UPDATE 1-Soccer-Auckland FC edge Sydney 1-0 to become New Zealand's first A-League champions

Auckland joined a select group of cross-border ‌winners in world soccer, emulating AS Monaco, who won eight titles in France's Ligue 1 and Northern ‌Ireland's Derry City, twice league winners in the Republic of Ireland. Sydney had scraped into the Grand Final via a penalty shootout following a last-gasp equaliser in the semi-final against Newcastle Jets but there was no late rally in Auckland as their bid ⁠for a ​record-extending sixth A-League title ⁠ended in disappointment.


Reuters | Updated: 23-05-2026 16:03 IST | Created: 23-05-2026 16:03 IST
UPDATE 1-Soccer-Auckland FC edge Sydney 1-0 to become New Zealand's first A-League champions

Cameron Howieson ​struck in the second half with a ​touch of fortune as Auckland FC ‌swept to ​a 1-0 Grand Final win over Sydney on Saturday and became the first New Zealand team to clinch an A-League championship.

Scoring his first goal ‌for Auckland in his 58th match, midfielder Howieson's 60th-minute volley took a deflection on the way past wrong-footed goalkeeper Harrison Devenish-Meares, sending a sold-out crowd at Mount Smart Stadium into ecstasy. Auckland joined a select group of cross-border ‌winners in world soccer, emulating AS Monaco, who won eight titles in France's Ligue 1 and Northern ‌Ireland's Derry City, twice league winners in the Republic of Ireland.

Sydney had scraped into the Grand Final via a penalty shootout following a last-gasp equaliser in the semi-final against Newcastle Jets but there was no late rally in Auckland as their bid ⁠for a ​record-extending sixth A-League title ⁠ended in disappointment. Sydney captain Rhyan Grant had a late chance to equalise after latching onto a pinpoint cross from English winger Joe ⁠Lolley on 83 minutes.

But he sent his glancing header just over the bar. Only moments before, Auckland forward Jesse Randall ​missed a chance to bury Sydney when he blazed over from short range and with the ⁠goal at his mercy.

It was the most clear-cut chance of a mostly cagey affair in a match-up of the league's stingiest sides. Defence ⁠held ​sway completely from the first whistle to beyond the interval despite the theatrical efforts of Auckland's Sam Cosgrove. The tall striker went down twice in the area at the start of each half under ⁠close attention but referee Alex King waved away his pleas for a penalty.

Auckland coach Steve Corica claimed his ⁠third A-League title as ⁠coach against his old team, having delivered the trophy for Sydney back-to-back in 2019-20. As a player, he also scored the winner for them in the inaugural ‌2006 Grand ‌Final against Central Coast Mariners.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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