There are several Australian rules football leagues in regional Queensland.
The sport of Australian rules football has a rich history in Queensland which dates back to the 1860s, however the game outside of South East Queensland was slower to take off than in Brisbane.
In 1913, a team of servicemen briefly existed on Thursday Island, but was short-lived. In 1944, a league of servicemen was formed around the Atherton Tableland. Teams represented included Wongabel, Wondelca, Kairi, Mareeba and Ravenshoe. The league was a precursor to the nearby Cairns, Queensland league.
In 1955, the Townsville Australian Football League began. Two years later the Cairns Australian Football League was formed. AFL was also introduced to Mount Isa. In the early 1970s, organised leagues started appearing in Mackay, the Darling Downs and Central Queensland.
The Australian Football League has occasionally played pre-season matches in Cairns and there have been semi-regular premiership matches on the Gold Coast.
Current competitions
editAFL Cairns is a semi-professional league that includes clubs from the Cairns region in Queensland, Australia. It is widely regarded as the strongest regional Australian rules football league in Queensland and has a large base at Cazaly's Stadium which has staged pre-season Australian Football League matches.
The league has significant coverage in local media such as The Cairns Post. Each year the Grand Final attracts between 2,000–3,000 spectators.
AFL Capricornia is an amateur competition played in the areas of Rockhampton, Gladstone and Yeppoon between the months of March and September in the cooler seasons of the Central Queensland climate.
The league is covered primarily by the Rockhampton Morning Bulletin in the local print media.
AFL Darling Downs is an amateur competition formed as the Darling Downs Australian Football League in 1971. It is based around the city of Toowoomba west of Brisbane. The senior representative team is known as the Demons and wear guernseys modelled on the Melbourne Demons guernseys. The Under 18 representative team who participate in the AFLQ Under 18 competition are known as the "Crows" and wear guernseys modelled on the Adelaide Crows guernseys.
AFL Mackay is an amateur competition formed as the Mackay Australian Football League in 1970. It is based around the city of Mackay with further clubs in Airlie Beach, Sarina, Alligator Creek, Pioneer Valley and Moranbah. The representative team is known as the Crows.
AFL Mount Isa is an amateur competition formed as the North West Australian Football League in 1967, changing its name to the Mount Isa AFL in 1969. Prior to this the game was played but was not organised. It is based around the city of Mount Isa.
The first matches in Mount Isa were played in 1932.[1] The city had 3 clubs by 1933.[2] Another league was formed in 1955.[3] However the current league wasn't established until much later.
Current Clubs
editOfficial Name | Colours | Nickname | Home | Years in competition | Premierships | Premiership Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mount Isa Buffaloes | Buffaloes | Legend Oval, Mount Isa | 1983- | 5 | 1992, 1994, 1995, 2017, 2018 | |
Mount Isa Tigers | Tigers | Legend Oval, Mount Isa | 1967- | 11 | 1971, 1973, 1983, 1989, 1998, 1999, 2006, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016 | |
Lake Nash | Bats (formerly Bushies, Young Guns) |
Alpurrurulam Oval, Alpurrurulam (NT) | *1993- | 2 | 2002, 2003 | |
Dajarra Rhinos | Rhinos | Monument Sports Oval, Dajarra | 2018- | 0 | - |
Former Clubs
editOfficial Name | Colours | Nickname | Home | Years in competition | Premierships | Premiership Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mount Isa Rovers | Rovers | Legend Oval, Mount Isa | 1967-2020 | 24 | 1968, 1976, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986,1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013 |
Premiers
editNorth West Australian Football League (1967-1968) / Mount Isa AFL (1969-1999) / AFL Mount Isa (2000-present)
- 1967: Hawks
- 1968: Rovers
- 1969: Saints
- 1970: Saints
- 1971: Tigers
- 1972: Hawks
- 1973: Tigers
- 1974: Saints
- 1975: Hawks
- 1976: Rovers
- 1977: Mary Kathleen
- 1978: Mary Kathleen
- 1979: Mary Kathleen
- 1980: Rovers
- 1981: Rovers
- 1982: Rovers
- 1983: Tigers
- 1984: Rovers
- 1985: Rovers
- 1986: Rovers
- 1987: Saints
- 1988: Rovers
- 1989: Tigers
- 1990: Rovers
- 1991: Rovers
- 1992: Buffaloes
- 1993: Rovers
- 1994: Buffaloes
- 1995: Buffaloes
- 1996: Rovers
- 1997: Rovers
- 1998: Tigers
- 1999: Tigers
- 2000: Rovers
- 2001: Rovers
- 2002: Lake Nash, Mighty Bats
- 2003: Lake Nash, Mighty Bats
- 2004: Rovers
- 2005: Rovers[4]
- 2006: Tigers
- 2007: Rovers
- 2008: Rovers
- 2009: Rovers
- 2010: Rovers
- 2011: Tigers
- 2012: Rovers
- 2013: Rovers
- 2014: Tigers
- 2015: Tigers
- 2016: Tigers
- 2017: Buffaloes
- 2018: Buffaloes
AFL Townsville is an amateur competition formed as the Townsville Australian Football League in 1955, the first AFL competition to be formed in Queensland outside of the South East. It is based around the city of Townsville. For a short period in the 1980s, the competition was played during the summer months. The representative team is known as the Eagles and they wear similar guernseys to the Zillmere Eagles old white and blue guernsey's.
The AFL Wide Bay competition was formerly known as the Bundaberg-Wide Bay Australian Football League which was formed in 1987 through the merger of the Bundaberg Australian Football League and Wide Bay Australian Football Leagues. The competition currently features teams from the cities of Bundaberg, Maryborough and Hervey Bay. The representative team is known as the Tigers wearing guernseys similar to those of the Richmond Tigers.
Defunct competitions
editThe Bundaberg Australian Football League was an amateur competition formed in 1972 and continued until 1986, before merging with the Wide Bay Australian Football League, starting a new competition called the Bundaberg Wide Bay Australian Football League in 1987, now known as AFL Wide Bay.
The four foundation clubs were Burnett Heads, Southern Suburbs (South Bundaberg), Western Suburbs (West Bundaberg), and North Bundaberg.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Years in Competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|
North Bundaberg | 1972–1986 | 5 | |
South Bundaberg | 1972–1986 | 1 | |
West Bundaberg | 1972–1986 | 5 | |
Burnett Heads | 1972–1982 | - | |
Hervey Bay | 1977, 1982–1983 | 3 | |
South Bundaberg (2) | 1979 | - | |
Maryborough | 1979 | - | |
Biggenden | 1983 | - | |
Gympie | 1984 | - | |
Cooloola Coast | 1984 | - | |
Urangan | 1984 | 1 | |
Brothers | 1985 | - |
Premiers
editBundaberg AFL (1972-1986)
- 1972: North Bundaberg
- 1973: Western Suburbs
- 1974: Western Suburbs
- 1975: North Bundaberg
- 1976: North Bundaberg
- 1977: Hervey Bay
- 1978: North Bundaberg
- 1979: North Bundaberg
- 1980: West Bundaberg
- 1981: South Bundaberg
- 1982: Hervey Bay
- 1983: Hervey Bay
- 1984: Urangan[5]
- 1985: West Bundaberg
- 1986: West Bundaberg
The Central Highlands Australian Football League was an amateur competition formed in 1983 and ceased operations after the 1997 season. Most of the previous clubs still exist and operate Auskick programs, including Dysart and Emerald. The Moranbah Bulldogs moved to the Mackay Australian Football League after the league folded.
The league was a once flourishing competition with Clubs competing in Seniors, Reserves and juniors in Under 16's, 14's, and 12's. Around 1994, the mines in the area shifted from a five-day week into a seven-day 12-hour roster, which in turn limited teams' playing rosters. The league then changed onfield playing numbers from 18 to 13 with unlimited bench players. Unfortunately this still did not help and most clubs were forced to cease operations due to lack of playing numbers and not of financial matters.
Prior to the formation of the competition, Dysart, Middlemount and Moranbah had played in Mackay's competition.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Nickname | Years in competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Blackwater | Dark Blue and White | Cats | 1983–1997 | 3 |
Clermont | Red and Black | Bombers | 1985–1986 | - |
Dysart | Red and White | Swans | 1983–1997 | 2 |
Emerald | Black, White and Red | Saints | 1983–1997 | 7 |
Middlemount | Blue and White | Kangaroos | 1983–1991 | 1 |
Moranbah | Blue, White and Red | bulldogs | 1983–1988, 1994–1997 | 2 |
Tieri | Black and Yellow | Tigers | 1983–1991, 1996 | - |
United | Black and Yellow | Tigers | 1992–1995 | - |
Premiers
editCentral Highlands AFL (1983-1997)
- 1983: Dysart
- 1984: Dysart
- 1985: Moranbah
- 1986: Moranbah
- 1987: Middlemount
- 1988: Emerald
- 1989: Emerald
- 1990: Blackwater
- 1991: Blackwater
- 1992: Blackwater
- 1993: Emerald
- 1994: Emerald
- 1995: Emerald
- 1996: Emerald
- 1997: Emerald
The Gold Coast Australian Football League was a competition that operated from at least 1961 to 1996 before being absorbed by the Queensland AFL as its Gold Coast Division.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Years in Competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|
Ashmore Nerang | Black and White | 1985-1989 | 0 |
Broadbeach | White and blue | 1971–1996 | 2 |
Burleigh Heads | Red and Black | 1979–1996 | 0 |
Coolangatta Tweed Heads | 1965–1996 | 6 | |
Ipswich | 1963 | 0 | |
Labrador | Black and Yellow | 1964–1996 | 5 |
Lismore | 1968–1970, 1978–1983 | 0 | |
Palm Beach-Currumbin | Yellow and Purple | 1961–1996 | 4 |
Robina Roos | Blue and White | 1996 | 0 |
Southport | White and black | 1961–1982 | 9 |
Surfers Paradise | Red and Blue | 1962–1996 | 9 |
Premiers
editGold Coast AFL (1961-1996) / AFLQ - Gold Coast Division (1997-1999)
- 1961: Southport
- 1962: Southport
- 1963: Surfers Paradise
- 1964: Southport
- 1965: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1966: Southport
- 1967: Surfers Paradise
- 1968: Surfers Paradise
- 1969: Surfers Paradise
- 1970: Labrador
- 1971: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1972: Surfers Paradise
- 1973: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1974: Surfers Paradise
- 1975: Southport
- 1976: Southport
- 1977: Southport
- 1978: Coolangatta
- 1979: Southport
- 1980: Southport
- 1981: Coolangatta
- 1982: Coolangatta
- 1983: Coolangatta
- 1984: Surfers Paradise
- 1985: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1986: Labrador
- 1987: Broadbeach
- 1988: Coolangatta
- 1989: Coolangatta
- 1990: Surfers Paradise
- 1991: Labrador
- 1992: Surfers Paradise
- 1993: Labrador
- 1994: Labrador
- 1995: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1996: Broadbeach
- 1997: Palm Beach-Currumbin
- 1998: Surfers Paradise
- 1999: Palm Beach-Currumbin
The Maryborough Australian Football League was an amateur competition that lasted two full seasons in 1981 and 1982. In 1983, there was only a limited number of fixtures, and due to lack of players, the competition folded after the season was over.
In 1983, Biggenden played in both the Bundaberg AFL and the Maryborough competition. Biggenden 2 lost to Cooloola Coast in the 1983 MAFL Grand Final, as their seniors did the previous year.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Years in Competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|
Biggenden | Brown and White | 1981–1983 | 1 |
Cooloola Coast | Navy Blue and White | 1982–1983 | 2 |
Isis | Brown and Yellow | 1981–1983 | - |
Maryborough[6] | Black and Gold | 1981–1983 | - |
Torbanlea[citation needed] | Red and Blue | 1981 | - |
Premiers
editMaryborough AFL (1981-1983)
The Sunshine Coast Australian Football League was an amateur competition that was formed in 1970 and continued until 1992. The three foundation clubs were Noosa, Maroochydore and Nambour.
In 1993, the clubs from the competition played in the Brisbane Australian Football League, and later split up into various AFL South Queensland Divisions.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Nickname | Years in competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Caboolture | Maroon, Blue and Gold | Lions (Cats 73-75) | 1973–1975, 1984–1987, 1990 | - |
Caloundra | Navy Blue and White | Panthers (Cats 73-80) | 1973–1983, 1985–1989, 1991–1992 | 4 |
Gympie | Navy Blue and White | Cats | 1971–1983, 1992 | - |
Hervey Bay | Red and Green | Seahawks | 1978–1981 | - |
Kawana | Blue and Yellow | Eagles | 1983–1984, 1990–1992 | - |
Maroochydore | Green and Gold | 1970–1992 | 11 | |
Maryborough | Black and Gold | Tigers | 1977 | - |
Mooloolah Valley | Black and White | Magpies | 1985–1988 | - |
Nambour | Navy Blue and White | Blues | 1970–1975, 1977–1992 | 1 |
Noosa | Black and Gold | Tigers | 1970–1992 | 7 |
Pomona | Blue and Gold | Demons | 1975, 1987–1990 | - |
Pomona/Cooroy | Red and Blue | Demons | 1976–1986 | - |
Pomona/Gympie | Blue, White and Gold | Devil Cats | 1991 | - |
Southern Districts | Red, Blue and Gold | Wildcats | 1987–1989 | - |
Premiers
editSunshine Coast AFL (1970-1992)
- 1970: Maroochydore
- 1971: Maroochydore
- 1972: Maroochydore
- 1973: Noosa
- 1974: Maroochydore
- 1975: Noosa
- 1976: Noosa
- 1977: Noosa
- 1978: Maroochydore
- 1979: Maroochydore
- 1980: Noosa
- 1981: Noosa
- 1982: Maroochydore
- 1983: Maroochydore
- 1984: Maroochydore
- 1985: Noosa
- 1986: Maroochydore
- 1987: Caloundra
- 1988: Caloundra
- 1989: Maroochydore
- 1990: Nambour
- 1991: Caloundra
- 1992: Caloundra
The Wide Bay Australian Football League was a short-lived amateur competition that was formed in 1985 as a result of a breakaway from the Bundaberg Australian Football League. It only lasted two years before merging with the league it broke away from.
Clubs
editClub | Colours | Years in competition | Premierships |
---|---|---|---|
Cooloola Coast | Navy Blue and White | 1985–1986 | - |
Gympie Blues[9] | 1985 | - | |
Gympie Cats | Navy Blue and White | 1985–1986 | - |
Hervey Bay Bombers | Black and Red | 1985–1986 | 2 |
Hervey Bay Hawks | Brown and Yellow | 1985 | - |
Maryborough | Black and Gold | 1986 | - |
Premiers
editWide Bay AFL (1985-1986)
- 1985: Hervey Bay Bombers
- 1986: Hervey Bay Bombers
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "AT MOUNT ISA "Aussie" Rules Played". Sporting Globe. No. 1042. Victoria, Australia. 3 August 1932. p. 8 (Edition1). Retrieved 26 September 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "AUSTRALIAN RULES". The Brisbane Courier. No. 23, 485. Queensland, Australia. 9 May 1933. p. 16. Retrieved 19 June 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Bird, Murray; Parker, Greg (2018). More of the Kangaroo: 150 Years of Australian Football in Queensland - 1866 to 2016. Morningside, Qld. p. vii. ISBN 978-0-9943936-1-6. OCLC 1082363978.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Rovers Win". The North West Star Mount Isa. Mount Isa, Queensland. 12 September 2005. p. 20.
- ^ "Urangan in Rules Win". News Mail Bundaberg. Bundaberg, Queensland. 28 August 1984. p. 17.
- ^ "Up There Cazaly". Maryborough Chronicle Maryborough. Maryborough, Queensland. 4 August 1981. p. 14.
- ^ "Up There Cazaly". Maryborough Chronicle Maryborough. Maryborough, Queensland. 4 August 1981. p. 14.
- ^ "Dolphins win final 158-32". Maryborough Chronicle Maryborough. Maryborough, Queensland. 23 August 1983. p. 14.
- ^ Wide Bay AFL Year Book 1985.
External links
editLeagues
edit- Official AFL Cairns Website
- Official AFL Capricornia Site
- Official AFL Darling Downs Site
- Official AFL Mackay Website
- Official AFL Mount Isa Website
- Official AFL Townsville Website
- Official AFL Wide Bay Website