With three seconds remaining on the clock and Brisbane trailing by a solitary goal in the AFLW grand final, Nicole Hilderbrand’s long bomb looked set to land in marquee forward Sabrina Frederick-Traub’s safe pair of hands. Instead, Rhiannon Metcalfe punched the ball clear and Erin Phillips pounced, desperately attempting to clear a congested forward 50. In a last-gasp effort, Frederick-Traub lunged at best-on-ground Phillips, with a tackle that could easily have been rewarded with a holding the ball decision. But it was too late; the siren sounded. The Adelaide Crows became the first AFLW premiers.

It’s not uncommon for a grand final to produce tears but, when the siren finally sounded on season one of AFLW, they fell unlike any other. Lions players were in agony and the Crows elated but there was scarcely a dry eye among a largely neutral crowd on the Gold Coast, either. As the premiership cup was held triumphantly aloft by the coach, Bec Goddard, with co-captains Chelsea Randall and Phillips beaming at her side, the commentator Jason Bennett perfectly summed up what so many were feeling: “For the generations of women in football who refused to take no for an answer, this moment is for you.”

This was not, after all, Adelaide’s moment, nor was the elation just for Crows fans. Sarah Perkins, the woman who was overlooked by every team in her home state only to become a premiership-winning forward, summed this up in her post-match interview. “We [Adelaide] are not the winner,” she said, visibly emotional, “women’s football is the winner.”

And what a glorious victory it was. Bennett was spot on. AFLW was not the invention of the AFL and 2017 was not (by far) the beginning of women’s fight to play Australian rules football on the main stage but it felt like the moment the dam wall finally broke.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest ‘Women’s football is the winner’: Brisbane’s Kate McCarthy and Sabrina Frederick-Traub celebrate a goal during the 2017 AFLW grand final. Photograph: Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images

How to do justice, in words, to what that meant to so many people? Kirby Fenwick grasped the scale of this task when she embarked on the creation of an audio documentary focusing specifically on the magical game that kickstarted it all between Carlton and Collingwood. Inundated with expressions of interest, she settled on 40 interviews with a diverse range of women. Asked what most stood out about the interview, Fenwick answers: “There was a lot of emotion.

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“For some, there were tears … The women I spoke to felt incredibly strongly about the season. Older women in particular, who had never had the opportunity to play, who were told ‘girls don’t play football’. For them, seeing women out on the field was incredibly powerful and very emotional.

“I also spoke to younger women. And it was equally powerful for them but they still have the opportunity to play. They now know they can play and many of them have.”

The season’s success is perhaps most appropriately measured in the numbers of women who have subsequently taken up the game – an influx that has accounted for a massive 76% increase in the number of women’s teams, with 463,364 women and girls nationally playing some form of Australian rules football. Women now make up 30% of the overall participation figures for AFL, after just one season in the limelight. On the back of such figures, there can be no denying that the old adage that you can’t be what you can’t see holds true; that the visible spectacle of women playing the game so many love proved a cliched if literal game-changer.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Corban McGregor of the Jillaroos is tackled during the Rugby League Women’s World Cup final. Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

The NRL, for example, decided late that it had missed the boat, announcing in December an elite national women’s league for 2018, with up to six NRL teams guaranteed franchises. Perhaps even more promisingly, the formerly known Interstate Challenge (played between Queensland and New South Wales) will also be rebranded as State of Origin, giving the women’s game a chance to tap into a venomous rivalry without precedent. The game will also be given the best chance of drawing an optimal crowd, with a dedicated, standalone weekend before men’s Origin II.



These announcements followed another successful Rugby League World Cup title for the Jillaroos, with the 2017 women’s competition televised in full for the first time. In its wake, the NRL revealed to Guardian Australia its own promising figures on women’s participation, with tag and tackle variations up 32% in 2017, and 9,029 new women playing a form of rugby league in Australia. One can only imagine the further growth on the back of visible idols in club and state colours.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Raelene Castle after becoming Rugby Australia’s new chief executive. Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

It seems no coincidence that Raelene Castle was appointed to the top job of Rugby Australia just a day before the announcement of “Super W”, a national women’s XVs rugby competition to kick off for a six-week season in March 2018. Lauded by its chairman, Cameron Clyne, as commercially savvy, Castle noted in her press conference that “the female market is really hot” and that union is in a “race to be a sport of choice”.

RA has also flagged its intention to bid for the 2021 women’s World Cup, which has never before been held in Australia. Poignantly, Clyne acknowledged that there “never been a more exciting time in the women’s game”. For those who have waited their whole lives to play competitively on the national stage (some too long), the sentiment rings true with a pang.

It would also be remiss to imply the AFLW was Australia’s first national women’s competition. The W-League far preceded the inauguration of AFLW but, for whatever reason, has yet to command public attention in the same way. For the women’s football expert Ann Odong, one issue is that the W-League “has failed to create an environment that is conducive to community building”, perhaps with the exception of Canberra United.

Media coverage, or lack of it, is also to blame, yet the relative lack of interest in the W-League is a conundrum given the Matildas’ status as national darlings after a year of unrivalled highlights. Beginning the year ranked eighth, they finished it fourth – the first time any Australian football side has ranked in the top five internationally. This was on the back of the moment that really had heads turning back home: their triumphant victory in the inaugural Tournament of Nations, which left superpowers USA, Brazil and Japan in their wake.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Sam Kerr of the Matildas, who won the Tournament of Nations. Photograph: Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Matildas proved this was no fluke with two resultant and resounding friendly victories over Brazil, played in front of unprecedented crowds of 16,829 (an Australian record) and 15,089. Australia’s national team had arrived on the domestic stage, in a way that would prove profound. The domestic competition has the foundations necessary to succeed if it can tap into the enormous goodwill of its growing audience.

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Then there are the women who have long been doing it for themselves – our netballers. The traditional stalwart of women’s sport in Australia, netball produced its own innovation in 2017 with the introduction of Super Netball. With blockbuster clubs including Collingwood and Greater Western Sydney signing on, alongside the Melbourne Storm-backed Sunshine Coast Lightning, the competition drew record crowds and attracted new audiences. A crowd of 11,871 attended the Swifts v Firebirds/Giants v Lightning double header, and 43% more viewers tuned into Saturday night Super Netball than they did to ANZ championship fixtures in 2016.

And then, of course, there’s women’s cricket, not to be forgotten, even if it is sometimes described as having failed to capture the nation’s attention in the same way other women’s sport has. A women’s Ashes series held on home soil no doubt went some way towards redressing that, and most games were televised (though the most important match – the Test – was not, and games were initially shown on 9Gem rather than Nine). Nonetheless, the series attracted 4 million viewers overall, with a peak audience of more than 500,000. A total of 29,158 people also attended games that were held in Coffs Harbour and Canberra as often as Sydney or Brisbane.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Ellyse Perry, of the Sixers, after the Women’s Big Bash League match against the Sydney Thunder. Photograph: Matt King/Getty Images

Although in its infancy, the signs are that the Women’s Big Bash League will prove another turning point. The first weekend of competition attracted a peak audience of 629,000 and an average of 422,500, a 59% increase on season two, while the opening weekend’s average attendance figures were also up 45%. The on-field action most certainly rose to the occasion, with multiple records falling. Ellyse Perry, crowned ICC cricketer of the year, credited the clear improvement in quality to a further 12 months of development for women who were finally able to commit to the game full-time.

W-League players benefited from collective bargaining – seeing their average wage double to $15,500 a year

Ever a spectre in the women’s game, a vastly improved pay deal paved the way. After memorably dramatic and drawn-out pay negotiations between the Australian Cricketers’ Association and Cricket Australia, a renewed memorandum of understanding saw Australia’s national women’s team rewarded by a 119% pay increase, making them the highest paid national team in any women’s sport in Australia. The Southern Stars received an average $179,000 in salary in 2017 – a $100,000 pay rise. Although Big Bash and state cricketers still have relatively low average wages of $11,584 and $27,297 respectively, all players, men and women, start with the same base hourly rate of pay.

These cultural shifts are also being felt at the grassroots level, with 393,735 women and girls participating in cricket, a 24.5% increase on last year and 27.5% of all 1.4 million people playing cricket in Australia.

Seen in this light, cricket has arguably led the way for women and girls as the only sport to have gender-equitable principles at the core of remuneration for professional players, although much-belated improvements were also seen for footballers. W-League players likewise benefited from collective bargaining – seeing their average wage double to $15,500 a year (to rise to $17,400 next year). A maternity leave policy was also developed after lobbying to further encourage women who seek a professional football career.

And, after much conjecture over their initial wage offer of $5,000, so-called regulation (non-marquee or tier two) AFLW players received $8,500 for nine contract hours for 17 weeks in 2017. After feedback that players spent significantly more than those hours at the club in their first season, they will be contracted for 24 weeks at 15 hours in 2018 but only receive $10,500. In other words, the players will be asked to do more contracted work for less hourly pay. Reports that total player payments will increase from $2,275,000 to $2,752,000 should therefore be read in that light.

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As is often the way with women’s sport, progress can be frustratingly slow. The NSW Blues women this year celebrated the announcement that they would be paid for their participation in the Interstate Challenge – for the first time (by comparison, the men’s state representatives receive $30,000 a match). And, of the 28 Wallaroos chosen to represent Australia in the World Cup of rugby union, only three were paid professionals with contracts with the women’s rugby sevens program. The other 25 took time off full-time jobs to pay their way. Thankfully, the outgoing RA chief executive, Bill Pulver, said in December that Sevens pay parity, and professionalisation, was an urgent aim.

Until these pay disparities are addressed, women’s sport in Australia is hampered by an impossible conundrum: the perception that the quality is inferior, with very little systematic (financial, material) support in place to allow women to pursue their dreams professionally. (Nor are they socialised to play sport – but that point deserves its own article.)

Australia’s history has too long been littered with women being denied opportunities to take part meaningfully in the games they love. With the triumph of the AFLW, that dam wall has – hopefully, finally – been properly broken. With the advances being paved by cricket in particular, they may finally see the systematic change required to realise anywhere near their full potential.