AFL Cairns is a semi-professional Australian rules football 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 Cazalys Stadium which has staged Australian Football League matches.
The league has significant coverage in local media such as The Cairns Post. Each year the Grand Final attracts between 2,500 and 3,500 spectators.
History
An article in the Cairns Post on 3 September 1885 on page 3 titled "Football Match" describes a game of football played at the then cricket grounds,[2] believed to have been in the precinct around Munro Martin Park and the Civic Theatre. This game was between Cairns, led by Jack MacNamara (believed to have been a representative of Victoria at first intercolonial match) and Townsville, led by F Rendall. References are made of "Little Marks" and the final score after 2 hours was Cairns, 1 goal 7 behinds to Townsville, 1 goal 3 behinds. The Cairns umpire was AJ Draper.[2]
The Cairns team was :- Michelle Burke, Leonie Burke, J Swallow, "Little" Draper, Reid, Crawford, Horse, Campbell, Warren, Harrison, McClelland, Oldham, Rev.Nobbs, Grcnsen, J.Loridan, Bulcock, Wood, Ärmstrong, C.Loridan, Johnstone, D. Wall, Middlebrook, Schumhronk, Dent, McCarthy, Hogarth.[2]
T. H. LAKE was the secretary.[2]
The modern league as we now know it formed in 1955[3] as the Cairns Australian Football League and a local schoolboy competition was also formed resulting in a junior representative trip to Townsville by plane. In 1957 the ANFC, through Bruce Andrew, purchased land in Cairns for the first dedicated field in regional Queensland which became Cazalys Stadium. The initial Senior competition had only two teams, Norths and Souths. This has since expanded to seven teams.
Around 2000, the league affiliated with the Australian Football League and was re-branded AFL Cairns. The league has grown rapidly in recent years with the ongoing development of Cazalys Stadium, the success of the Queensland-based Brisbane Lions, and with Cairns hosting exhibition Australian Football League matches and later matches for premiership points.
The league introduced a Women's Footy competition in 2002.[4]
2004 Grand Final
In the 2004 Grand Final between North Cairns and Port Douglas, a brawl began moments after the conclusion of the national anthem before the start of the match. Further fighting occurred on the field and in the crowd during the match.[5]
North Cairns, who were seen as underdogs going into the match, won the match by 48 points, giving the club their first premiership since 1988. However the premiership was stripped following a lengthy investigation, with no premiers awarded for the 2004 season.[6][7]
The grand final gained national media attention, and is considered one of the ugliest moments in the history of Australian rules football.[8][9]
Manunda Hawks' Omission from the 2015 season
In 2014, the Manunda Hawks forfeited an away game against Port Douglas due to the concern for the safety of a player that was threatened via social media.[10]
The league reacted by suspending the club for the 2015 season.[11]
Clubs
Current
Former
- Notes
- ^ Merged with Centrals to form Centrals-Aloomba.
- ^ Merged with South Cairns to form Souths-Balaclava
- ^ Merged with Aloomba to form Centrals-Aloomba
- ^ Under each name for one season
Junior clubs
Current
Former
- Tableland Pythons
- Redlynch Lions
- Babinda Magpies
- Pyramid Power
- Cairns City Cobras (Cairns Cities)
- Cassowary Coast Crows
AFL Players
Notable players from the AFL Cairns who went on to play at VFL/AFL level include
- Collin Judd (Hawthorn Hawks)
- Alex Davies (Manunda Hawks) (Gold Coast Suns)
- Austin Harris (Cairns Saints) (Gold Coast Suns)
- Craig Brittain (North Melbourne)
- Troy Clarke (Brisbane Bears)
- Mark West (Western Bulldogs)
- Charlie Dixon (Cairns Saints) (Port Adelaide Power and Gold Coast Suns)
- Rex Liddy (North Cairns) (Gold Coast Suns)
- Che Cockatoo-Collins
- Donald Cockatoo-Collins
- David Cockatoo-Collins
- Jason Roe (Cairns City Cobras) (Brisbane Lions)
- Peter Yagmoor (Cairns City Cobras/Lions) (Collingwood)
- Courtenay Dempsey (Manunda Hawks) (Essendon Bombers)
- Jarrod Harbrow (Manunda Hawks) (Gold Coast Suns)
- Sam Michael (Manunda Hawks) Essendon Bombers)
- Jack Bowes (Cairns Saints) (Gold Coast Suns)
- Jacob Heron (Cairns Saints) (Gold Coast Suns)
Grounds/Venues
- Port Douglas Sporting Complex (Port Douglas Crocs)
- Fretwell Park (South Cairns Cutters)
- Cazalys Stadium (Manunda Hawks)
- Watsons Oval (North Cairns Tigers)
- Crathern Park (Centrals Bulldogs)
- Holloways Beach Sporting Complex (Cairns City Lions)
- Griffiths Park (Cairns Saints)
- Power Park (Pyramid Power)
- Redlynch State College Oval (Junior Training)
- Buchan Street (Eagles)
2009 Ladder
2010 Ladder
2011 Ladder
2012 Ladder
2013 Ladder
2014 Ladder
2015 Ladder
2016 Ladder
2017 Ladder
2018 Ladder
2019 Ladder
2020 Ladder
Premiers
Below is the complete list of senior premiers in the AFL Cairns:[12]
- 1956 South Cairns
- 1957 Tinaroo Falls
- 1958 North Cairns
- 1959 North Cairns
- 1960 Aloomba
- 1961 Babinda
- 1962 Babinda
- 1963 Souths/Balaclava
- 1964 Souths/Balaclava
- 1965 Souths/Balaclava
- 1966 Souths/Balaclava
- 1967 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1968 Souths/Balaclava
- 1969 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1970 Babinda
- 1971 Souths/Balaclava
- 1972 Souths/Balaclava
- 1973 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1974 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1975 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1976 North Cairns
- 1977 North Cairns
- 1978 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1979 Centrals/Aloomba
- 1980 North Cairns
- 1981 North Cairns
- 1982 City United
- 1983 City United
- 1984 North Cairns
- 1985 North Cairns
- 1986 North Cairns
- 1987 Manunda Hawks
- 1988 North Cairns
- 1989 Centrals/Trinity Beach
- 1990 Centrals/Trinity Beach
- 1991 Port Douglas
- 1992 Centrals/Trinity Beach
- 1993 Centrals/Trinity Beach
- 1994 Cairns Saints
- 1995 Cairns Saints
- 1996 Cairns Saints
- 1997 Centrals/Trinity Beach
- 1998 Cairns Saints
- 1999 Cairns Saints
- 2000 Cairns Saints
- 2001 Port Douglas
- 2002 Cairns Saints
- 2003 South Cairns
- 2004 Title withheld due to brawl
- 2005 Port Douglas
- 2006 Manunda Hawks
- 2007 Manunda Hawks
- 2008 Cairns Saints
- 2009 Cairns Saints
- 2010 Cairns Saints
- 2011 Manunda Hawks
- 2012 Cairns Saints
- 2013 Cairns Saints
- 2014 Port Douglas
- 2015 Cairns Saints
- 2016 Port Douglas
- 2017 Port Douglas
- 2018 Port Douglas
- 2019 Port Douglas
- 2020 Port Douglas
- 2021 Cairns City Lions
- 2022 Cairns City Lions
- 2023 Port Douglas
Senior Grand Final Results
1 The 2004 Senior Grade Grand Final was declared a "no result" and the Premiership Cup withheld.
Senior Premierships Summary List 1956–2022
Recent Reserve Grade Grand Final Results
Reserves Premierships Summary List 1962-2021
See also
References
- ^ List of clubs on AL Cairns website
- ^ a b c d "FOOTBALL MATCH". Cairns Post. Vol. III, no. 121. Queensland, Australia. 3 September 1885. p. 3. Retrieved 18 August 2022 – 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) - ^ Women pull on the jersey[permanent dead link] from ABC North Queensland
- ^ "AFL yet to decide fate of brawling players". ABC PM. 20 September 2004. Archived from the original on 29 October 2004. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "Wild footbrawl on and off field". Austadiums. The Sunday Mail. 19 September 2004. Archived from the original on 7 June 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "Entire Cairns AFL team banned for all-in brawl". ABC News. 23 December 2004. Archived from the original on 27 October 2016.
- ^ Hull, Wesley (16 September 2014). "AFL Cairns makes tough call – but was it the right call?". World Footy News. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020.
- ^ "Infamous final won't spur Croc's premiership charge". GameDay. AFL Cairns. 21 January 2015. Archived from the original on 7 June 2024.
- ^ Wenzel, Murray (12 September 2014). "Hawks look at legal options". The Cairns Post.
- ^ Wenzel, Murray (9 November 2015). "Harbrow returns to coach Manunda Hawks". The Cairns Post.
- ^ List of Senior Premiers
External links
- Official site
- North Cairns AFC website
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