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1989–90 National Soccer League

The 1989–90 National Soccer League season, was the 14th season of the National Soccer League in Australia. The league was known as the Quit NSL under a sponsorship arrangement with the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.[1]

NSL 1989–90
LeagueNational Soccer League
SportAssociation football
Duration1989–90
Number of teams14
NSL season
ChampionsSydney Olympic
Top scorerDavid Seal (15)
National Soccer League seasons

Regular season

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League table

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Marconi Fairfield 26 16 6 4 51 24 +27 38 Qualification for the Finals series
2 South Melbourne 26 15 6 5 42 23 +19 36
3 Melbourne Croatia 26 14 7 5 49 26 +23 35
4 Adelaide City 26 13 8 5 39 23 +16 34
5 Sydney Olympic (C) 26 12 7 7 40 25 +15 31
6 APIA Leichhardt 26 11 9 6 36 25 +11 31
7 Sydney Croatia 26 10 6 10 40 39 +1 26
8 Parramatta Eagles 26 10 6 10 31 31 0 26
9 Preston Makedonia 26 9 5 12 33 35 −2 23
10 St George-Budapest 26 7 7 12 35 44 −9 21
11 Wollongong City 26 8 4 14 30 48 −18 20
12 Sunshine George Cross 26 6 5 15 24 49 −25 17
13 West Adelaide (R) 26 5 4 17 21 54 −33 14 Relegation to the South Australian Division 1
14 Blacktown City (R) 26 4 4 18 30 55 −25 12 Relegation to the NSW Division 1
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated

Finals series

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Grand Final

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1 Australia  Bob Catlin
2 Australia  Gary van Egmond
3 Australia  Jean-Paul de Marigny
4 Australia  Steve Calderan (c)
5 Australia  Robert Wheatley
6 Australia  Ian Gray
7 Australia  Tom McCulloch
8 Australia  Vince Colagiuri
9 New Zealand  Fred de Jong
10 Australia  Paul Okon
11 Australia  David Lowe
Substitutes:
12 Australia  Peter Katholos
14 Australia  Gerry Gomez
20 Australia  Mark Schwarzer
Manager:
Australia  Bertie Mariani
1 New Zealand  Clint Gosling
2 Australia  David Barrett
3 Australia  Robert Hooker (c)
4 Australia  Tony Spyridakos
5 Australia  Andrew Bernal
6 Australia  Gary Phillips
7 Australia  Grant Lee
8 Australia  Alistair Edwards
9 Australia  Abbas Saad
10 New Zealand  Robert Ironside
11 Australia  Steve Refenes
Substitutes:
12 Australia  Marko Perinovic
13 Australia  Eric Hristodoulou
20 Australia  Gary Meier
Manager:
England  Mick Hickman

Individual awards

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References

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  1. ^ Williams, Daniel (31 October 1989). "NSL prepares to turn up the heat on rival codes". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 26 May 2020 – via Newspapers.com.

Other sources

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