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2018 OFC Champions League

The 2018 OFC Champions League was the 17th edition of the Oceanian Club Championship, Oceania's premier club football tournament organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) and the 12th season under the current OFC Champions League name.


Tournament details
Qualifying stage:American SamoaGroup stage:Vanuatu (Group A)Tahiti (Group B)New Zealand (Group C)Solomon Islands (Group D)
Qualifying stage:20–26 January 2018Competition proper:10 February – 20 May 2018
Competition proper: 16 Total: 18 (from 11 associations)
Team Wellington (1st title)
Lautoka
40
177 (4.43 per match)
91,636 (2,291 per match)
Angus Kilkolly Emiliano Tade (8 goals each)
Roy Kayara
Eñaut Zubikarai
Auckland City
← 2017 2019 →

The 2018 OFC Champions League was the 17th edition of the Oceanian Club Championship, Oceania's premier club football tournament organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) and the 12th season under the current OFC Champions League name.

In the final, Team Wellington defeated Lautoka 10–3 on aggregate and qualified as the OFC representative at the 2018 FIFA Club World Cup in the United Arab Emirates. Auckland City are the defending champions, having won the last seven titles straight, but they were eliminated in the semi-finals.

For this season, the top two teams of each group (instead of only the group winners) in the group stage advanced to the knockout stage, which included a quarter-final round played as a single match hosted by the group winners.

A total of 18 teams from all 11 OFC member associations enter the competition.

  • The seven developed associations (Fiji, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tahiti, Vanuatu) are awarded two berths each in the group stage.
  • The four developing associations (American Samoa, Cook Islands, Samoa, Tonga) are awarded one berth each in the qualifying stage, with the winners and runners-up advancing to the group stage.
AssociationTeamQualifying method
FijiLautoka2017 Fiji Premier League champions
Ba2017 Fiji Premier League runners-up
New CaledoniaMagenta2016 New Caledonia Super Ligue champions
Lössi2016 New Caledonia Super Ligue runners-up
New ZealandTeam Wellington2016–17 New Zealand Football Championship finals series champions
Auckland City2016–17 New Zealand Football Championship regular season premiers
Papua New GuineaToti City2017 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League regular season premiers
Madang2017 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League regular season runners-up
Solomon IslandsSolomon Warriors2017–18 Solomon Islands S-League champions
Marist2017–18 Solomon Islands S-League runners-up
TahitiDragon2016–17 Tahiti Ligue 1 champions
Vénus2016–17 Tahiti Ligue 1 runners-up
VanuatuNalkutan2016–17 VFF National Super League grand final champions
Erakor Golden Star2016–17 VFF National Super League grand final runners-up
AssociationTeamQualifying method
American SamoaPago Youth2016 FFAS Senior League champions
Cook IslandsTupapa Maraerenga2017 Cook Islands Round Cup champions
SamoaLupe o le Soaga2017 Samoa National League champions
TongaVeitongo2017 Tonga Major League champions

The schedule of the competition is as follows.

StageDraw dateMatch dates
Qualifying stage15 September 2017(Auckland, New Zealand)20–26 January 2018
Group stage.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}
Group A: 10–16 February 2018
Group B: 11–17 February 2018
Group C: 25 February – 3 March 2018
Group D: 24 February – 2 March 2018
Quarter-finals5 March 2018(Auckland, New Zealand)7–8 April 2018
Semi-finalsFirst leg: 22 April 2018
Second leg: 29 April 2018
FinalFirst leg: 13 May 2018
Second leg: 20 May 2018

The draw for the qualifying stage was held on 15 September 2017 at the OFC Headquarters in Auckland, New Zealand. The champions of the four developing associations were drawn from Pot A into each of the four positions 1–4 to determine the fixtures. The four teams in the qualifying stage played each other on a round-robin basis at a centralised venue. The winners and runners-up advanced to the group stage to join the 14 direct entrants. Matches were played between 20 and 26 January 2018 in Pago Pago, American Samoa.

The draw for the group stage was held on 15 September 2017 at the OFC Headquarters in Auckland, New Zealand. The 16 teams (14 teams entering the group stage and two teams advancing from the qualifying stage) were drawn into four groups of four, with each group containing two teams from Pot B (which were drawn into positions 1–2 to determine the fixtures) and two teams from Pot C (which were drawn into positions 3–4 to determine the fixtures). Teams from the same association, as well as the two teams advancing from the qualifying stage, could not be drawn into the same group. The teams were seeded based on the following:

  • Pot B contained the champions of the seven developed associations, and the runners-up of New Zealand, by virtue of having the best second team in the 2017 OFC Champions League.
  • Pot C contained the runners-up of the six developed associations apart from New Zealand, and the two teams advancing from the qualifying stage, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw.

The four teams in each group played each other on a round-robin basis at a centralised venue. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the quarter-finals of the knockout stage. The hosts of each group were announced by OFC on 31 October 2017.

  • Group A matches were played between 10 and 16 February 2018 in Port Vila, Vanuatu.
  • Group B matches were played between 11 and 17 February 2018 in Pirae, Tahiti.
  • Group C matches were played between 25 February – 3 March 2018 in Auckland, New Zealand.
  • Group D matches were played between 24 February – 2 March 2018 in Honiara, Solomon Islands.

The eight teams in the knockout stage played on a single-elimination basis. In the quarter-finals, each tie was played as a single match, while in the semi-finals and final, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis.

The bracket was decided after the draw for the knockout stage (quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final) was held on 5 March 2018 at the OFC Headquarters in Auckland, New Zealand.

In the quarter-finals, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group (teams from same group cannot play each other), with the group winners hosting the match, and the matchups decided by draw.

Team 1ScoreTeam 2
Team Wellington11–0Toti City
Auckland City2–0Solomon Warriors
Dragon1–2Lautoka
Nalkutan1–2Marist

In the semi-finals, the four quarter-final winners played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw.

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Lautoka2–1Marist1–11–0
Team Wellington2–2 (a)Auckland City0–02–2

In the final, the two semi-final winners played each other, with the order of legs decided by draw.

Team Wellington won 10–3 on aggregate.

The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.

AwardPlayerTeam
Roy KayaraTeam Wellington
Angus KilkollyTeam Wellington
Eñaut ZubikaraiAuckland City
Auckland City

Note: Although Angus Kilkolly and Emiliano Tade both scored eight goals in the competition, Kilkolly won the Golden Boot as he played less minutes than Tade.

  • 2018 FIFA Club World Cup

  • OFC Champions League 2018, oceaniafootball.com

    • News > 2018 OFC Champions League Archived 2020-10-29 at the Wayback Machine, oceaniafootball.com
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