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Posted: 2022-10-04 02:22:29

Saturday's Australia Cup final was meant to be a celebration of everything that makes Australian football unique: its cultural diversity, its storied community clubs, its passionate fan groups, its reflection of the nation's vibrant and intertwined migrant history.

Framed in the lead-up as a meeting between the worlds of 'old soccer' and 'new football', the game pitted Sydney United 58 – a former National Soccer League powerhouse that was founded by Croatian immigrants in 1958 and became known for developing some of Australia's best male players like Graham Arnold, Robbie Slater, Tony Popovic, Mile Jedinak and Zeljko Kalac – against Macarthur FC, a club founded two years ago as an A-Leagues expansion franchise and which is still laying down its cultural and historical roots.

Football players celebrating on the field.
Ante Milicic (left) and Tony Popovic (right) as teammates for Sydney United in the National Soccer League.(Supplied: Sydney United FC)

The competitive context of the game was also noteworthy. Inspired by the English FA Cup, this year's Australia Cup saw more than 700 clubs from every state and territory play a series of knock-out games against one another before the A-League Men clubs were introduced in the final stages.

As per the original competition's romantic possibilities, some of the semi-professional sides – including SU58 – triumphed over their fully-professional rivals, thanks in part to the growing standards of the second-tier clubs and the timing of the cup to coincide with NPL finals, where part-time players are at their fittest, while the ALM pros are still in pre-season.

But what started as an opportunity to celebrate the game's unique historical and sporting traits turned into a reminder that the fault-lines that separate 'old soccer' from 'new football' remain as deep and dark as ever.

The rumbles started even before the opening whistle. According to multiple fans in attendance at Parramatta Stadium, as well as those watching the television broadcast, the traditional Welcome To Country ceremony and national anthem were drowned out by whistles, songs, and alleged boos from SU58 fans.

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