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At first glance, you wouldn’t look at Melbourne City’s A-League Women programme and think they were searching for redemption. Not when the club is basking in the glow of another Matildas call-up, more silverware and potentially a historic treble. And yet, given the club’s sustained success since its era of Matildas-laden squads ended, there is a sense of unfinished business heading into this year’s finals.

The timing of the Women’s Asian Cup and April’s international window may have somewhat stunted the league’s momentum and hype, but City maintained their push and secured their third premiership in succession last month. And while it wasn’t delivered in the same invincible manner as last season – given injuries to key players and an increasing level of parity in the league – it still arrived with a round to spare.

For the second-straight year, Michael Matricciani’s team enter the finals with hopes of a championship-premiership-Champions League treble in play. They host the lowest-seeded winner of this week’s elimination finals between Canberra and Melbourne Victory and Brisbane against Adelaide in a two-legged semi-final, and are due to face Tokyo Verdy Beleza in the semis of the AFC Women’s Champions League. That fixture will take place in South Korea on 20 May, just days after the scheduled date of a grand final that, if they reach it, they will host. An Asian crown, after finishing as runners-up to Wuhan Jiangda in the inaugural edition, would significantly push their case to be Asia’s representative at the first Women’s Club World Cup in 2028.

On an individual level, City remain one of the game’s key Matildas factories. Once able to field an XI loaded with national team players simply because they were willing to properly invest in their programme, the shift in power in global women’s football to Europe has seen a change in approach. Now, a key pillar of their squad building is devoted to signing some of the best young talent from around the country with the lure of one of the best-resourced programmes in the league and developing them into international-calibre players.

Daniela Galić, Leticia McKenna, Alexia Apostolakis, Holly McNamara, Leah Davidson, and Laura Hughes (who has since switched allegiance to Wales) all made their international debuts after moving to the club. Kaitlyn Torpey received her first call-up just weeks after setting a new outbound transfer record for the league when she moved to the San Diego Wave, while injury-hit Bryleeh Henry has also remained part of national team squads. The pipeline doesn’t look like it will run dry any time soon, with the likes of Danella Butrus and Shelby McMahon coming through while the club, alongside Victory, have finally been given blessing to field their own youth sides in the local NPLW Victoria competition from this season.

This domestic core has been supplemented by shrewdly recruited international talent such as Venezuelan Mariana Speckmaier and Mexican Lourdes Bosch, who both moved on for transfer fees last off-season, and leaders such as record games holder Rebekah Stott. The Kiwi international – the league’s best and most important player according to Matricciani – now has 10 A-League Women trophies to her name, nine with City. While other players such as Sam Kerr may have burned brighter for a shorter period, Stott has a longevity of excellence in the competition that marks her as one of its greatest.

Yet, for all her and City’s success in recent years, a championship – the major metric by which Australian football still measures it – has eluded them. And that, inevitably, colours perceptions. Is that fair? Probably not. The advent of a full home-and-away campaign has increased the prestige of the premiership significantly and, given it is accompanied by qualification for Asia and its associated prize money, arguably carries more tangible benefits. But it is titles that still matter in Australia. Sydney asserted themselves as defending champions in 2023-24 by knocking off City in the grand final, and the Central Coast Mariners were the fairytale winners in 2024-25. If City want to be the undisputed best, they need one.

Making this all the more pressing is that, highlighted by back-to-back Golden Boot winner McNamara, a significant chunk of the squad is expected to move on during the offseason, having exhausted their development in Australia. It feels like an era is ending and a rebuild is coming, meaning this group of players are running out of chances to claim a title, one they’ll feel they deserve together.

Certainly, a championship won’t come easily. Every club in this league has their own narrative of redemption and is capable of beating any other on its day. Bev Priestman has Wellington humming as they chase a fairytale of their own. But after multiple years of heartbreak, City know that.