Brisbane ženy

Brisbane ženy

Leagues Played
AFL - ženy 79
Links
Wikipedia
Related Teams
Brisbane Brisbane rezervný tím

Results

AFL - ženy 12/03 03:30 394 [3] North Melbourne ženy v Brisbane ženy [4] 27-44
AFL - ženy 11/25 08:45 232 [4] Brisbane ženy v Geelong ženy [6] 38-34
AFL - ženy 11/11 04:05 14 [1] Adelaide ženy v Brisbane ženy [4] 37-39
AFL - ženy 11/04 08:05 10 [5] Brisbane ženy v Melbourne ženy [1] 53-28
AFL - ženy 10/28 04:05 9 [12] St Kilda ženy v Brisbane ženy [4] 55-34
AFL - ženy 10/21 04:05 8 [4] Brisbane ženy v Adelaide ženy [1] 42-39
AFL - ženy 10/14 06:05 7 [5] Gold Coast ženy v Brisbane ženy [4] 21-57
AFL - ženy 10/07 08:15 6 [4] Brisbane ženy v Collingwood ženy [13] 28-33
AFL - ženy 10/01 04:05 5 [15] Hawthorn ženy v Brisbane ženy [4] 32-59
AFL - ženy 09/24 03:05 4 [3] North Melbourne ženy v Brisbane ženy [7] 33-35
AFL - ženy 09/17 07:05 3 [9] Brisbane ženy v Sydney ženy [10] 87-32
AFL - ženy 09/09 03:05 2 [15] Port Adelaide ženy v Brisbane ženy [12] 26-76

Wikipedia - Brisbane Lions

The Brisbane Lions are a professional Australian rules football club based in Brisbane, Queensland, that compete in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's elite competition.

The Lions came into existence in 1996 when the AFL expansion club the Brisbane Bears, established in 1987, absorbed the AFL operations of one of the league's foundation clubs, Fitzroy, established in Melbourne, Victoria in 1883. Its colours of maroon, blue, and gold were drawn from both Fitzroy and the Bears.

The club plays its home matches at the Gabba in Brisbane, and its headquarters and training facilities are located at Springfield Central Stadium. The Lions are one of the most successful AFL clubs of the 2000s, appearing in four consecutive grand finals from 2001 to 2004, a period in which they won three premierships (2001, 2002, 2003). They also finished runners-up in 2023.

The Lions were a foundation team in the AFL Women's competition in 2017, and have featured in five grand finals in that time, winning the premiership in 2021 and again in 2023 also finishing runners-up on the other occasions. They also field a reserves men's team in the Victorian Football League, and operate an under-18s academy which contests Division 2 of the men's and women's underage national championships and the Talent League.

History

History

In the inaugural year of the Brisbane Lions (1997), the club affiliated with the Queensland Australian Football League (QAFL), allowing players not selected for the AFL team to be drafted to individual clubs. Reserves players not on an AFL list cannot be called up to the AFL team, they must first be drafted into the AFL.

Between 1998 and 2010 the club's reserves team participated in the QAFL, where it was initially known as the "Lion Cubs". The club won their first reserve-grade premiership in 2001 when they defeated the Southport Sharks in the QAFL Grand Final. In 2004, they began to compete as the Suncoast Lions Football Club. The side played home matches at the Gabba (as a curtain raiser game for Brisbane Lions matches) and, formerly, at the Fishermans Road football complex on the Sunshine Coast.

In 2011, the team moved to the multi-state North East Australian Football League (NEAFL), where they won four premierships − 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2019.

Following the NEAFL disbanding after the 2019 season, the reserves side moved to the Victorian Football League (VFL), with their first season in 2021.

Since 2023, the side has played reserves matches at Springfield Central Stadium.