A-League Youth Golden Boot

The A-League Youth Golden Boot, formerly Y-League Golden Boot, is an annual soccer award presented to the leading goalscorer in the Y-League, currently referred to as the Nike Golden Boot for sponsorship purposes.

A-League Youth Golden Boot
Awarded forThe leading goalscorer in a given Y-League season.
Sponsored byNike
CountryAustralia
Presented byFootball Federation Australia
First awarded2009
Last awarded2019
Currently held byMoudi Najjar
Most awardsFrancesco Monterosso (2)

The Y-League was founded in 2008. The number of teams in the league has ranged from seven to ten during its history, and there are currently ten clubs in the league. The award is given to the top-scorer over the regular season (not including the finals series/grand final).

Francesco Monterosso is the only player to have won the award on multiple occasions.

Winners

Key
Player (X) Name of the player and number of times they had won the award at that point (if more than one)
Games The number of Y-League regular season games played by the winner that season
Rate The winner's goals-to-games ratio that regular season
§ Denotes the club were Y-League premiers in the same season
Y-League Golden Boot winners
Season Player Nationality Club Goals Games Rate Ref(s)
2008–09 Francesco Monterosso  Australia Adelaide United Youth 13 18 0.72 [1]
2009–10 Francesco Monterosso (2)  Australia Adelaide United Youth 17 [1]
2010–11 Bernie Ibini-Isei  Australia Central Coast Mariners Academy 12 [1]
2011–12 Mitchell Mallia  Australia Sydney FC Youth 13 [1]
2012–13 Kale Bradbery  Australia Newcastle Jets Youth 13 [1]
2013–14 Anthony Costa  Australia Adelaide United Youth 14 [1]
2014–15 Wade Dekker  Australia Melbourne City Youth§ 9 [1]
2015–16 Joey Katebian  Australia Melbourne Victory Youth 10 [1]
2016–17 Pierce Waring  Australia Melbourne Victory Youth 6 [1]
2017–18 Abraham Majok  Australia Western Sydney Wanderers Youth§ 9 7 0.78 [2]
2018–19 Moudi Najjar  Australia Melbourne City Youth 7 6 0.86 [3]


Awards won by club

Club Total
Adelaide United Youth 3
Melbourne Victory Youth 2
Melbourne City Youth 2
Central Coast Mariners Academy 1
Sydney FC Youth 1
Newcastle Jets Youth 1
Western Sydney Wanderers Youth 1

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.