The club was established as Ajax Soccer Club in 1955 by Maltese immigrants.[3] In honour of the MalteseFloriana club, Ajax SC adopted their familiar green and white playing strips.[3] The club was renamed to Green Gully Ajax SC when it moved to its current home ground at Green Gully Reserve in 1966, in the West of Melbourne suburb of Kealba.[3] In 1972, the City of Keilor Council laid down two full size football pitches and constructed a large dressing room facility which included showers and toilets.[3] The "Ajax" was dropped in 1982.[3]
Green Gully have been Victorian Champions in 1981, 1982, 1983, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2010 and 2011.[citation needed]
Recent history
Gully placed third in the league in 2012 and made it all the way to the preliminary final, but went down to Dandenong Thunder. After a fifth placed league finish in 2013, Gully exited the finals series at the first stage after a 1–0 loss to South Melbourne.
Green Gully had their bid for a place in the inaugural National Premier Leagues Victoria accepted and entered the competition in 2014. The NPLV replaced the old VPL. The Cavaliers finished in 10th place in the new 14 team competition in 2014, and finished in 7th place the following year, just missing out on the finals series. Bob Stojcevski departed the club mid-season after an extended period of poor form, with Rodrigo Vargas (as player-coach) and Stephen Downes taking on the head role to see out the season.
In October 2015, Green Gully announced that former Oakleigh Cannons boss Arthur Papas would lead the club in the 2016 NPL Victoria season.[4] Papas brought in the likes of former Brisbane Roar youngster George Lambadaridis, former Melbourne Heart midfielder Kliment Taseski and Japanese left-back Yohei Iwasaki for the 2016 campaign.[5] Gully qualified for the national stage of the 2016 FFA Cup, drawing A-League side Central Coast Mariners in the Round of 32 and became at the time only the second member federation club to beat an A-League club when Liam Boland's 92nd minute long-range goal saw the Cavaliers win the tie 2–1 in front of 900 people at Green Gully Reserve.[6] In the Round of 16, Gully came up against local rivals and NPL Victoria compatriots Melbourne Knights FC. Despite the hosts taking a 1–0 lead early on at Knights Stadium, a Nicholas Krousoratis goal wedged between a Liam Boland brace saw the visitors progress to the quarter-finals of the competition in front of 2,472 people.[7] Gully were handed its first interstate opponent in the final eight, when it drew NPL Capital Football side Canberra Olympic, losing 1–0 in Canberra.[8][9] In the league, Gully finished in 5th place, losing 5–2 to Oakleigh in the elimination final.
On 23 February 2017, it was announced that Papas would be leaving his position as manager of Green Gully to join Saudi Professional League club Ettifaq FC as assistant coach to former Villareal coach Eelco Schattorie for the remainder of the Saudi Professional League season.[10] He was replaced by Green Gully's U20’s Head Coach Brian Vanega.[11] Gully finished in fifth place in the league, losing 4–0 to Bentleigh Greens in the elimination final.
In 2018, Papas retook the senior coaching job, but again departed, joining Schattorie at NorthEast United FC in the Indian Super League. Stephen Downes, who won the Victorian Premier League in 2011 and Dockerty Cup in 2013 with Gully, took over as manager of the club. Gully finished the season in 12th place, winning just one of its last 16 games. The 12th placed finish meant that Gully went into the promotion-relegation playoff, where the took on Moreland City FC at AAMI Park. Gully, who were 2–0 down, scored in the 91st and 94th minute to take the game to extra time, where Krousoratis eventually scored a winner for Green Gully, retaining the club's top flight status.[12]
In 2019, Harry Ho made his debut for the Senior team. Playing in defensive midfield as he made an instant impact with the team claiming a 3–0 victory against Bentleigh Greens.
The Kit Supplier for the Green Gully Cavaliers is Kappa, Kappa is the match day kit supplier and training kit supplier. Green Gully's matchday kit is green with white stripes, while the shorts and socks are just green. The green gully juniors also have their kit supplier as Kappa.
Current squad
As of 10 February 2024
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.