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changes to capital football

Didnt suncoast fire play in victoria for a bit?

They should take all disgruntled clubs from other states and become a national comp :D
 
 
Finally - other clubs beginning to speak publicly on the review as a whole. Coincidentally, the only club I've seen with people actively defending the review across these kinds of posts, is Brindabella.




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'I think it's ridiculous': Mayor weighs into the fight dividing Canberra soccer and impact on son

Melanie Dinjaski

By Melanie Dinjaski
Updated August 27 2025 - 5:55pm, first published 5:27pm


Capital Football has reiterated the controversial changes proposed in its NPL review will go ahead as planned, as it faces growing criticism from the soccer community.

The peak soccer body in the region defended the review and its processes implementing wide-ranging changes to the NPL landscape which has now drawn the ire of Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor, Kenrick Winchester, who has escalated Monaro Panthers' protest by taking the issue to NSW, ACT and federal ministers.

"Something needs to happen here - this decision can't stand," Winchester told The Canberra Times, with his own son impacted by the Panthers being one of four clubs axed from the NPL Boys competitions in 2026.

"Our state and federal members are very well aware of it and watching with a keen interest."
Many club representatives that have reached out to this masthead since the NPL review report was officially released in May have had various concerns about the review.

Some clubs felt its implementation had been too hasty, and there are other concerns about the review's transparency of process, potential conflicts of interest, inconsistencies in the recommendations, how the changes impacts shared facilities use, and there is a perception that Capital Football has lacked the necessary support and communication.

In response to these criticisms that are growing louder within the community, Capital Football doubled down on the review's findings and remain committed to continuing planned changes for 2026.

The sporting body said a review was commissioned in 2024 to evaluate the current NPL structure, and it was last year potential changes were initially flagged for this season.

After clubs argued that would not be enough time for implementation, Capital Football said "the release of the report was delayed" until this year, "ensuring that clubs had a clear runway to prepare for the 2026 season instead".

"Capital Football acknowledges the feedback received from clubs regarding the implementation of the NPL review report's recommendations," the body said in a statement.

Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor Kenrick Winchester and his son Harry. Picture by Gary Ramage

Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor Kenrick Winchester and his son Harry. Picture by Gary Ramage

"Capital Football's role is to govern and manage the game in the best interests of football in our region. While we understand some clubs are unhappy with aspects of the review and its implementation, our responsibility is to take a broader, long-term view.

"The objective is to strengthen our competition and ensure clubs are able to place greater focus on developing junior pathways, which is vital for the future of the game.

"We have been engaging with clubs throughout this process. Club presidents were involved and briefed on the draft recommendations in August 2024 and again in February 2025.



"We recognise there may be communication challenges within some club organisations, but we are confident that the consultation process was thorough and inclusive.

"Capital Football remains committed to supporting clubs during this transition, continuing open dialogue, and working together to achieve a stronger and more sustainable competition for the benefit of the entire football community."
Harry, 13, son of Kenrick Winchester. Picture by Gary Ramage

Harry, 13, son of Kenrick Winchester. Picture by Gary Ramage

Winchester's son was one of a group of Panthers juniors on track to make the jump from juniors to NPL Boys level next season, but is now facing a tough fork in the road.

"He's caught up in this, potentially having to make a decision whether he sticks with Monaro, plays for his school, or trials for another NPL club. He shouldn't have to make that decision," the mayor said.

"All the kids have come through together and this is likely to send them in different directions. I think it's ridiculous.

"You've got a club that wants to play at the top level and has all the facilities, coaching, the infrastructure, and is one of the only clubs that has a pathway from four-year-olds through to first grade.

"But it's been taken away from them because someone's come up with a decision saying that the competition should have 10 clubs, with no scientific backing behind it.

"Our kids are not going to have the opportunity to play at the highest level."

Related: READ THE FULL CAPITAL FOOTBALL NPL REVIEW REPORT HERE

South Jerrabomberra Sporting Complex is where juniors at Monaro currently play, but with the Panthers omitted from the NPL Boys level, that venue - that was a $36 million project - will not able to be used at the same capacity by the broader NPL soccer community.

Winchester reached out to ACT Minister for Sport Yvette Berry and wrote to NSW Minister for Sport Steve Kamper.



It comes as another group of parents also took their issues about the NPL review report to Capital Football chief executive Samantha Farrow, and the ACT government, and requested a meeting.

Speaking on behalf of the group, Erin, whose child plays in in NPL Boys for West Canberra Wanderers, felt blindsided by the review, describing it in a letter to the aforementioned parties as "inconsistent, lacking in transparency, and highly destabilising."
West Canberra Wanderers are fighting for their NPL Boys. Picture by Sitthixay Ditthavong

West Canberra Wanderers are fighting for their NPL Boys. Picture by Sitthixay Ditthavong

She claimed the first rumblings of changes among Canberra region clubs last year was the starting point to frustration that has since snowballed when the review was finally made public in May.



"The uncertainty around NPL status in late 2024 forced many families at West Canberra to move clubs in search of clarity, which weakened squads in older age groups and placed excessive pressure on our younger teams from the outset of the 2025 season," she wrote.

"This is neither sustainable nor fair, and no single team should be left carrying the burden of a club's NPL viability as a result of delayed decision and communication from our governing body.

"A more constructive approach would have been a phased rollout over two to three seasons."

From the parents' perspective, Erin was hopeful Capital Football would at least pause the review, or scrap it altogether and start again "in a proper manner", believing that clubs have not had enough to time to appeal the decisions.

"People aren't saying there isn't a need for reform, but they're saying there needs to be a process that clubs can undertake in a fair manner," Erin told The Canberra Times.

"It seems the way that Capital Football have done their reviews, they've kind of done it in this isolated space.

"They gave people a month, a very short period of time, to submit exemption requests about how they were going to meet a lot of criteria by the following year. Many clubs need more time to come up with a plan. From a business perspective it's unreasonable.


"The reason why West Canberra is very different than some other clubs is that if our boys aren't in the NPL, the club is pretty much decimated.

"It's not fair and there's a lot of parents and players upset."

On Monday, the Panthers shared a petition on its social media accounts, similarly calling for more time from Capital Football before implementing review changes.

Melanie Dinjaski

Melanie Dinjaski

Sports Reporter

Melanie Dinjaski is an experienced sports journalist at the Canberra Times with a genuine love of all sports. She's covered every code from NRL to NFL. Melanie aims to bring Canberrans all the sports news they need to know. If you have a story worth sharing, get in touch!



All Comments​

Comment by Luke Santolin.​

All of a sudden, Capital Football is discussing the timeline of the review with the media and trying to sneak in details about the 'consultation' that took place with clubs.

They even have the gall to now blame the clubs for their internal communication not being great 😂

Meanwhile, there is a letter written and signed by 12 ACT Club Presidents saying that 'NO MEANINGFUL CONSULTATION' ever took place which was not circulated around the Capital Football board for more than 21 days.

And they want to talk to us about internal communication.

The hypocrisy and disdain shown by this board to the Football Community is employed to govern is almost criminal in nature. But I better stop speaking

This isn't controversial. This is a massacre. And somehow nobody is doing anything to stop it

Comment by Belinda Eidum.​

I'm grateful to The Canberra Times for highlighting this important local issue, which affects many families and communities across the region. At a time when increasing participation in sport should be a shared goal, it's deeply concerning to see decisions being made by the sport's governing body that may instead discourage involvement.

For many players and their families, the recent restructuring decisions by Capital Football could force an uncomfortable choice: switch clubs to remain in a competitive environment, drop to a lower tier, or leave the sport entirely. Not all players have the means to travel further afield for training, and clubs that are removed from the NPL competition risk losing players, sponsors, and the ability to attract new talent — potentially threatening their very existence.

The implementation of the review feels like a disservice to the players, families, and countless volunteers who dedicate time and energy to supporting local football.

Moreover, Capital Football's claim that the review is being implemented as planned is questionable. The decision to allow Wagga Wagga to remain in NPLB — contrary to the original recommendations — has resulted in the removal of four local clubs from the competition instead of three, undermining confidence in the process and its fairness.

In light of the lack of genuine consultation with those most affected, it seems only reasonable to pause the rollout. Clubs and communities need adequate time and support to prepare for such significant changes.

We all want to see football in our region thrive. But that will only happen if Capital Football commits to working collaboratively and transparently with clubs and the broader community, ensuring that reforms truly serve the best interests of the sport.
 

'I think it's ridiculous': Mayor weighs into the fight dividing Canberra soccer and impact on son

Melanie Dinjaski

By Melanie Dinjaski
Updated August 27 2025 - 5:55pm, first published 5:27pm


Capital Football has reiterated the controversial changes proposed in its NPL review will go ahead as planned, as it faces growing criticism from the soccer community.

The peak soccer body in the region defended the review and its processes implementing wide-ranging changes to the NPL landscape which has now drawn the ire of Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor, Kenrick Winchester, who has escalated Monaro Panthers' protest by taking the issue to NSW, ACT and federal ministers.

"Something needs to happen here - this decision can't stand," Winchester told The Canberra Times, with his own son impacted by the Panthers being one of four clubs axed from the NPL Boys competitions in 2026.

"Our state and federal members are very well aware of it and watching with a keen interest."
Many club representatives that have reached out to this masthead since the NPL review report was officially released in May have had various concerns about the review.

Some clubs felt its implementation had been too hasty, and there are other concerns about the review's transparency of process, potential conflicts of interest, inconsistencies in the recommendations, how the changes impacts shared facilities use, and there is a perception that Capital Football has lacked the necessary support and communication.

In response to these criticisms that are growing louder within the community, Capital Football doubled down on the review's findings and remain committed to continuing planned changes for 2026.

The sporting body said a review was commissioned in 2024 to evaluate the current NPL structure, and it was last year potential changes were initially flagged for this season.

After clubs argued that would not be enough time for implementation, Capital Football said "the release of the report was delayed" until this year, "ensuring that clubs had a clear runway to prepare for the 2026 season instead".

"Capital Football acknowledges the feedback received from clubs regarding the implementation of the NPL review report's recommendations," the body said in a statement.

Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor Kenrick Winchester and his son Harry. Picture by Gary Ramage

Queanbeyan-Palerang Council mayor Kenrick Winchester and his son Harry. Picture by Gary Ramage

"Capital Football's role is to govern and manage the game in the best interests of football in our region. While we understand some clubs are unhappy with aspects of the review and its implementation, our responsibility is to take a broader, long-term view.

"The objective is to strengthen our competition and ensure clubs are able to place greater focus on developing junior pathways, which is vital for the future of the game.

"We have been engaging with clubs throughout this process. Club presidents were involved and briefed on the draft recommendations in August 2024 and again in February 2025.



"We recognise there may be communication challenges within some club organisations, but we are confident that the consultation process was thorough and inclusive.

"Capital Football remains committed to supporting clubs during this transition, continuing open dialogue, and working together to achieve a stronger and more sustainable competition for the benefit of the entire football community."
Harry, 13, son of Kenrick Winchester. Picture by Gary Ramage

Harry, 13, son of Kenrick Winchester. Picture by Gary Ramage

Winchester's son was one of a group of Panthers juniors on track to make the jump from juniors to NPL Boys level next season, but is now facing a tough fork in the road.

"He's caught up in this, potentially having to make a decision whether he sticks with Monaro, plays for his school, or trials for another NPL club. He shouldn't have to make that decision," the mayor said.

"All the kids have come through together and this is likely to send them in different directions. I think it's ridiculous.

"You've got a club that wants to play at the top level and has all the facilities, coaching, the infrastructure, and is one of the only clubs that has a pathway from four-year-olds through to first grade.

"But it's been taken away from them because someone's come up with a decision saying that the competition should have 10 clubs, with no scientific backing behind it.

"Our kids are not going to have the opportunity to play at the highest level."

Related: READ THE FULL CAPITAL FOOTBALL NPL REVIEW REPORT HERE

South Jerrabomberra Sporting Complex is where juniors at Monaro currently play, but with the Panthers omitted from the NPL Boys level, that venue - that was a $36 million project - will not able to be used at the same capacity by the broader NPL soccer community.

Winchester reached out to ACT Minister for Sport Yvette Berry and wrote to NSW Minister for Sport Steve Kamper.



It comes as another group of parents also took their issues about the NPL review report to Capital Football chief executive Samantha Farrow, and the ACT government, and requested a meeting.

Speaking on behalf of the group, Erin, whose child plays in in NPL Boys for West Canberra Wanderers, felt blindsided by the review, describing it in a letter to the aforementioned parties as "inconsistent, lacking in transparency, and highly destabilising."
West Canberra Wanderers are fighting for their NPL Boys. Picture by Sitthixay Ditthavong

West Canberra Wanderers are fighting for their NPL Boys. Picture by Sitthixay Ditthavong

She claimed the first rumblings of changes among Canberra region clubs last year was the starting point to frustration that has since snowballed when the review was finally made public in May.



"The uncertainty around NPL status in late 2024 forced many families at West Canberra to move clubs in search of clarity, which weakened squads in older age groups and placed excessive pressure on our younger teams from the outset of the 2025 season," she wrote.

"This is neither sustainable nor fair, and no single team should be left carrying the burden of a club's NPL viability as a result of delayed decision and communication from our governing body.

"A more constructive approach would have been a phased rollout over two to three seasons."

From the parents' perspective, Erin was hopeful Capital Football would at least pause the review, or scrap it altogether and start again "in a proper manner", believing that clubs have not had enough to time to appeal the decisions.

"People aren't saying there isn't a need for reform, but they're saying there needs to be a process that clubs can undertake in a fair manner," Erin told The Canberra Times.

"It seems the way that Capital Football have done their reviews, they've kind of done it in this isolated space.

"They gave people a month, a very short period of time, to submit exemption requests about how they were going to meet a lot of criteria by the following year. Many clubs need more time to come up with a plan. From a business perspective it's unreasonable.


"The reason why West Canberra is very different than some other clubs is that if our boys aren't in the NPL, the club is pretty much decimated.

"It's not fair and there's a lot of parents and players upset."

On Monday, the Panthers shared a petition on its social media accounts, similarly calling for more time from Capital Football before implementing review changes.

Melanie Dinjaski

Melanie Dinjaski

Sports Reporter

Melanie Dinjaski is an experienced sports journalist at the Canberra Times with a genuine love of all sports. She's covered every code from NRL to NFL. Melanie aims to bring Canberrans all the sports news they need to know. If you have a story worth sharing, get in touch!



All Comments​

Comment by Luke Santolin.​

All of a sudden, Capital Football is discussing the timeline of the review with the media and trying to sneak in details about the 'consultation' that took place with clubs.

They even have the gall to now blame the clubs for their internal communication not being great 😂

Meanwhile, there is a letter written and signed by 12 ACT Club Presidents saying that 'NO MEANINGFUL CONSULTATION' ever took place which was not circulated around the Capital Football board for more than 21 days.

And they want to talk to us about internal communication.

The hypocrisy and disdain shown by this board to the Football Community is employed to govern is almost criminal in nature. But I better stop speaking

This isn't controversial. This is a massacre. And somehow nobody is doing anything to stop it

Comment by Belinda Eidum.​

I'm grateful to The Canberra Times for highlighting this important local issue, which affects many families and communities across the region. At a time when increasing participation in sport should be a shared goal, it's deeply concerning to see decisions being made by the sport's governing body that may instead discourage involvement.

For many players and their families, the recent restructuring decisions by Capital Football could force an uncomfortable choice: switch clubs to remain in a competitive environment, drop to a lower tier, or leave the sport entirely. Not all players have the means to travel further afield for training, and clubs that are removed from the NPL competition risk losing players, sponsors, and the ability to attract new talent — potentially threatening their very existence.

The implementation of the review feels like a disservice to the players, families, and countless volunteers who dedicate time and energy to supporting local football.

Moreover, Capital Football's claim that the review is being implemented as planned is questionable. The decision to allow Wagga Wagga to remain in NPLB — contrary to the original recommendations — has resulted in the removal of four local clubs from the competition instead of three, undermining confidence in the process and its fairness.

In light of the lack of genuine consultation with those most affected, it seems only reasonable to pause the rollout. Clubs and communities need adequate time and support to prepare for such significant changes.

We all want to see football in our region thrive. But that will only happen if Capital Football commits to working collaboratively and transparently with clubs and the broader community, ensuring that reforms truly serve the best interests of the sport.


Can you give me tldr version or should I just not worry about it?

Also, are you still reffing?

Edit: Nevermind. Had a skim read of the page before and I'm roughly up to speed.

Wagga and Griffith booted. Teams not happy.
 
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Well.. I guess that's the result of the 'formal investigation'



Definitely seems to be a lot of this festering though

Glad the governing body is ignoring minor issues like kicking a club out of the league and focusing on more important stuff like shutting them up
 
Can you give me tldr version or should I just not worry about it?

Also, are you still reffing?

Edit: Nevermind. Had a skim read of the page before and I'm roughly up to speed.

Wagga and Griffith booted. Teams not happy.
TLDR:
  • Review committee formed by governing body
  • Clubs not consulted properly upon this review (according to sources), yet Capital Football maintains that there was
  • One source includes an email of receipt of concerns from 12 of 16 NPL/CPL clubs - with receipt only acknowledged the evening after the review findings were confirmed (28 days after it was initally sent)
  • Committee Review panel has at least one direct conflict of interest that was not tabled
  • Major aspects of the review findings include:
    • Griffith and Wagga to be removed, primarily due to travel issues with youth teams, and apparent lack of resources (eg, Referees) in these areas - these seemed to be the only two direct concerns listed in the review.
    • Removal of 4 clubs from the NPL Boys competition, and 1 club from the NPL Girls competitions - to line up total amount of clubs with first grade, despite the review saying that more games are beneficial for younger teams, and the season still having the same amount of rounds as would be used as a 14 team home and away season. This point is the main piece of that particular article, as Monaro Panthers (one of the few clubs in Canberra/Queanbeyan that actually has a full pathway from U5s/U6s all the way up to Masters) will be one of the clubs cut.
Also - no, currently not reffing, have too much of a punza for it at the moment (since Capital Football tend to sometimes put me on games higher than I'm licenced, and I don't want to ruin the game by being too unfit to keep up), and also have a bit of a family situation taking up a lot of time this season (and into next perhaps, given the circumstances). But, given my public stance against Capital Football on this, I doubt I'll be welcomed back at this stage.
 
Glad the governing body is ignoring minor issues like kicking a club out of the league and focusing on more important stuff like shutting them up
I'm hoping I can make time this weekend to head to a game since it's the final round (probably Monaro's given their opposition to the review) with some sort of protest on that exact issue. That's the bit that irritates me.
 
Big final match this weekend for relegation (in a normal world), Yoogali vs O'Connor. A draw is enough for Yoogali to stick it up Capital Football.
 
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Big final match this weekend for regulation (in a normal world), Yoogali vs O'Connor. A draw is enough for Yoogali to stick it up Capital Football.
Yep - such a shame their review champions that promotion/relegation brings more importance to more games at the end of the season - and this would have been of the ultimate importance. Another thing on the big giant list of contradictions the review has made that I need to add.
 

Canberra soccer controversy: two clubs investigate mega merger for future

Melanie Dinjaski

By Melanie Dinjaski
Updated August 26 2025 - 10:20am, first published August 25 2025 - 3:31pm


Two of Canberra's biggest soccer clubs have been in discussions over a proposal for a merger, while the flow-on effects of Capital Football's controversial NPL overhaul continue to be felt at all levels in the region.

The Canberra Times can reveal that a proposal was put forward for Canberra Olympic FC and Woden Valley Soccer Club to merge.

The benefit for Woden Valley would be tapping into the elite pathways that Olympic offers across NPL boys, girls, men and women competitions, giving junior players opportunities in the NPL that is doesn't currently have, as well as benefitting from a pooling of other club resources such as coaching, administration and facility use.

Meanwhile, Olympic would be able to significantly expand its junior player cohort with Woden Valley covering a large catchment area and having a well-established community level presence. It's estimated Woden Valley has approximately 2000 juniors currently.

There are also potential commercial benefits for both clubs covering such a wide geographical area and getting a significant player numbers boost. Both clubs share the Hellenic Club as a sponsor.

It remains unclear exactly which club brought the proposal to the table, but it is understood there has been at least one meeting between senior representatives from each club two weeks ago. Woden Valley's committee has not yet been formally presented with the proposal.

"Any considerations with respect to this issue are a matter for the Woden Valley Soccer Club committee," a Woden Valley spokesperson said.
Woden Valley Soccer Club. Picture by Karleen Minney

Woden Valley Soccer Club. Picture by Karleen Minney

The value of clubs established in the NPL system has never been greater since Capital Football announced in May its overhaul for next season following a review report that sent shockwaves through the soccer community in the region.


The review led to the men's Capital Premier League competition - a grade below NPL Men - being scrapped for next season, with promotion and relegation going forward to involve the lower level, Community League 1, as long as clubs declare their interest and meet eligibility for NPL promotion.

The top NPL men's competition was also expanded from eight to 10 teams to play 18 rounds, with a six-team finals series over three weeks and a new pre-season competition against Illawarra Premier League sides.

All Riverina clubs were dropped from Capital Football competitions next year, which impacted Yoogali Soccer Club's NPL men's teams and Wagga City Wanderers' CPL and NPL boys teams.

The latter's NPL boys contingent was reinstated for 2026 following an appeal to Capital Football as long as they are not relegated which would prompt further review, while Yoogali SC's NPL men exclusion was upheld with the sporting body arguing the club was not "compliant" in regards to demonstrating its youth development pathway.

With Yoogali SC punted from NPL, at the end of the 2025 CPL season, the top three men's teams on the ladder that meet the eligibility criteria are to be promoted to the NPL next year. As it currently stands, that would be Belconnen United, Canberra Olympic and Brindabella Blues.

Changes recommended in the Capital Football review for NPL Boys and Girls have also led to frustration from clubs.

Left in limbo amid a lack of consultation and communication from Capital Football, Monaro Panthers went public with their outrage over the NPL Boys overhaul.

On Monday, the Panthers shared a petition on its social media accounts, calling for Capital Football to give all clubs more time before implementing the changes outlined in the NPL review report.

Monaro was also among the "coalition of clubs" that wrote a joint letter to Capital Football in early July, along with Canberra Croatia, Queanbeyan City, White Eagles FC, Juventus FC, Tigers FC, O'Connor Knights, Belconnen United, Wagga City Wanderers, Yoogali FC, and ANU FC.

Though each club had various concerns, they all banded together to request further dialogue with Capital Football and asked for a pause on implementing the review's recommendations next year.

The Panthers are concerned that its current complete pathway offered from MiniRoos to the NPL and Masters will now become broken. The club has been excluded from playing in NPL Boys grades next year with teams reduced from 14 to 10.

The flow-on effect of an incomplete elite pathway is that junior players will leave to rival clubs that do offer an NPL Boys program. That causes a drain on Monaro's junior numbers, and also puts in jeopardy the Panthers' ability to fulfil Capital Football's criteria for its NPL Men team that requires clubs to fill all age grades at junior level.

Currently Monaro's elite girls program go through Bella Monaro's NPL Girls pathway as part of a partnership.

"Our boys pathway will be broken and disjointed," Monaro committee member, Tina Brandt, said.

"Wagga got an exemption which made us feel that Capital Football can change the decision."

Brandt met with Capital Football chief executive Samantha Farrow to discuss the review and has also put in a request for an audience with the board.

Monaro did not apply for an exemption to the Capital Football review as it did not expect the implementation of recommendations to happen so fast.

"My key message to [Farrow] was I just wanted more time," Brandt said.

"I feel the review should have had a three-year grace period as minimum... but I would take one more year.
Monaro Panthers junior girls players at the club's female-friendly change rooms at Riverside Stadium. Picture by Gary Ramage

Monaro Panthers junior girls players at the club's female-friendly change rooms at Riverside Stadium. Picture by Gary Ramage

"It's not just us. We have to fight our own fight, but we have the interest of the competition at heart.

"There's a sentiment from families that they have invested in Monaro for a long time, and now that's for nothing. If you're playing under-13s this year, and you're hoping to come into our NPL Boys under-14s next year, it won't be there.

"They'll go to another NPL club which is understandable, older kids may go to another sport or they might play division one in the Junior League, which is a lower level of competition, a less intense program, and there's no trials. It's not the same as the NPL."
Monaro Panthers' NPL men's team in action. Picture by Keegan Carroll

Monaro Panthers' NPL men's team in action. Picture by Keegan Carroll

Brandt also pointed out the superior playing fields and infrastructure that Monaro Panthers offers to Capital Football's NPL Boys competitions will be lost, with the club's location over the ACT border allowing for additional investment from NSW government and Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional Council.

"I think Capital Football haven't considered that aspect. I'm not getting the sentiment that they care," Brandt said.

"The benefit that quality grounds is it makes for improved play and training, which makes better players and it means less injuries."

As a result of their NPL Boys omission the Panthers committee is investigating its potential options for elite junior pathways playing under Football NSW rather than Capital Football.

An increased presence of the club's entire community is expected at this Saturday's Monaro Panthers NPL men's game at Riverside Stadium to "send a message about the importance of grassroots sports".

"We've only got a couple of weeks left of a fight," Brandt said.
 
By the way - It has come to my attention from some posts online, as well as via some contact directly with some of the affected clubs (or at least I'm reading between the lines), that there are still appeals and discussion in progress from some of the Canberra clubs on pausing the review implementation until after next season.
 
Absolutely fuming today I had to write a song after this news.

May I remind you that Canberra Juventus - one of Canberra's most successful senior men's clubs through the history of Capital Football/ACT Soccer Federation - were denied an exemption under the NPL Review of 2025, with this being the public reasoning:

Canberra Juventus FC – Junior Pathway Exemption Denied
Canberra Juventus’ request for a junior pathway exemption has been denied. The Board expressed concern over the feasibility of establishing a full junior pathway within a 12-month timeframe. The club is encouraged to plan for future NPL promotion by developing its youth structure.

This evening, Canberra Juventus has announced the following (which yes, isn't a full pathway yet, but already has made a mockery of the NPL Review exemption announcements in my opinion):


Oh, Capital Football's bureaucracy...
 
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