📰 The key factors as Auckland FC’s A-League Finals quest begins

Publish date
Saturday, 17 May 2025, 1:00PM

By Michael Burgess

Auckland FC will enter the cauldron tonight. Forget everything they have achieved already this season – facing Melbourne Victory in a finals match here is the greatest challenge of their short existence.

Victory are the biggest club in the A League, with arguably the most passionate fanbase and AAMI Park can be an intimidating arena, given the proximity of the crowd and the way the noise is contained within the stadium. Auckland acquitted themselves well a month ago – with a clinical 2-0 win – but this will be a very different scenario and is a hell of the place to make a finals debut.

Experience

Melbourne Victory have tons of playoff experience within their squad, while success at this time of year has long been part of the DNA of the club. That was illustrated last season, when they edged the Wellington Phoenix across two legs and again last week, as they stopped the highly fancied Western Sydney Wanderers in the elimination final.

Auckland may be new to this arena but won’t be fazed. Look at some of their resumes: captain Hiroki Sakai at Fifa World Cups, Ligue 1 and Bundesliga, Louis Verstraete in big Belgium derbies, Dan Hall in consecutive A League grand finals, Jake Brimmer with eight seasons at Victory and the South American trio (Guillermo May, Felipe Gallegos and Neyder Moreno), who are veterans of high pressure occasions on that continent. However, as a collective group it is a novel and different test, while it may also be an eye-opener for the younger members of the squad.

Formation

Auckland FC could revert to a 3-5-2 shape tonight, used in the last clash with Victory. It means more bodies in central midfield, a stronger defensive shape and more chances for the wide players, particularly Francis de Vries, to get forward. However, it can be tricky, given they have favoured 4-4-2 for most of the campaign and it is imperative that the wing backs resist the temptation to sit too deep. Brimmer could start alongside Gallegos and Verstraete to form the midfield axis in that scenario, while Jesse Randall will be used up front alongside May, in the absence of Max Mata, who didn’t travel due to a hamstring strain.

Preparation

Auckland FC have benefited from a week off and are refreshed and ready to go. A planned intra-squad match last Friday was called off after 20 minutes due to torrential rain but coach Steve Corica has been pleased with the work this week, while those close to the squad have noted the extra intensity.

May hasn’t trained fully this week due to a knee knock but will start. The team trained close to the central city yesterday – at the home of the Port Melbourne Sharks – before the players had a free afternoon to relax.

Conditions

The forecast isn’t great for tonight. The weather has closed in here in Melbourne, with rain expected most of the day. It is something that Auckland haven’t had to deal with for most of their season, with the vast majority of matches played under sunny skies. The AAMI Park field will also be heavier, cut up by yesterday’s first semifinal between Melbourne City and Western United.

Striking First

It’s a cliché but opening the scoring is crucial tonight. Auckland FC are great frontrunners – as they have shown all season – and are adept in transition if the opposition needs to chase the game. All 15 of their victories this season have come after they scored first. They haven’t trailed many times this campaign but are yet to retrieve a deficit and come back and win.

The Finals Quest

Across their proud history Wellington Phoenix have never won a finals match in Australia, despite having some impressive squads down the years. That underlines the scale of tonight’s task for Auckland FC, if they want to make history as a New Zealand side in the playoffs. Of course, a victory on Saturday is not imperative but the main focus will be going back to Go Media Stadium with something, as a draw would also be a solid base ahead of next week.

The Travelling Fans

There is expected to be a decent contingent of Auckland colour in the grandstands. A few hundred have made the trip over – some with a painful experience of the 6am flight from Auckland yesterday, with issues at Qantas check-in terminals resulting in massive queues – and they will be supplemented by expatriates taking the chance to see the Black Knights.

The Mentality

Discipline, focus and especially concentration will be key tonight, as any lapses can have massive consequences. That was shown in last night’s AAMI Park match, in the other semifinal. The first half was an even affair – with Melbourne City ahead 1-0 at the break – but Western United paid a harsh price for two poor moments in the second spell and the 3-0 defeat means the tie is all but over.

This article was first published on nzherald.co.nz and is republished here with permission.

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