategic framework names facilities as one of its five core pillars, and the organisation’s ability to make the case to government, councils and private investors for the kind of sustained infrastructure funding the sport requires will depend significantly on the financial and advocacy expertise sitting around its board table.

Football Australia and Football NSW recently called on the NSW Government to establish a $343 million grassroots facilities fund in response to the same structural pressures. Victoria faces an analogous challenge, and the director recruitment process signals that FV is aware its board needs people who can drive investment portfolios and revenue streams, not merely administer existing ones.

The Commercial Dimension

The case for bringing investment expertise onto the board extends beyond facilities. Australian sport sits within a $41.7 billion economy, and football’s share of that landscape is growing in ways that create both opportunity and complexity. Broadcast rights, commercial partnerships, digital platforms, and the expanding role of sports betting in the revenue structures of sporting codes are reshaping how governing bodies at every level think about financial sustainability.

Football Victoria’s competitions, including NPL, state leagues,  and an increasingly significant women’s program, represent a substantial commercial asset that has historically been underleveraged relative to its scale. The appointment of directors with investment and fundraising competencies is a direct acknowledgement that the next phase of the sport’s growth in Victoria will require a more sophisticated financial strategy than the one that got it here.

The digital innovation competency sits alongside that commercial imperative. Football is generating more data, more content and more participant interaction than at any point in its history in Australia, and the governing bodies that build effective digital infrastructure now will be better positioned to manage participation, retain players and engage communities at a scale that was not previously possible.

Governance and Equity

Football Victoria’s nomination process includes a constitutional requirement for 40:40:20 board composition. It translates to 40 percent identifying as women, 40 percent as men, and 20 percent of any gender.

The equity means decisions made at the board-level, about facilities investment, participation pathways, and community engagement have a direct impact on who gets to play, where and under what conditions. A board composition that reflects the diversity of the football community it governs is better placed to identify the structural barriers that data alone does not always surface.

FV CEO, along with the Independent Nominations Committee, will assess candidates against the full range of competencies outlined in the strategic framework, including governance experience, demonstrated involvement in football as a player, coach, referee or administrator, and an understanding of the broader football ecosystem.

The sport is at an inflection point. The foundations have been laid by decades of community building, volunteer labour and grassroots investment. What happens next, whether the participation boom becomes a lasting structural shift or a wave that recedes from insufficient infrastructure to sustain it, will be shaped in no small part by the quality of leadership at the governing body level.

Most Popular Topics

Editor Picks

Send this to a friend