South Hobart captain Nick Morton is the 2024 NPL Tasmanian Player-of-the-Year.
The announcement was made last Saturday night at the Football Tasmania Awards dinner at Wrest Point Hotel-Casino.
Photo: James Sherman, the Coach-of-the-Year. has left Glenorchy Knights. [PlessPix]
Glenorchy Knights coach James Sherman was named the NPL
Tasmania coach-of-the-year.
Kingborough Lions United duo Kobe Kemp and Noah Mies won the Golden Boot Award as the NPL’s top scorers with 20 goals apiece.
Photo: Kobe Kemp (Joint Golden Boot winner). [PlessPix]
Photo: Noah Mies (Joint Golden Boot winner). [PlessPix]
Angus Burdon of Glenorchy Knights won the Golden Glove
Award as the best goalkeeper.
Brenton Kopra was the NPL Referee-of-the-Year.
Photo: Brenton Kopra is the NPL Referee-of-the-Year. [PlessPix]
Devonport captain Kieran Mulraney took out the Walter
Pless Media Award in the NPL competition.
Photo: Kieran Mulraney, the Devonport City skipper, won the Walter Pless Media Award. [PlessPix]
Whitney Knight of Devonport City won the Women’s Super
League Best-and-Fairest Award.
Tom Ballantyne of Devonport was the WSL coach-of-the-year,
Whitney Knight and South Hobart’s Josephine Mamic jointly
took out the Golden Boot Award in the WSL.
The Golden Glove Award for the best goalkeeper went to
South Hobart’s Kacee Ponting.
The WSL referee-of-the-year went to Elliana Beeston.
In the NPL Under-21 competition, Jordan Payne of Devonport
City won the Best & Fairest Award as well as the Golden Boot for being the
leading scorer.
Alex Gaetani of Launceston City was names as the NPL
Under-21 coach-of-the-year.
Josh Berry was named as the Young Referee-of-the-Year.
In the Men’s Southern Championship, Ivan Jozeljic was
announced as Referee-of-the-Year and Riley Pitchford of Taroona as the Coach-of=the-Year.
Samuel James of Taroona won the Golden Boot and also
shared the Best-and-Fairest Award with South East United’s Luke Huigsloot.
In the Women’s Southern Championship, Katherine Ollerhead
of New Town White Eagles won the Best-and-Fairest Award, Olivia Young of
University the Golden Boot Award and Tayla Thomas of Taroona the Coach-of-the
Year Award.
In the Men’s Northern Championship, Charlie Vella was
Referee-of-the-Year, Jack Bowman the Coach-of-the-Year, and Beau Blizzard of
the Somerset Sharks won both the Best-and-Fairest and the Golden Boot awards,
In the Women’s Northern Championship, Fergus Luttmer of Burnie United was names as the Coach-of-the-Year, while Tully Parke of Burnie United won the Golden Boot Award and Malanie Quirk, also of Burnie United, was named at the Best-and-Fairest player.
3 comments:
Well done to all the winners and recipients.
Taroona with both their men's and women's coaches winning their respective coaches awards.
And based on Burnie winning the women's Northern championship, they would be a great addition into the WSL.
Please no more additional to the NPL or WSL. The standard is going backwards. Only 2-3 teams can win each comp every year and rest already make up numbers. Basketball and Footy and pulling bigger numbers now of juniors as Football Tas were too slow as per usual getting any real pathway for players in a national stage.
Congratulations to all the winners; Noah Mies continues the scoring legacy of the Mies family. Well done Noah.
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