logo
'It's a good feeling': Underdog secures Cup spot to mark biggest moment in club history

'It's a good feeling': Underdog secures Cup spot to mark biggest moment in club history

The Advertiser12-06-2025
Cooks Hill president Mitch McPherson has described the club's rise into the Australia Cup main draw as the biggest moment in its history after a dramatic night of qualifying action.
Cooks Hill beat NPL Northern NSW heavyweights Broadmeadow 2-1 at Magic Park on Wednesday night to book their maiden appearance in the next stage of the national knockout tournament.
At Weston, the goalkeeping heroics of 22-year-old George Stephens lifted the Bears into the final 32 teams for their first time after they defeated Edgeworth in a penalty shootout.
The results mean Cooks Hill and the Bears will be the region's representatives in the competition's main draw, where they join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs.
With it comes national exposure.
Cooks Hill players and officials were basking in the afterglow on Thursday morning after the ninth-placed NPL side stunned leaders Broadmeadow, who were gunning for an eighth appearance in the Cup's final stage.
"We've been pretty successful over the years in working our way up through the various grades," McPherson said.
"That's from the old IDs [interdistrict], through zone, a successful [Northern League One] campaign. This is our fourth year of NPL and we've had some OK results, so making it this far, playing on the national stage, is huge."
MORE NEWCASTLE SPORT
Josh Benson gave Cooks Hill a 1-0 lead on the counter-attack in the 11th minute. Magic equalised through Ezra Palombini in the 70th minute before Benson assisted substitute Xavier Williams' winning tap-in with seven minutes remaining.
Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich, a New Zealand international who has played in leagues around the world, said the achievement was "up there" in terms of his career highlights.
"I'm just so happy for the boys in particular because I do demand a lot from them and they have been putting the effort in," Zoricich told the Newcastle Herald on Thursday.
"I just want them to get rewarded and hopefully last night goes a little way to doing that, putting them on the big stage in the next round.
"We knew it was a big game for us, a great opportunity for us, and the boys really took it on board. I don't think they were going to let anything beat them last night ... just the work rate and the determination.
"And, for the club as well. I'm happy for the club to be recognised for the hard work that's been done in the background. It's just a good feeling around the club."
Cooks Hill do not have the big budgets of some of the more established NPL clubs.
Instead, they have backed young talent and players who have been on the Cooks Hill journey.
"I did an interview after the game and they asked if I got anyone in during the transfer window and I said I didn't, and if we do get anyone in we can't afford to pay the big bucks that are going around," Zoricich said.
"So we identify players, either younger players that need a chance, and we give them that opportunity. And there's a few boys that have been there for a while and have come up through the divisions with the club, and they're the ones that I would really like to reward with something.
"For instance, Dan Clements last night was just really happy. He said, 'We've never beaten Magic' and they've never been to round of 32, and it just gives them that opportunity that they've never had.
"If it continues, that will be great, but that's my main motivation, to give these boys that have been there through everything, just give them something to hang their hat on and say that they were proud to be part of."
The Bears, who are placed third in NPL with five games in hand, beat second-placed Edgeworth 1-1 (3-1) on penalties after the two sides could not be separated following 120 minutes of play.
"It was a big win for the club," Weston coach Kew Jaliens said.
"The people at the club have been working very hard to get the club moving forward, so it's great that we as boys on the pitch can do something back in ways like this and give them a good game with a good outcome.
"This is a very big opportunity to showcase what we can do, and to put your name on the Australian football map."
Stephens was immense, denying three successive Edgeworth attempts from the spot to seal the win and etch his name in Weston folklore.
"I had a few chats with George in the last week about being mentally strong and believing in himself," Jaliens said.
"That is what he showed yesterday ... It was great class to save some of those pens."
Originally from Queensland, Stephens relocated to Newcastle when he was 17.
He has played at Toronto and Kahibah and was briefly at Edgeworth before taking a break from football for most of last season.
"I wasn't enjoying my football too much, so I had a little break and then jumped back into it, and I'm loving it now," Stephens said.
The shot-stopper joined Weston this campaign and has been working with A-League goalkeeping coach Andrew Goldman in the Newcastle Jets youth system.
"He has played a massive part in my career with the belief, time and effort he's given me," Stephens said of Goldman.
NPL leading scorer Ryan Feutz gave Edgeworth a 1-0 lead in the 20th minute on Wednesday night before Aaron Niyonkuru levelled in the 52nd minute.
Jackson Brady scored the opening penalty in the shoot-out before Niyonkuru followed suit.
Joseph Melmeth, Jose Atayde and Tyler Harrison were all denied by Stephens while Burke Fahling and Brock Beveridge converted for Weston.
"I've only been involved in two penalty shoot-outs, both this year in the Australia Cup," Stephens said.
"I was actually pretty excited. It's sort of an opportunity to prove yourself and make a big difference at a club that hasn't progressed to the round of 32 before.
"I was just trying to stay focused, keep my head in my game, not get caught up in overthinking anything.
"I can't even put into words how incredible that feeling was, saving that third penalty, jumping up and having all of the boys running towards me. It's something that I'll never forget. It's absolutely massive for the club.
"I was super proud of all of the boys and their effort. It's a great group of boys out there. I love the club, the team. We have great coaches and I'm really enjoying my time at Weston."
The Cup's round of 32 draw will be done on June 25.
Meanwhile, New Lambton drew 2-2 with Newcastle Olympic in a rescheduled NPL clash at Darling Street Oval on Wednesday night.
Olympic finished with nine men after Nathan Toby and Jed Hornery were red-carded in the late stages.
Toby has subsequently been handed a three-match suspension for violent conduct while Hornery will miss one game.
It is a classic case of David versus Goliath. At stake is a place in the Australia Cup main draw and a chance to perform on the national stage.
Underdogs Cooks Hill will take on NNSW NPL leaders and Australia Cup regulars Broadmeadow Magic at Magic Park on Wednesday night.
Weston host another round-of-32 regular Edgeworth in the other NNSW final qualifier, also at 7pm Wednesday.
The winners will join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs in the final stages of the national knockout.
Cooks Hill, who were promoted to the NNSW NPL in 2022, are yet to progress to the main draw.
Magic, in contrast, are gunning for an eighth appearance. Their last Cup run was in 2023, when they went down 4-2 to Sydney United in the round of 32.
"It is a final for us," Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich said. "If we got an opportunity on the national stage, it would be fantastic for the club.
"We know it will be tough. Magic are up the top [of the league] for a reason."
Cooks Hill edged out Northern Stars 1-0 in Coffs Harbour on Saturday to book a date with Magic.
Josh Benson converted from the penalty spot in the first half.
"We will have to play a lot better than we did Saturday," Zorcich said. "The boys will be up for it."
Cooks Hill have struggled for consistency in the NPL and sit in ninth spot on 12 points, mixing four wins with six losses.
Their round 11 battle with Magic was washed out and postponed to July 16.
"Our form has been very erratic," Zoricich said. "Against Azzurri (1-0 win on April 26), we toughed that one out and I thought here is the turning point. We really dug in and that was a good result for us.
"We haven't really kicked on. It has been hard. We haven't been able to train fully and games have been called off.
"We have been good in fits and start. I haven't seen the best out of a number of our players that is for sure.
"Against Magic, every player in our team has to be on. We have to work extra hard and limit their transitional chances."
Magic were beaten by Lambton Jaffas in the NNSW final qualifier last season.
They enter the Cooks Hill clash without striker Riley Smith, who suffered a season-ending broken leg in the 2-0 win over Maitland on Saturday, and Coby Nancarrow (hamstring).
"Our rotation is crucial now to make sure we get the right balance," Magic coach Jim Cresnar said. "We haven't played Cooks Hill [this season]. They will be a hard team to play. They are very mobile, they are well coached. It will be a tough battle at Magic Park. We will need a bit of luck to get through."
Weston, like Cooks Hill, are chasing a place in the round of 32 for the first time.
They accounted for Lambton 2-1 last Saturday and sit third in the NPL.
Edgeworth are aiming for a seventh slot in the round of the 32 since the Australia Cup's inception in 2014.
They have qualified in the past two years, going down 4-1 to Olympic Kingsway in Perth last season and losing 4-0 to A-League club Western United at Jack McLaughlin Oval in 2023.
The Eagles received a free ride to Wednesday after North Coast outfit Bangalow forfeited.
"To go into the main draw of the Australian Cup is a big prize," coach Peter McGuinness said. "It is a good competition to be involved in."
Edgeworth's league form has been top notch, stringing seven wins together, the last a 2-0 triumph over Lambton on May 31.
"We haven't had a lot of football," coach Peter McGuinness said. "We have been able to get some training in of late, but we are still not match fit.
"It will be a tough game. I have watched Weston a few times. They are very well organised and play good football.
"Chris Hatfield is a good player. Burke Fahling is a good player. Aaron Niyonkura, Blake Archbold ... they have a lot of good players.
"Defensively, we have been pretty sound. I think we have a lot more in us going forward. It is a matter of getting back into games week-in, week out."
Cooks Hill president Mitch McPherson has described the club's rise into the Australia Cup main draw as the biggest moment in its history after a dramatic night of qualifying action.
Cooks Hill beat NPL Northern NSW heavyweights Broadmeadow 2-1 at Magic Park on Wednesday night to book their maiden appearance in the next stage of the national knockout tournament.
At Weston, the goalkeeping heroics of 22-year-old George Stephens lifted the Bears into the final 32 teams for their first time after they defeated Edgeworth in a penalty shootout.
The results mean Cooks Hill and the Bears will be the region's representatives in the competition's main draw, where they join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs.
With it comes national exposure.
Cooks Hill players and officials were basking in the afterglow on Thursday morning after the ninth-placed NPL side stunned leaders Broadmeadow, who were gunning for an eighth appearance in the Cup's final stage.
"We've been pretty successful over the years in working our way up through the various grades," McPherson said.
"That's from the old IDs [interdistrict], through zone, a successful [Northern League One] campaign. This is our fourth year of NPL and we've had some OK results, so making it this far, playing on the national stage, is huge."
MORE NEWCASTLE SPORT
Josh Benson gave Cooks Hill a 1-0 lead on the counter-attack in the 11th minute. Magic equalised through Ezra Palombini in the 70th minute before Benson assisted substitute Xavier Williams' winning tap-in with seven minutes remaining.
Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich, a New Zealand international who has played in leagues around the world, said the achievement was "up there" in terms of his career highlights.
"I'm just so happy for the boys in particular because I do demand a lot from them and they have been putting the effort in," Zoricich told the Newcastle Herald on Thursday.
"I just want them to get rewarded and hopefully last night goes a little way to doing that, putting them on the big stage in the next round.
"We knew it was a big game for us, a great opportunity for us, and the boys really took it on board. I don't think they were going to let anything beat them last night ... just the work rate and the determination.
"And, for the club as well. I'm happy for the club to be recognised for the hard work that's been done in the background. It's just a good feeling around the club."
Cooks Hill do not have the big budgets of some of the more established NPL clubs.
Instead, they have backed young talent and players who have been on the Cooks Hill journey.
"I did an interview after the game and they asked if I got anyone in during the transfer window and I said I didn't, and if we do get anyone in we can't afford to pay the big bucks that are going around," Zoricich said.
"So we identify players, either younger players that need a chance, and we give them that opportunity. And there's a few boys that have been there for a while and have come up through the divisions with the club, and they're the ones that I would really like to reward with something.
"For instance, Dan Clements last night was just really happy. He said, 'We've never beaten Magic' and they've never been to round of 32, and it just gives them that opportunity that they've never had.
"If it continues, that will be great, but that's my main motivation, to give these boys that have been there through everything, just give them something to hang their hat on and say that they were proud to be part of."
The Bears, who are placed third in NPL with five games in hand, beat second-placed Edgeworth 1-1 (3-1) on penalties after the two sides could not be separated following 120 minutes of play.
"It was a big win for the club," Weston coach Kew Jaliens said.
"The people at the club have been working very hard to get the club moving forward, so it's great that we as boys on the pitch can do something back in ways like this and give them a good game with a good outcome.
"This is a very big opportunity to showcase what we can do, and to put your name on the Australian football map."
Stephens was immense, denying three successive Edgeworth attempts from the spot to seal the win and etch his name in Weston folklore.
"I had a few chats with George in the last week about being mentally strong and believing in himself," Jaliens said.
"That is what he showed yesterday ... It was great class to save some of those pens."
Originally from Queensland, Stephens relocated to Newcastle when he was 17.
He has played at Toronto and Kahibah and was briefly at Edgeworth before taking a break from football for most of last season.
"I wasn't enjoying my football too much, so I had a little break and then jumped back into it, and I'm loving it now," Stephens said.
The shot-stopper joined Weston this campaign and has been working with A-League goalkeeping coach Andrew Goldman in the Newcastle Jets youth system.
"He has played a massive part in my career with the belief, time and effort he's given me," Stephens said of Goldman.
NPL leading scorer Ryan Feutz gave Edgeworth a 1-0 lead in the 20th minute on Wednesday night before Aaron Niyonkuru levelled in the 52nd minute.
Jackson Brady scored the opening penalty in the shoot-out before Niyonkuru followed suit.
Joseph Melmeth, Jose Atayde and Tyler Harrison were all denied by Stephens while Burke Fahling and Brock Beveridge converted for Weston.
"I've only been involved in two penalty shoot-outs, both this year in the Australia Cup," Stephens said.
"I was actually pretty excited. It's sort of an opportunity to prove yourself and make a big difference at a club that hasn't progressed to the round of 32 before.
"I was just trying to stay focused, keep my head in my game, not get caught up in overthinking anything.
"I can't even put into words how incredible that feeling was, saving that third penalty, jumping up and having all of the boys running towards me. It's something that I'll never forget. It's absolutely massive for the club.
"I was super proud of all of the boys and their effort. It's a great group of boys out there. I love the club, the team. We have great coaches and I'm really enjoying my time at Weston."
The Cup's round of 32 draw will be done on June 25.
Meanwhile, New Lambton drew 2-2 with Newcastle Olympic in a rescheduled NPL clash at Darling Street Oval on Wednesday night.
Olympic finished with nine men after Nathan Toby and Jed Hornery were red-carded in the late stages.
Toby has subsequently been handed a three-match suspension for violent conduct while Hornery will miss one game.
It is a classic case of David versus Goliath. At stake is a place in the Australia Cup main draw and a chance to perform on the national stage.
Underdogs Cooks Hill will take on NNSW NPL leaders and Australia Cup regulars Broadmeadow Magic at Magic Park on Wednesday night.
Weston host another round-of-32 regular Edgeworth in the other NNSW final qualifier, also at 7pm Wednesday.
The winners will join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs in the final stages of the national knockout.
Cooks Hill, who were promoted to the NNSW NPL in 2022, are yet to progress to the main draw.
Magic, in contrast, are gunning for an eighth appearance. Their last Cup run was in 2023, when they went down 4-2 to Sydney United in the round of 32.
"It is a final for us," Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich said. "If we got an opportunity on the national stage, it would be fantastic for the club.
"We know it will be tough. Magic are up the top [of the league] for a reason."
Cooks Hill edged out Northern Stars 1-0 in Coffs Harbour on Saturday to book a date with Magic.
Josh Benson converted from the penalty spot in the first half.
"We will have to play a lot better than we did Saturday," Zorcich said. "The boys will be up for it."
Cooks Hill have struggled for consistency in the NPL and sit in ninth spot on 12 points, mixing four wins with six losses.
Their round 11 battle with Magic was washed out and postponed to July 16.
"Our form has been very erratic," Zoricich said. "Against Azzurri (1-0 win on April 26), we toughed that one out and I thought here is the turning point. We really dug in and that was a good result for us.
"We haven't really kicked on. It has been hard. We haven't been able to train fully and games have been called off.
"We have been good in fits and start. I haven't seen the best out of a number of our players that is for sure.
"Against Magic, every player in our team has to be on. We have to work extra hard and limit their transitional chances."
Magic were beaten by Lambton Jaffas in the NNSW final qualifier last season.
They enter the Cooks Hill clash without striker Riley Smith, who suffered a season-ending broken leg in the 2-0 win over Maitland on Saturday, and Coby Nancarrow (hamstring).
"Our rotation is crucial now to make sure we get the right balance," Magic coach Jim Cresnar said. "We haven't played Cooks Hill [this season]. They will be a hard team to play. They are very mobile, they are well coached. It will be a tough battle at Magic Park. We will need a bit of luck to get through."
Weston, like Cooks Hill, are chasing a place in the round of 32 for the first time.
They accounted for Lambton 2-1 last Saturday and sit third in the NPL.
Edgeworth are aiming for a seventh slot in the round of the 32 since the Australia Cup's inception in 2014.
They have qualified in the past two years, going down 4-1 to Olympic Kingsway in Perth last season and losing 4-0 to A-League club Western United at Jack McLaughlin Oval in 2023.
The Eagles received a free ride to Wednesday after North Coast outfit Bangalow forfeited.
"To go into the main draw of the Australian Cup is a big prize," coach Peter McGuinness said. "It is a good competition to be involved in."
Edgeworth's league form has been top notch, stringing seven wins together, the last a 2-0 triumph over Lambton on May 31.
"We haven't had a lot of football," coach Peter McGuinness said. "We have been able to get some training in of late, but we are still not match fit.
"It will be a tough game. I have watched Weston a few times. They are very well organised and play good football.
"Chris Hatfield is a good player. Burke Fahling is a good player. Aaron Niyonkura, Blake Archbold ... they have a lot of good players.
"Defensively, we have been pretty sound. I think we have a lot more in us going forward. It is a matter of getting back into games week-in, week out."
Cooks Hill president Mitch McPherson has described the club's rise into the Australia Cup main draw as the biggest moment in its history after a dramatic night of qualifying action.
Cooks Hill beat NPL Northern NSW heavyweights Broadmeadow 2-1 at Magic Park on Wednesday night to book their maiden appearance in the next stage of the national knockout tournament.
At Weston, the goalkeeping heroics of 22-year-old George Stephens lifted the Bears into the final 32 teams for their first time after they defeated Edgeworth in a penalty shootout.
The results mean Cooks Hill and the Bears will be the region's representatives in the competition's main draw, where they join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs.
With it comes national exposure.
Cooks Hill players and officials were basking in the afterglow on Thursday morning after the ninth-placed NPL side stunned leaders Broadmeadow, who were gunning for an eighth appearance in the Cup's final stage.
"We've been pretty successful over the years in working our way up through the various grades," McPherson said.
"That's from the old IDs [interdistrict], through zone, a successful [Northern League One] campaign. This is our fourth year of NPL and we've had some OK results, so making it this far, playing on the national stage, is huge."
MORE NEWCASTLE SPORT
Josh Benson gave Cooks Hill a 1-0 lead on the counter-attack in the 11th minute. Magic equalised through Ezra Palombini in the 70th minute before Benson assisted substitute Xavier Williams' winning tap-in with seven minutes remaining.
Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich, a New Zealand international who has played in leagues around the world, said the achievement was "up there" in terms of his career highlights.
"I'm just so happy for the boys in particular because I do demand a lot from them and they have been putting the effort in," Zoricich told the Newcastle Herald on Thursday.
"I just want them to get rewarded and hopefully last night goes a little way to doing that, putting them on the big stage in the next round.
"We knew it was a big game for us, a great opportunity for us, and the boys really took it on board. I don't think they were going to let anything beat them last night ... just the work rate and the determination.
"And, for the club as well. I'm happy for the club to be recognised for the hard work that's been done in the background. It's just a good feeling around the club."
Cooks Hill do not have the big budgets of some of the more established NPL clubs.
Instead, they have backed young talent and players who have been on the Cooks Hill journey.
"I did an interview after the game and they asked if I got anyone in during the transfer window and I said I didn't, and if we do get anyone in we can't afford to pay the big bucks that are going around," Zoricich said.
"So we identify players, either younger players that need a chance, and we give them that opportunity. And there's a few boys that have been there for a while and have come up through the divisions with the club, and they're the ones that I would really like to reward with something.
"For instance, Dan Clements last night was just really happy. He said, 'We've never beaten Magic' and they've never been to round of 32, and it just gives them that opportunity that they've never had.
"If it continues, that will be great, but that's my main motivation, to give these boys that have been there through everything, just give them something to hang their hat on and say that they were proud to be part of."
The Bears, who are placed third in NPL with five games in hand, beat second-placed Edgeworth 1-1 (3-1) on penalties after the two sides could not be separated following 120 minutes of play.
"It was a big win for the club," Weston coach Kew Jaliens said.
"The people at the club have been working very hard to get the club moving forward, so it's great that we as boys on the pitch can do something back in ways like this and give them a good game with a good outcome.
"This is a very big opportunity to showcase what we can do, and to put your name on the Australian football map."
Stephens was immense, denying three successive Edgeworth attempts from the spot to seal the win and etch his name in Weston folklore.
"I had a few chats with George in the last week about being mentally strong and believing in himself," Jaliens said.
"That is what he showed yesterday ... It was great class to save some of those pens."
Originally from Queensland, Stephens relocated to Newcastle when he was 17.
He has played at Toronto and Kahibah and was briefly at Edgeworth before taking a break from football for most of last season.
"I wasn't enjoying my football too much, so I had a little break and then jumped back into it, and I'm loving it now," Stephens said.
The shot-stopper joined Weston this campaign and has been working with A-League goalkeeping coach Andrew Goldman in the Newcastle Jets youth system.
"He has played a massive part in my career with the belief, time and effort he's given me," Stephens said of Goldman.
NPL leading scorer Ryan Feutz gave Edgeworth a 1-0 lead in the 20th minute on Wednesday night before Aaron Niyonkuru levelled in the 52nd minute.
Jackson Brady scored the opening penalty in the shoot-out before Niyonkuru followed suit.
Joseph Melmeth, Jose Atayde and Tyler Harrison were all denied by Stephens while Burke Fahling and Brock Beveridge converted for Weston.
"I've only been involved in two penalty shoot-outs, both this year in the Australia Cup," Stephens said.
"I was actually pretty excited. It's sort of an opportunity to prove yourself and make a big difference at a club that hasn't progressed to the round of 32 before.
"I was just trying to stay focused, keep my head in my game, not get caught up in overthinking anything.
"I can't even put into words how incredible that feeling was, saving that third penalty, jumping up and having all of the boys running towards me. It's something that I'll never forget. It's absolutely massive for the club.
"I was super proud of all of the boys and their effort. It's a great group of boys out there. I love the club, the team. We have great coaches and I'm really enjoying my time at Weston."
The Cup's round of 32 draw will be done on June 25.
Meanwhile, New Lambton drew 2-2 with Newcastle Olympic in a rescheduled NPL clash at Darling Street Oval on Wednesday night.
Olympic finished with nine men after Nathan Toby and Jed Hornery were red-carded in the late stages.
Toby has subsequently been handed a three-match suspension for violent conduct while Hornery will miss one game.
It is a classic case of David versus Goliath. At stake is a place in the Australia Cup main draw and a chance to perform on the national stage.
Underdogs Cooks Hill will take on NNSW NPL leaders and Australia Cup regulars Broadmeadow Magic at Magic Park on Wednesday night.
Weston host another round-of-32 regular Edgeworth in the other NNSW final qualifier, also at 7pm Wednesday.
The winners will join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs in the final stages of the national knockout.
Cooks Hill, who were promoted to the NNSW NPL in 2022, are yet to progress to the main draw.
Magic, in contrast, are gunning for an eighth appearance. Their last Cup run was in 2023, when they went down 4-2 to Sydney United in the round of 32.
"It is a final for us," Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich said. "If we got an opportunity on the national stage, it would be fantastic for the club.
"We know it will be tough. Magic are up the top [of the league] for a reason."
Cooks Hill edged out Northern Stars 1-0 in Coffs Harbour on Saturday to book a date with Magic.
Josh Benson converted from the penalty spot in the first half.
"We will have to play a lot better than we did Saturday," Zorcich said. "The boys will be up for it."
Cooks Hill have struggled for consistency in the NPL and sit in ninth spot on 12 points, mixing four wins with six losses.
Their round 11 battle with Magic was washed out and postponed to July 16.
"Our form has been very erratic," Zoricich said. "Against Azzurri (1-0 win on April 26), we toughed that one out and I thought here is the turning point. We really dug in and that was a good result for us.
"We haven't really kicked on. It has been hard. We haven't been able to train fully and games have been called off.
"We have been good in fits and start. I haven't seen the best out of a number of our players that is for sure.
"Against Magic, every player in our team has to be on. We have to work extra hard and limit their transitional chances."
Magic were beaten by Lambton Jaffas in the NNSW final qualifier last season.
They enter the Cooks Hill clash without striker Riley Smith, who suffered a season-ending broken leg in the 2-0 win over Maitland on Saturday, and Coby Nancarrow (hamstring).
"Our rotation is crucial now to make sure we get the right balance," Magic coach Jim Cresnar said. "We haven't played Cooks Hill [this season]. They will be a hard team to play. They are very mobile, they are well coached. It will be a tough battle at Magic Park. We will need a bit of luck to get through."
Weston, like Cooks Hill, are chasing a place in the round of 32 for the first time.
They accounted for Lambton 2-1 last Saturday and sit third in the NPL.
Edgeworth are aiming for a seventh slot in the round of the 32 since the Australia Cup's inception in 2014.
They have qualified in the past two years, going down 4-1 to Olympic Kingsway in Perth last season and losing 4-0 to A-League club Western United at Jack McLaughlin Oval in 2023.
The Eagles received a free ride to Wednesday after North Coast outfit Bangalow forfeited.
"To go into the main draw of the Australian Cup is a big prize," coach Peter McGuinness said. "It is a good competition to be involved in."
Edgeworth's league form has been top notch, stringing seven wins together, the last a 2-0 triumph over Lambton on May 31.
"We haven't had a lot of football," coach Peter McGuinness said. "We have been able to get some training in of late, but we are still not match fit.
"It will be a tough game. I have watched Weston a few times. They are very well organised and play good football.
"Chris Hatfield is a good player. Burke Fahling is a good player. Aaron Niyonkura, Blake Archbold ... they have a lot of good players.
"Defensively, we have been pretty sound. I think we have a lot more in us going forward. It is a matter of getting back into games week-in, week out."
Cooks Hill president Mitch McPherson has described the club's rise into the Australia Cup main draw as the biggest moment in its history after a dramatic night of qualifying action.
Cooks Hill beat NPL Northern NSW heavyweights Broadmeadow 2-1 at Magic Park on Wednesday night to book their maiden appearance in the next stage of the national knockout tournament.
At Weston, the goalkeeping heroics of 22-year-old George Stephens lifted the Bears into the final 32 teams for their first time after they defeated Edgeworth in a penalty shootout.
The results mean Cooks Hill and the Bears will be the region's representatives in the competition's main draw, where they join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs.
With it comes national exposure.
Cooks Hill players and officials were basking in the afterglow on Thursday morning after the ninth-placed NPL side stunned leaders Broadmeadow, who were gunning for an eighth appearance in the Cup's final stage.
"We've been pretty successful over the years in working our way up through the various grades," McPherson said.
"That's from the old IDs [interdistrict], through zone, a successful [Northern League One] campaign. This is our fourth year of NPL and we've had some OK results, so making it this far, playing on the national stage, is huge."
MORE NEWCASTLE SPORT
Josh Benson gave Cooks Hill a 1-0 lead on the counter-attack in the 11th minute. Magic equalised through Ezra Palombini in the 70th minute before Benson assisted substitute Xavier Williams' winning tap-in with seven minutes remaining.
Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich, a New Zealand international who has played in leagues around the world, said the achievement was "up there" in terms of his career highlights.
"I'm just so happy for the boys in particular because I do demand a lot from them and they have been putting the effort in," Zoricich told the Newcastle Herald on Thursday.
"I just want them to get rewarded and hopefully last night goes a little way to doing that, putting them on the big stage in the next round.
"We knew it was a big game for us, a great opportunity for us, and the boys really took it on board. I don't think they were going to let anything beat them last night ... just the work rate and the determination.
"And, for the club as well. I'm happy for the club to be recognised for the hard work that's been done in the background. It's just a good feeling around the club."
Cooks Hill do not have the big budgets of some of the more established NPL clubs.
Instead, they have backed young talent and players who have been on the Cooks Hill journey.
"I did an interview after the game and they asked if I got anyone in during the transfer window and I said I didn't, and if we do get anyone in we can't afford to pay the big bucks that are going around," Zoricich said.
"So we identify players, either younger players that need a chance, and we give them that opportunity. And there's a few boys that have been there for a while and have come up through the divisions with the club, and they're the ones that I would really like to reward with something.
"For instance, Dan Clements last night was just really happy. He said, 'We've never beaten Magic' and they've never been to round of 32, and it just gives them that opportunity that they've never had.
"If it continues, that will be great, but that's my main motivation, to give these boys that have been there through everything, just give them something to hang their hat on and say that they were proud to be part of."
The Bears, who are placed third in NPL with five games in hand, beat second-placed Edgeworth 1-1 (3-1) on penalties after the two sides could not be separated following 120 minutes of play.
"It was a big win for the club," Weston coach Kew Jaliens said.
"The people at the club have been working very hard to get the club moving forward, so it's great that we as boys on the pitch can do something back in ways like this and give them a good game with a good outcome.
"This is a very big opportunity to showcase what we can do, and to put your name on the Australian football map."
Stephens was immense, denying three successive Edgeworth attempts from the spot to seal the win and etch his name in Weston folklore.
"I had a few chats with George in the last week about being mentally strong and believing in himself," Jaliens said.
"That is what he showed yesterday ... It was great class to save some of those pens."
Originally from Queensland, Stephens relocated to Newcastle when he was 17.
He has played at Toronto and Kahibah and was briefly at Edgeworth before taking a break from football for most of last season.
"I wasn't enjoying my football too much, so I had a little break and then jumped back into it, and I'm loving it now," Stephens said.
The shot-stopper joined Weston this campaign and has been working with A-League goalkeeping coach Andrew Goldman in the Newcastle Jets youth system.
"He has played a massive part in my career with the belief, time and effort he's given me," Stephens said of Goldman.
NPL leading scorer Ryan Feutz gave Edgeworth a 1-0 lead in the 20th minute on Wednesday night before Aaron Niyonkuru levelled in the 52nd minute.
Jackson Brady scored the opening penalty in the shoot-out before Niyonkuru followed suit.
Joseph Melmeth, Jose Atayde and Tyler Harrison were all denied by Stephens while Burke Fahling and Brock Beveridge converted for Weston.
"I've only been involved in two penalty shoot-outs, both this year in the Australia Cup," Stephens said.
"I was actually pretty excited. It's sort of an opportunity to prove yourself and make a big difference at a club that hasn't progressed to the round of 32 before.
"I was just trying to stay focused, keep my head in my game, not get caught up in overthinking anything.
"I can't even put into words how incredible that feeling was, saving that third penalty, jumping up and having all of the boys running towards me. It's something that I'll never forget. It's absolutely massive for the club.
"I was super proud of all of the boys and their effort. It's a great group of boys out there. I love the club, the team. We have great coaches and I'm really enjoying my time at Weston."
The Cup's round of 32 draw will be done on June 25.
Meanwhile, New Lambton drew 2-2 with Newcastle Olympic in a rescheduled NPL clash at Darling Street Oval on Wednesday night.
Olympic finished with nine men after Nathan Toby and Jed Hornery were red-carded in the late stages.
Toby has subsequently been handed a three-match suspension for violent conduct while Hornery will miss one game.
It is a classic case of David versus Goliath. At stake is a place in the Australia Cup main draw and a chance to perform on the national stage.
Underdogs Cooks Hill will take on NNSW NPL leaders and Australia Cup regulars Broadmeadow Magic at Magic Park on Wednesday night.
Weston host another round-of-32 regular Edgeworth in the other NNSW final qualifier, also at 7pm Wednesday.
The winners will join 21 other qualifiers from NPL competitions around the country and 11 A-League clubs in the final stages of the national knockout.
Cooks Hill, who were promoted to the NNSW NPL in 2022, are yet to progress to the main draw.
Magic, in contrast, are gunning for an eighth appearance. Their last Cup run was in 2023, when they went down 4-2 to Sydney United in the round of 32.
"It is a final for us," Cooks Hill coach Chris Zoricich said. "If we got an opportunity on the national stage, it would be fantastic for the club.
"We know it will be tough. Magic are up the top [of the league] for a reason."
Cooks Hill edged out Northern Stars 1-0 in Coffs Harbour on Saturday to book a date with Magic.
Josh Benson converted from the penalty spot in the first half.
"We will have to play a lot better than we did Saturday," Zorcich said. "The boys will be up for it."
Cooks Hill have struggled for consistency in the NPL and sit in ninth spot on 12 points, mixing four wins with six losses.
Their round 11 battle with Magic was washed out and postponed to July 16.
"Our form has been very erratic," Zoricich said. "Against Azzurri (1-0 win on April 26), we toughed that one out and I thought here is the turning point. We really dug in and that was a good result for us.
"We haven't really kicked on. It has been hard. We haven't been able to train fully and games have been called off.
"We have been good in fits and start. I haven't seen the best out of a number of our players that is for sure.
"Against Magic, every player in our team has to be on. We have to work extra hard and limit their transitional chances."
Magic were beaten by Lambton Jaffas in the NNSW final qualifier last season.
They enter the Cooks Hill clash without striker Riley Smith, who suffered a season-ending broken leg in the 2-0 win over Maitland on Saturday, and Coby Nancarrow (hamstring).
"Our rotation is crucial now to make sure we get the right balance," Magic coach Jim Cresnar said. "We haven't played Cooks Hill [this season]. They will be a hard team to play. They are very mobile, they are well coached. It will be a tough battle at Magic Park. We will need a bit of luck to get through."
Weston, like Cooks Hill, are chasing a place in the round of 32 for the first time.
They accounted for Lambton 2-1 last Saturday and sit third in the NPL.
Edgeworth are aiming for a seventh slot in the round of the 32 since the Australia Cup's inception in 2014.
They have qualified in the past two years, going down 4-1 to Olympic Kingsway in Perth last season and losing 4-0 to A-League club Western United at Jack McLaughlin Oval in 2023.
The Eagles received a free ride to Wednesday after North Coast outfit Bangalow forfeited.
"To go into the main draw of the Australian Cup is a big prize," coach Peter McGuinness said. "It is a good competition to be involved in."
Edgeworth's league form has been top notch, stringing seven wins together, the last a 2-0 triumph over Lambton on May 31.
"We haven't had a lot of football," coach Peter McGuinness said. "We have been able to get some training in of late, but we are still not match fit.
"It will be a tough game. I have watched Weston a few times. They are very well organised and play good football.
"Chris Hatfield is a good player. Burke Fahling is a good player. Aaron Niyonkura, Blake Archbold ... they have a lot of good players.
"Defensively, we have been pretty sound. I think we have a lot more in us going forward. It is a matter of getting back into games week-in, week out."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New signing Jaiden Kucharski and captain Ben Garuccio unable to play for Western United due to FIFA registration ban
New signing Jaiden Kucharski and captain Ben Garuccio unable to play for Western United due to FIFA registration ban

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

New signing Jaiden Kucharski and captain Ben Garuccio unable to play for Western United due to FIFA registration ban

Western United could lose recent signing Jaiden Kucharski before he plays a competitive game for the club due to a registration ban that will prevent him and club captain Ben Garuccio from playing in an Australia Cup round-of-32 clash against Sydney FC on Tuesday night. United announced the signing of ex-Sky Blues attacker Kucharski earlier this month despite knowing that he could not be registered due to an ongoing FIFA ban stemming from a unresolved financial dispute involving the club's former striker Aleksandar Prijovic. The ban also applies to left-back Garuccio, as he didn't re-sign with United until after he had become a free agent, meaning he needs to be re-registered. As a result, the pair can't play against the Sydneysiders at Ironbark Fields, and Football Australia is also investigating whether United breached the ban by fielding Kucharski in a friendly game last week against NPL Victoria club Oakleigh Cannons. It continues the turmoil that the financially embattled United finds itself in. The club's proposed new ownership structure, which was announced in May and involves KAM Melbourne, a subsidiary of American company KAM Sports buying a $100m controlling stake in the club and its parent company Western Melbourne Group, is yet to be approved by the Australian Professional Leagues, which runs the A-League. The lengthy delay for approval is understood to be because the APL is yet to receive KAM Melbourne's completed ownership proposal. The ongoing uncertainty about United's future, as well as its inability to play, has 23-year-old Kucharski and his representatives assessing his immediate future. Other A-League clubs are interested in the services of the former Australian under-17 international, and there are suggestions he might seek to be released from his two-year contract unless the registration ban is resolved, and that could be dependent on KAM Melbourne's majority ownership of United being approved. United's financial problems meant players and staff were paid late for three successive months until this month's wages arrived on time. Superannuation payments were due on Monday. United will face a Sydney side that won't include Brazilian star Douglas Costa, who is yet to arrive back in Australia following an extended off-season break. Sydney's bid to sign former Bayern Munich star Thomas Muller has failed, with the German veteran electing to continue his career in America's Major League Soccer competition, most likely with Canada-based club Vancouver Whitecaps. In other Australia Cup round-of-32 games on Tuesday night, Gold Coast Knights host Auckland FC, Southern Districts Raiders meet Macarthur FC, and Olympic Kingsway take on Melbourne Victory. In Sunday's all A-League battle, Wellington Phoenix knocked Perth Glory out of the Cup, winning a penalty shootout 8-7 after scores were locked at 1-1 at the end of normal time and extra time.

Kempsey preview: Trainer John Shelton expecting strong showing from Hayley's Rocket
Kempsey preview: Trainer John Shelton expecting strong showing from Hayley's Rocket

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • News.com.au

Kempsey preview: Trainer John Shelton expecting strong showing from Hayley's Rocket

THE colours worn by one of the best milers of the 1980s could well be flying high at the final Northern Rivers region meeting of the 2024/25 season. Monday's wearer of Riverdale's red, white and yellow silks is Hayley's Rocket which is housed at Grafton by Kosciuskzo winning trainer John Shelton for close friend Brian Paine whose father, Ross, owned the aforementioned multiple stakes-winner. Bought in New Zealand as a yearling, Riverdale won over $500,000 in prizemoney, much of which as a consequence of his Epsom Handicap-Ampol Stakes (now the Cantala Stakes) double in 1984. Riverdale also won the Warwick Stakes, Gosford Gold Cup as well as a triumphant 'home town' win in the Grafton Cup. Brian Paine and wife Elizabeth together shelled out $14,000 for Hayley's Rocket at the 2023 Magic Millions Yearling Sale. A daughter of Blue Diamond winner Written By out of a mare by Magic Millions 2YO Classic winner Bradbury's Luck, Hayley's Rocket is bred on a rare double-cross of Geoff and Beryl White's former crack colt, Iglesia. The Paine's would have been suitably buoyed by their filly's eye-catching debut in a deep Super Maiden on the recent South Grafton Cup undercard. 'I thought she went pretty good,'' Shelton said. 'She didn't have a lot of luck in the run, she was caught a little bit wide most of the race and she battled on to the line. 'She's got a good gate on Monday. There is a fair bit of depth in that maiden but she should acquit herself quite well.' Shelton meanwhile has taken over the training duties of regally-bred former Goulburn resident Shine Like It Does whose value is well and truly 'INXS' of her current earnings of $52,100 given she is a grand-daughter of Dane Ripper. Shine Like It Does broke her maiden at Moruya on June 27 prior to her closing fourth in a Class 2 mile at Grafton on Ramornie Day when saddled-up by Goulburn trainer Lucy Longmire. 'It was a credible run,'' Shelton said. 'I don't know what it is like on wet ground. 'Lucy left her up here for a couple of runs just to see what happens up here. 'She's done well since she has been here and is coming back from a Class 2 to a Benchmark 58. 'She's got a good rider (Luke Rolls) but she hasn't drawn that well so we'll just play it by ear.' Shelton's other runner on the final Northern Rivers district meeting on the 2024/25 season is three-year-old gelding Sources Link which lines up in the WIN Network Benchmark 58 Handicap (1450m). The son of Team Hawkes' Silver Slipper winner Headwater had his first five runs in Victoria under the care of Cox Plate winning trainer, Greg Eurell. Sources Link turned in a new P.B when making his NSW and Shelton stable debut in a 1000m Country Maiden, also on Ramornie Day. His Monday mission is the Plate over 1250m. 'His run was good the other day, he just got run off his feet,'' Shelton said. 'I thought he might be a little bit fresh but he looks like he wants 1200 or 1400m. 'We bought him as a second-hand horse out of Melbourne and he'll pay his way I think.' Sources Link will be ridden by Shelton's former apprentice, Ben Looker, whose tally of winners for his old boss currently stands at 119 with almost 200 placings.

Sydney FC signs son of former Socceroos star
Sydney FC signs son of former Socceroos star

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

Sydney FC signs son of former Socceroos star

A day after signing Al Hassan Toure, Sydney FC have secured the services of emerging Socceroos midfielder Paul Okon-Engstler from Portuguese powerhouse Benfica. The Sky Blues have signed Okon-Engstler - the son of former Socceroos defender Paul Okon - on a three-year deal. The 20-year-old joins from Portugal's most successful club Benfica, who made the last 16 at the recent FIFA Club World Cup. Okon-Engstler was called into Tony Popovic's Socceroos squad for recent World Cup qualifiers against Japan and Saudi Arabia. Although he is yet to make his international debut, he is considered a rising star and remains in the mix to feature for Australia at the 2026 World Cup. Okon-Engstler progressed through Benfica's academy and featured in the Portuguese second division throughout last season. "I'm really excited to be joining Sydney FC and to start this next chapter of my career back in Australia," Okon-Engstler said. "Sydney FC is a fantastic, forward-thinking football club with a progressive football philosophy and strategy which really drew me in. "It's a special moment for me and my family, I'm coming here to win trophies and fast-track my career and I can't wait to play in front of the Sky Blue members." Okon-Engstler could make his first appearance for Sydney on July 29 when they take on Western United in the Australia Cup. Toure, who started his career at Adelaide United, signed a two-year deal. The 25-year-old returns to Australia from FC Tulsa in the USL Championship after stints in Turkey and France. A day after signing Al Hassan Toure, Sydney FC have secured the services of emerging Socceroos midfielder Paul Okon-Engstler from Portuguese powerhouse Benfica. The Sky Blues have signed Okon-Engstler - the son of former Socceroos defender Paul Okon - on a three-year deal. The 20-year-old joins from Portugal's most successful club Benfica, who made the last 16 at the recent FIFA Club World Cup. Okon-Engstler was called into Tony Popovic's Socceroos squad for recent World Cup qualifiers against Japan and Saudi Arabia. Although he is yet to make his international debut, he is considered a rising star and remains in the mix to feature for Australia at the 2026 World Cup. Okon-Engstler progressed through Benfica's academy and featured in the Portuguese second division throughout last season. "I'm really excited to be joining Sydney FC and to start this next chapter of my career back in Australia," Okon-Engstler said. "Sydney FC is a fantastic, forward-thinking football club with a progressive football philosophy and strategy which really drew me in. "It's a special moment for me and my family, I'm coming here to win trophies and fast-track my career and I can't wait to play in front of the Sky Blue members." Okon-Engstler could make his first appearance for Sydney on July 29 when they take on Western United in the Australia Cup. Toure, who started his career at Adelaide United, signed a two-year deal. The 25-year-old returns to Australia from FC Tulsa in the USL Championship after stints in Turkey and France. A day after signing Al Hassan Toure, Sydney FC have secured the services of emerging Socceroos midfielder Paul Okon-Engstler from Portuguese powerhouse Benfica. The Sky Blues have signed Okon-Engstler - the son of former Socceroos defender Paul Okon - on a three-year deal. The 20-year-old joins from Portugal's most successful club Benfica, who made the last 16 at the recent FIFA Club World Cup. Okon-Engstler was called into Tony Popovic's Socceroos squad for recent World Cup qualifiers against Japan and Saudi Arabia. Although he is yet to make his international debut, he is considered a rising star and remains in the mix to feature for Australia at the 2026 World Cup. Okon-Engstler progressed through Benfica's academy and featured in the Portuguese second division throughout last season. "I'm really excited to be joining Sydney FC and to start this next chapter of my career back in Australia," Okon-Engstler said. "Sydney FC is a fantastic, forward-thinking football club with a progressive football philosophy and strategy which really drew me in. "It's a special moment for me and my family, I'm coming here to win trophies and fast-track my career and I can't wait to play in front of the Sky Blue members." Okon-Engstler could make his first appearance for Sydney on July 29 when they take on Western United in the Australia Cup. Toure, who started his career at Adelaide United, signed a two-year deal. The 25-year-old returns to Australia from FC Tulsa in the USL Championship after stints in Turkey and France.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store