2023 AFL Women's Grand Final | ||||||||||||||||
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Date | 3 December 2023 | |||||||||||||||
Stadium | Ikon Park | |||||||||||||||
Attendance | 12,616 | |||||||||||||||
Umpires | Joel Clamp, Matt Adams, Samuel Nippress | |||||||||||||||
Coin toss won by | Brisbane | |||||||||||||||
Ceremonies | ||||||||||||||||
National anthem | Vera Blue | |||||||||||||||
Broadcast in Australia | ||||||||||||||||
Network | Seven Network | |||||||||||||||
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The 2023 AFL Women's Grand Final was an Australian rules football match held on the 3 December at Ikon Park to determine the premiers of the eighth season of the AFL Women's (AFLW) competition. The match was between North Melbourne and Brisbane was won by Brisbane; the club's second senior women's premiership. Brisbane's captain, Breanna Koenen, was awarded the best-on-ground medal.
Background
In the 2023 AFL Women's season, Brisbane had to contend with the loss of key players Emily Bates, Greta Bodey and Jesse Wardlaw, who departed for other clubs, and Kate Lutkins, who was pregnant. One of the original sides in the AFL Women's competition, and initially the only one based in Queensland, Brisbane had taken advantage of a strong pipeline for women AFL players in that state, but had since been repeatedly raided for players for expansion teams, enough to form an entire team. During the regular season, it suffered defeats at the hands of Richmond, Collingwood and St Kilda, none of which ultimately made the finals, but managed wins against the other top-four sides, Adelaide, North Melbourne and Melbourne, to finish fourth on the ladder.[1] The team then managed to defeat Adelaide by two points to earn a home Preliminary Final,[2] and then Geelong by four to secure a berth in the Grand Final.[3]
North Melbourne made its debut in 2019, building up its team by aggressively recruiting players. By 2023 the club had never played in an AFL Women's grand final (or, for that matter, a men's one since 1999). Although it posted several good wins in the 2023 season, it lost its matches against the other top-four contenders, Brisbane, Adelaide and Melbourne. In the finals though, it inflicted a stunning defeat on Melbourne in the Qualifying Final and then beat minor premiers Adelaide by a point in the Preliminary Final.[1][4]
Venue and date
By virtue of North Melbourne defeating Adelaide in the Preliminary Final, the Grand Final was held at Princes Park on 3 December 2023.[5] It was the first time that the AFLW Grand Final had been held Melbourne since 2018.[4][6] The venue had once had a capacity in excess of 20,000 but due to recent works this had been reduced to just 13,000. All 13,000 tickets were sold out on the day they went on sale. There was disappointment that the larger Docklands Stadium could not be used, but the AFL said that the turf at Dockland was unsuitable due to the venue hosting other major events in recent weeks.[7][8] The match was played in front of a crowd of 12,616 spectators.[9]
Entertainment
Two-time ARIA Award-winning artist G Flip was designated to perform in the pre-game entertainment. G Flip had previously provided the pre-game entertainment for the 2021 AFLW Grand Final and the half-time Entertainment for the 2022 AFL Grand Final.[10] She was joined by former Brisbane Lions players Sabrina Frederick and Jesse Wardlaw, who now play for other teams.[11] Uncle Colin Hunter Jr gave the Welcome to Country and Vera Blue sang the national anthem.[12]
Media coverage
The 2023 AFL Women’s Grand Final was broadcast live on the Seven Network, 7plus, Fox Footy, Kayo Sports, and via the AFL and AFLW apps.[13]
Teams
Both sides announced unchanged teams from the preliminary finals despite injury concerns around some Brisbane players, notably centre half-forward Dakota Davidson, who had suffered a knee injury in the preliminary final.[14] The Grand Final was the 75th game for Brisbane's Shannon Campbell, who, together with team captain Breanna Koenen and Ally Anderson, played in all four of Brisbane's AFLW Grand Final appearances. It was also the 50th game for ruck Tahlia Hickie and wing Jade Ellenger.[11] North Melbourne's Emma Kearney, Jenna Bruton and Kim Rennie had won a premiership with the Western Bulldogs in 2018 Grand Final, a match in which Talia Randall had played for Brisbane.[1]
Emergencies: 1 Liz McGrath, 22 Ellie Gavalas, 29 Lucy Burke |
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Umpires
Position | Umpires |
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Field umpires | Joel Clamp, Matt Adams, Samuel Nippress |
Boundary umpires | Adrian Pretorius, Jaco Jansen van Rensburg, Dominic Schiliro, Greta Miller |
Goal umpires | Emilie Hill, Georgia Henderson |
Scoreboard
Grand Final | |||||
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Sunday, 3 December (2:30 pm) (AEDT UTC+11) | North Melbourne | def. by | Brisbane | Ikon Park (crowd: 12,616) | Report |
1.0 (6) 2.2 (14) 3.2 (20) 4.3 (27) |
Q1 Q2 Q3 Final |
0.0 (0) 2.1 (13) 4.3 (27) 7.2 (44) |
Umpires: Clamp, Adams, Nippress Best on ground: Bre Koenen Television broadcast: Seven Network, Fox Footy National anthem: Vera Blue | ||
Garner (2), Shierlaw, O'Loughlin | Goals | Davidson (2), Hampson (2), Mullins, O'Dwyer, Koenen | |||
Bruton (ankle) | Injuries | ||||
Match summary
Brisbane won the coin toss. After a minute of play, North Melbourne's Jenna Bruton was carried from the field with an ankle injury and took no further part in the game. This was a major blow, as Bruton had been a key figure in the preliminary final win against Adelaide, and it limited North Melbourne's rotations against one of the fittest teams in the competition. The game remained fierce but scoreless until, with less than two minutes to go in the first quarter, North Melbourne's Jasmine Garner, who had scored the first ever goal in an AFLW match back in 2017, scored her team's first ever goal in a Grand Final with a long range set shot. North Melbourne therefore took a one-goal lead into quarter time.[11][12]
Brisbane hit back in the early second quarter when youngster Charlotte Mullins scored an improbable goal from a long range snap shot that managed to get past the North Melbourne defence and dribbled across the line. A few minutes later though, Garner scored a second goal from a free kick. It took some brilliant work from Brisbane's Ally Anderson to deliver the ball to forward Ellie Hampson, who marked uncontested inside the 50 metre arc and booted a goal. North Melbourne continued winning centre clearances and attacking, but Brisbane's forward line, led by Bre Koenen, stood firm. Belle Dawes led the possession count, with 14. There was relentless pressure, with North Melbourne laying 47 tackles in the first half and Brisbane 46. At the half time break, North Melbourne was just one point in front, kicking 2.2 (14) to Brisbane's 2.1 (13).[11][12]
North Melbourne scored two behinds early in the third quarter, but it was Brisbane's Orla O'Dwyer who scored the first goal, putting Brisbane in front for the first time. The lead was short lived; North Melbourne's Kate Shierlaw took a spectacular mark in front of gaol, which she converted, and then her midfield managed another centre clearance and delivered the ball to Alice O'Loughlin, who kicked North Melbourne's second goal in as many minutes. Brisbane was successful in keeping North Melbourne's key forward Talia Randall quiet, but tagger Cathy Svarc had more difficulty with Jasmine Garner, and Bre Koenen was moved onto her. North Melbourne took a seven-point lead into the final break.[11][12]
Brisbane's Dakota Davidson had been quiet, largely due to her knee injury, which clearly had not fully healed, but now managed to soar above a pack and take a strong contested mark. She then scored a goal to peg the margin back to a single point. A few minutes later, she did it again, putting Brisbane back in front. Then Ellie Hampson was awarded a free kick for a hold in the goal square and slotted another goal. North Melbourne's efforts were stymied by ferocious tackling effort, with Brisbane laying on another 64 tackles in the second half to end with 110 for the match. Finally, with four minutes remaining, Bre Koenen, who had been a lion in defence in more ways than one, came forward to kick a goal and put the result beyond doubt. Brisbane claimed its second AFLW premiership, winning by 19 points, 7.2 (44) to 4.3 (27).[11][12]
Best-on-ground medal

Recently retire Adelaide and Port Adelaide champion Erin Phillips, a two-time winner of the AFLW Grand Final best-on-ground medal, was designated to present this year's medal to the player judged best afield. Phillips was part of a five-person voting panel chaired by Seven Network commentator and Adelaide premiership player Abbey Holmes and also included AFL.com.au reporter Gemma Bastiani, Herald Sun reporter Lauren Wood and ABC broadcaster Quentin Hull.[10] It was awarded to Bre Koenen, who had nineteen disposals, ten tackles, seven marks, and a goal.[12]
It was Koenensecond premiership. It was also the second for coach Craig Starcevich, who had previously won a premiership as a player with the Brisbane Lions men's team back in 1990, in which he was knocked senseless by Terry Daniher.[12] Starcevich, the only coach that the Brisbane women's side had ever known, had re-signed with the club, [1] The premiership cup was handed to Koenen and coach Starcevich by Brisbane's 2021 AFLW premiership captain, Emma Zielke.[10]
2023 Best-on-ground voting
15 – Breanna Koenen, Brisbane Lions – 33333
9 – Jasmine Garner, North Melbourne– 22221
5 – Belle Dawes, Brisbane Lions – 2111
1 – Natalie Grider, Brisbane Lions – 1
Abbie Holmes (Chair): Breanna Koenen, Belle Dawes, Jasmine Garner
Erin Phillips: Breanna Koenen, Jasmine Garner, Belle Dawes
Gemma Bastiani: Breanna Koenen, Jasmine Garner, Belle Dawes
Quentin Hull: Breanna Koenen, Jasmine Garner, Belle Dawes
Lauren Wood: Breanna Koenen, Jasmine Garner, Natalie Grider
Source: [16]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Black, Sarah. "AFLW Grand Final is a David and Goliath battle but who's who?". afl.com.au/aflw. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- ↑ Leonard, Owen. "Brisbane Lions hold off Adelaide Crows in thriller to earn home preliminary final". www.afl.com.au. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- ↑ "Brisbane hold off dogged Geelong to clinch record fifth AFLW grand final berth". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- 1 2 "North Melbourne to host AFLW grand final after beating Adelaide by one point in gripping preliminary final". ABC News. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- ↑ "Venue, time locked in for 2023 AFLW Grand Final". afl.com.au/aflw. 26 November 2023. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
- ↑ "When is the AFLW grand final? Date, time for 2023 women's showpiece fixture | Sporting News Australia". www.sportingnews.com. 2023-11-26. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
- ↑ Vinall, Marnie (28 November 2023). "Players see Garner's greatness, but umpires don't; Grand final stays at sold-out Ikon Park". The Age. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- ↑ "AFLW grand final won't move to Docklands Stadium despite rapid sellout at Princes Park". ABC News. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- ↑ "Brisbane Lions roar home in fourth quarter to win epic AFLW 2023 grand final". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- 1 2 3 "2023 NAB AFLW Grand Final: All you need to know". www.afl.com.au. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Wright, Nick (3 December 2023). "AFLW 2023 grand final LIVE: North Melbourne Kangaroos versus Brisbane Lions". The Age. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "AFLW 2023 grand final: North Melbourne 27-44 Brisbane - as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- ↑ "ARIA Award-winning artist G Flip to perform in the 2023 Telstra Pre-Game entertainment". afl.com.au/aflw. 2023-11-26. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
- 1 2 3 Laughton, Max. "Lions star overcomes knee concern as teams announced — AFLW Grand Final ultimate guide". Fox Sports. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
- ↑ "2023 NAB AFLW Grand Final umpires, goal boundary named announced". www.afl.com.au. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- ↑ "Best on Ground: 2023 NAB AFLW Grand Final North Melbourne Kangaroos v Brisbane Lions". www.afl.com.au. Retrieved 3 December 2023.