2008–09 season As one of the 7 established Australian A-League clubs, the Central Coast Mariners Women was announced to coincide with the establishment of the new W-League. In early September, Stephen Roche was appointed as the inaugural team coach. In October 2008, the squad was announced and featured
Matildas Kyah Simon,
Lyndsay Glohe and
Renee Rollason. As the club was funded by Football NSW and not the Mariners exclusively, the W-League outfit played home matches in Sydney's west at
Parramatta Stadium and
Campbelltown Stadium, which was an opportunity for the Mariners brand to spread into areas outside the Central Coast. Although the Mariners season got off to a bad start with a loss to the
Melbourne Victory, they soon found their feet to record back-to-back wins over
Perth Glory and
Canberra United, however, against Canberra, lost their first choice keeper Lisa Hartley after she fouled a Canberra United attacker and was shown a straight red card. The following three fixtures were all lost by the Mariners and failed to gain a point, including two back-to-back fixtures where the Mainers failed to score a goal. Those three fixtures were also at the Mariners' second home, Campbelltown Stadium, which proved to be the bogey ground for the Central Coast outfit as they failed to gain a single competition point from the venue. However, in round 7, the Mariners responded with a 6–0 drubbing of
Adelaide United, in Adelaide. That result would become the biggest team score and also the biggest win in the inaugural season by any team. Unable to maintain the momentum, the Mariners again lost another two back-to-back fixtures without scoring a goal and other results didn't go their way leading into the final round which meant a win against Melbourne Victory would not be enough to finish in the top 4 for the finals. The Mariners did win their final match for the regular season, almost ending Melbourne's finals hopes. The match was played in torrential rain, however, the Parramatta pitch held up as the Mariners put two late goals past the Victory shot stopper to win the match 2–0. With the Mariners in fifth at the conclusion of the round 10 fixture, only a win by
Sydney FC would put the Mariners into sixth and Melbourne into fifth. In a thrilling match, Sydney were up 3–0 within 28 minutes, but Adelaide United were not to be out done, with a thrilling finish that saw Adelaide score two mid-second-half goals, but could push for a third. Sydney defeated Adelaide 3–2 and attained the remaining finals spot. That result confirming the Mariners' 6th position on the ladder, divided only by goal difference with the fifth placed Melbourne. Kyah Simon, the leading goal scorer for the Mariners with 5, was only 2 goals short of the golden boot award which went eventually to Sydney's Leena Khamis. In a season that featured 4 wins and 6 losses from the 10 fixtures, the Mariners would be looking to improve on that for the next season.
2009 season . After not making the finals in the inaugural season, many changes were to follow. Eleven players from season 1 did not have their contract re-newed with the Mariners. As a result, there were ten new signings for the new season. Five of which from Sydney FC
Rachel Cooper; Jessica Seaman; Samantha Spackman;
Kelly Golebiowski;
Michelle Heyman, and three from the USA
Jillian Loyden;
Kendall Fletcher;
Lydia Vandenbergh, with
Caitlin Foord and
Ashleigh Connor from the
AIS and Illawarra Stingrays respectively. But the changes were to continue as the Mariners' would now play their home matches at the real home (men's senior and youth teams) of the Central Coast Mariners, then named
Bluetongue Stadium. Other home matches were played at
Canberra Stadium against Canberra (as a double-header with a Men's A-League fixture), and at
Leichhardt Oval in Sydney as part of a W-League double-header. The new season started in the best possible fashion for the Mariners with a 3–1 victory over traditional rivals Sydney FC away at the
Sydney Football Stadium. The
derby fueled by the fact that all three goals from the Mariners were scored from former Sydney players – Kelly Golebiowski and a double by Michelle Heyman. The Mariners continued their winning streak to a club record of 3 consecutive wins with a 2–0 victory over Adelaide at the Mariners first home game at
Bluetongue Stadium in wet conditions. In a match dominated by the yellow and navy, goals were hard to come by, however the final 17 minutes produced the match winning goals from Trudy Camilleri and Ashleigh Connor, with the latter being a driven low shot from the edge of the 6-yard box. The inaugural champions (
Brisbane Roar) were the next opponents in a top of the table clash. In a tight affair the Roar dominated the possession and the shots at goal. Late in the second-half, the Roar scored the one and only goal of the match. With a loss to the Roar, the Mariners were looking to get back on the score sheet and into the winners circle and that's just what they did against the near rivals
Newcastle. The derby produced 6 goals with the Mariners 5–1 runaway winners. Lydia Vandenburgh scored with only 5 minutes gone. Michelle Heyman added another two and on the half-hour mark it was 3–0. A second-half penalty to Kendall Fletcher and a late goal from substitute Trudy Camilleri completed the Mariners scoring, but an 89th minute consolation goal to the Jets rounded off the scoring.
Hiatus Due to lack of funding the Central Coast Mariners were forced to pull out of the
2010–11 W-League season.
Return to the A-League The Central Coast Mariners returned for the
2023–24 A-League Women season, with all home games to be played at
Central Coast Stadium. Their first fixture upon their return to the competition was against
Newcastle Jets. At the end of the 2023-2024 season, the Central Coast Mariners finished fifth and made the semi finals. In their second season in the Ninja A-league, the women won the
2024–25 A-League Women Championship. ==Colours and badge==