Tourney Name: | OFC Champions League |
Year: | 2010–11 |
Dates: | 23 October 2010 – 17 April 2011 |
Num Teams: | 8 |
Associations: | 7 |
Champion Other: | Auckland City |
Count: | 3 |
Second Other: | Amicale |
Matches: | 26 |
Goals: | 76 |
Top Scorer: | Fenedy Masauvakalo (8 goals) |
Prevseason: | 2009–10 |
Nextseason: | 2011–12 |
The 2010–11 OFC Champions League, also known as the 2011 O-League for short, was the 10th edition of the Oceanian Club Championship, Oceania's premier club football tournament organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and the 5th season under the current OFC Champions League name. It was contested by eight teams from seven countries. The teams were split into two four-team pools, the winner of each pool contesting the title of O-League Champion and the right to represent the OFC at the 2011 FIFA Club World Cup.
The tournament was won by Auckland City of New Zealand.
Association | Team | Qualifying method | |
---|---|---|---|
Fiji | Lautoka | 2009 Fiji National Football League champion | |
New Caledonia | Magenta | 2009 New Caledonia Division Honneur champion | |
New Zealand | Waitakere United | 2009–10 New Zealand Football Championship champion | |
Auckland City | 2009–10 New Zealand Football Championship premier | ||
Papua New Guinea | Hekari United | 2009–10 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League champion | |
Solomon Islands | Koloale | 2009–10 Solomon Islands National Club Championship champion | |
Tahiti | Tefana | 2009–10 Tahiti Division Fédérale champion | |
Vanuatu | Amicale | 2009–10 Vanuatu National Soccer League winner |
The match schedule is as follows.[1]
Round | Date | |
---|---|---|
Group stage | Matchday 1 | 23–24 October 2010 |
Matchday 2 | 13–14 November 2010 | |
Matchday 3 | 4–5 December 2010 | |
Matchday 4 | 5–6 February 2011 | |
Matchday 5 | 26–27 February 2011 | |
Matchday 6 | 19–20 March 2011 | |
Final | First leg | 2–3 April 2011 |
Second leg | 16–17 April 2011 |
The official draw was conducted at the OFC Executive Committee meeting in Johannesburg, South Africa in June 2010, and announced by the OFC on 11 June 2010.[2]
In each group, the teams played each other home-and-away in a round-robin format, with the group winner advancing to the final. If two or more teams are tied on points, the tiebreakers are as follow:[3]
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See main article: 2011 OFC Champions League Final. The winners of groups A and B played in the final over two legs. The hosts of each leg was decided by draw, and announced by the OFC on 22 March 2011.[6] The away goals rule would be applied, and extra time and penalty shootout would be used to decide the winner if necessary.[3]
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Auckland City won 6–1 on aggregate. As OFC Champions League winners they qualify for the qualifying round of the 2011 FIFA Club World Cup.