Australian fantasy football in 2026

By adriandon / Roar Rookie

Here we are, the start of December 2026, and what a month of football we have ahead of us to finish a great year.

It all started in March, and after 30 rounds for the A-League and 26 for the B-League, we had tight league finals last weekend.

Western Sydney Wanderers claimed the A-League premiership in the last round during the simultaneous Saturday night matches. South Melbourne won the B-League to secure automatic promotion, and Central Coast was confirmed for automatic relegation after finishing the A-League in 16th position.

In June we paused for the World Cup in North America and were proud of Australia’s Round of 16 finish and New Zealand’s respectable group stage performances.

Now we have 15 big matches to end 2026. Here is a guide to this month’s festival of football:

Friday, 4 December, at 7:30pm
The FFA Cup final between Adelaide United and Melbourne Victory is sold out at Adelaide’s new CBD stadium, which has provided large and boisterous crowds all season. The cup this year has once again been a huge drawcard for the local game, with the pick of the upsets being the Moreland Zebras win over Sydney FC in the Round of 16 back in May. Will the final see Johnny Warren Medallist Tom Rogic claim silverware in his first season back at Melbourne?

(AAP Image/David Mariuz)

Saturday, 5 December, at 7:30pm
The first leg of this B-League promotion play-off semi-final sees the fifth-placed Wollongong Wolves hosting the second-placed Auckland City. Can Scott Chipperfield’s men continue their recent run of good form against New Zealand opposition?

Sunday, 6 December, at 6pm
The first leg of this promotion play-off semi-final sees the fourth-placed Melbourne Knights hosting third-placed Tasmania. Can the young Viduka brothers find a way to get the Knights off to a strong start in this play-off?

Wednesday, 9 December, at 7:30pm
The first leg of the A-League relegation play-off has the 15th-placed Canberra hosting the 14th-placed Newcastle. Will cards be a factor again, like in the fiery clash earlier in the season between these rivals?

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Thursday, 10 December, at 7:30pm
The first quarter-final of the A-League championship series – formerly known as the ‘finals’ – sees premiers Wanderers host eighth-placed Western United. Can United’s Golden Boot winner Valentino Yuel lift his team against the premiers?

Friday, 11 December, at 7:30pm
The second quarter-final sees fourth-placed Adelaide host fifth-placed Sydney. How will the Adelaide crowd react to the return of Al Hassan Toure after Sydney poached him in the off-season?

Saturday, 12 December, at 5pm and 8pm
The third and fourth quarter-finals see second-placed Victory host seventh-placed Wellington followed by third-placed Brisbane Roar hosting sixth-placed Perth Glory. With some of the most attacking teams in action, will this Saturday night double-header be a goal-fest?

(Gene Sweeney Jr/Getty Images)

Sunday, 13 December, at 3pm and 6pm
The promotion play-off semi-final second legs take place between Auckland and Wollongong and Tasmania and Knights. Will rainy conditions once again help home teams Auckland and Tasmania this season and get them to next week’s promotion play-off final?

Thursday, 17 December, 7:30pm
It’s D-Day when Newcastle hosts Canberra in the second leg of the A-League relegation play-off. Can Ernie Merrick’s Canberra topple his former side?

Friday, 18 December, 7:30pm
The A-League championship first semi-final will be between the winners of Wanderers-Western and Adelaide-Sydney. Will we see a Sydney derby at Stadium Australia that breaks the all-time attendance record?

Saturday, 19 December, at 7:30pm
The second semi-final will be between the winners of Victory-Wellington and Brisbane-Perth. Can Perth do the unthinkable from sixth again?

Sunday, 20 December, at 6pm
If the B-League promotion play-off final is half as thrilling as last year’s match, we are in for a Christmas treat. When the winners of Auckland-Wollongong and Tasmania-Knights battle it out at the home of the highest-placed team, will penalties be the promotion decider again?

Saturday, 26 December, at 7.30pm
The A-League championship final on Boxing Day evening has become one of the highlights of the annual sporting calendar not only in Australia and New Zealand but also for the growing fan-base in Asia. Some big clubs are in contention this season, so could last year’s ratings bonanza be surpassed?

All games will be live on Optus Sport, with SBS also showing some of the games (check your local guides). It promises to be a fantastic conclusion to a brilliant 2026!

The Crowd Says:

2020-05-16T00:25:29+00:00

lesterlike

Roar Rookie


God help us if we manage to go so far as to get a 2nd tier and Pro/Rel but are still stuck with the archaic obsession of appeasing non football crowds by having finals. Not to mention I’d hope we would have kicked out the parasitic NZ teams well before then.

2020-05-15T01:43:25+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


Today it feels like a fantasy to think that the world will still exist in 2026. Yesterday the Chinese threatened to cut off Australia's iron ore exports and the AWU responded saying that Australia should take the lead in starting a trade equivalent of NATO to stand up to the Chinese. In today's headlines, Trump has threatened to “cut off the whole relationship” with China and the Chinese have responded by threatening to invade Taiwan. That could start WW3. Anything to do with football in Asia and Chinese investment will need a serious rethink.

2020-05-15T00:07:04+00:00

At work

Roar Rookie


Awesome stuff, I like the looks of it. All except for culminating in a GF on boxing day, the season should be wrapped up a little earlier IMO.

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