A couple charged with assault over a fight at an AFL match at Adelaide Oval have repeatedly clashed with media outside Adelaide Magistrates Court.

A man and a woman charged over a brawl at an Adelaide Oval AFL game have clashed with media representatives after a court appearance Tuesday.

Natelle Martine Hogg and Bill Brian Neville Fitzgerald have both been charged with aggravated assault over the incident in the grandstand at the match between the Adelaide Crows and Essendon on July 19.

Outside court, the pair clashed with TV reporters and other media, hurling abuse and grabbing at cameras and other equipment.

According to The Advertiser, police were called to the scene and are investigating the incident.

The report also claims sheriffs officers separated the pair from media representatives after the confrontation spilt over onto a street, which stopped motorists and cyclists from driving past.

Cameramen have captured the incident in a series of photos taken outside Adelaide Magistrates Court.

They will return to court in November.

Police have previously alleged Hogg struck a man to the head on more than one occasion, resisted officers and refused to give her personal details during the stadium incident in July.

Hogg told the court she “shouldn’t have acted the way I did” and asked to plead guilty, though she believed she had acted in self-defence.

But Magistrate Terry Forrest suggested the matter be further adjourned for her to get legal advice.

“You need to understand all the potential ramifications,” he said.

The allegations against Fitzgerald were not detailed and he told the court he was applying for legal aid.

Hogg, from Sheidow Park, was earlier this year banned from the Adelaide Oval and every AFL game across the country for three years after she was charged following the stadium brawl.

The Adelaide Oval ban, issued by stadium managers, is the longest handed down in South Australia and is in addition to a police-imposed three-month ban.

The AFL also banned the woman from attending any game at any stadium across the country for three years.

— with AAP