Australian Shardball League
| Current season, competition or edition: | |
| File:ASLlogo.png | |
| Sport | Shardball |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2011 |
| First season | 2011 |
| CEO | Eleanor Pike |
| No. of teams | 8 |
| Country | Australia |
| Most recent champion(s) | Melbourne Titans (2015) |
| Most titles | Melbourne Titans (2) |
| TV partner(s) | Seven Network Foxtel / Kayo |
| Official website | shardball.com |
The Australian Shardball League (ASL) is the premier professional competition in the sport of Shardball, contested by eight clubs based across Australia. Established in 2011, the ASL serves as the highest level of organised Shardball and operates on a fully professional basis, featuring a 22-round home-and-away season followed by a four-team finals series culminating in the ASL Grand Final.
The ASL is governed by the Australian Shardball Commission and has grown into one of the country’s most prominent national sporting competitions. By the end of the 2015 season, four clubs had won the premiership: the Melbourne Titans, Sydney Shardhawks, Adelaide Forge, and Brisbane Breakers. Melbourne became the first club to win two premierships after defeating Sydney in the 2015 Grand Final.
The league also awards a minor premiership to the club that finishes on top of the ladder at the end of the home-and-away season. Melbourne won the minor premiership in 2011, 2012, and 2015, while Adelaide won it in 2013 and Brisbane won it in 2014.
History
Origins and foundation
Shardball developed as a hybridised field sport in the late 2000s, combining elements of traditional Australian rules football with experimental ball-shaping designed to emphasise aerial contests, angled kicking, contested possession, and unpredictable ground movement. The sport was initially played through independent state-based competitions before a national professional model was proposed in 2010.
The Australian Shardball League was formally established ahead of the 2011 season, bringing together foundation clubs from Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth, Hobart, Darwin, and Canberra. The league was designed around a compact national footprint, allowing each club to play every opponent multiple times while keeping travel and operating costs manageable during the competition’s early years.
2011: Melbourne’s undefeated start
The league’s inaugural season in 2011 was dominated by the Melbourne Titans, who completed an undefeated home-and-away campaign and finished as the first minor premiers. Melbourne defeated the Sydney Shardhawks in the inaugural ASL Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, winning 16.12 (108) to 14.11 (95).
Melbourne’s early dominance gave the new league immediate credibility but also raised concerns that the competition could quickly become unbalanced. Sydney, Adelaide, and Brisbane all showed enough quality to suggest that the top end of the league would become more competitive in future seasons.
2012: Sydney breakthrough
The 2012 season saw Melbourne again finish on top of the ladder, but the finals series produced the league’s first major upset. Sydney improved across the back half of the season and defeated Melbourne in the finals before beating Adelaide in the Grand Final, 16.14 (110) to 14.16 (100).
Sydney’s premiership helped establish one of the ASL’s earliest major rivalries, with the Shardhawks and Titans regularly drawing the strongest national television audiences. Adelaide’s Grand Final loss also positioned the Forge as one of the league’s most consistent early challengers.
2013: Adelaide and Hobart reshape the league
The 2013 season marked a major shift in the ASL’s competitive balance. Defending premiers Sydney missed the finals, becoming the first club to fail to qualify in the season after winning the premiership. Adelaide emerged as the standout team, winning the minor premiership with a 15–7 record before defeating the Brisbane Breakers in the semi-finals.
The season also featured the rise of the Hobart Crags, who had previously struggled at the bottom end of the ladder. Hobart upset Melbourne in the semi-finals and reached their first Grand Final, but Adelaide won the premiership with a 17.11 (113) to 15.12 (102) victory.
2014: Brisbane’s system season
The 2014 season was won by the Brisbane Breakers, who claimed both their first minor premiership and first ASL premiership. Brisbane’s success was built around disciplined defensive spacing, contested-ball pressure, and a controlled possession game that reduced the influence of the league’s more explosive attacking sides.
Brisbane defeated Melbourne in the 2014 ASL Grand Final, 15.16 (106) to 14.10 (94). The result meant that the ASL had produced four different premiers in its first four seasons, strengthening the league’s reputation for parity.
The year also saw the Perth Ironfangs reach the finals for the first time, while Adelaide became the second consecutive reigning premier to miss the finals the following season.
2015: Melbourne become the first two-time premiers
The 2015 season became a turning point in the league’s early history. After four different premiers in four seasons, Melbourne returned to the top of the competition and became the first club to win a second ASL premiership.
Melbourne finished the home-and-away season as minor premiers with a 16–6 record before defeating Perth in the semi-finals and Sydney in the Grand Final. The 2015 decider revived the Melbourne–Sydney rivalry from the inaugural season, with the Titans defeating the Shardhawks 16.13 (109) to 13.14 (92).
Captain Nathan Cross won both the ASL Medal and the Grand Final Best on Ground Medal, while Jack Harrington won the Coleman Medal as the league’s leading goalkicker. The season confirmed Melbourne as the ASL’s first true powerhouse while still preserving the broader competitive balance of the league.
Competition format
The Australian Shardball League season traditionally runs from March to August, spanning just under six months of competition. The calendar is designed to balance a full national home-and-away fixture with a short, high-pressure finals series.
During the home-and-away season, each club plays 22 matches across 22 rounds. With eight clubs in the league, the fixture rotates so that each side faces every opponent three times across the season, with one additional rivalry or return fixture used to complete the schedule.
At the conclusion of the regular rounds, the top four teams on the ladder progress to the finals. The series begins with two semi-finals, in which the first-placed team plays the third-placed side and the second-placed team plays the fourth-placed side. The winners of these matches advance to the ASL Grand Final, which determines the season’s premiers.
Premiership points are awarded throughout the home-and-away season to decide ladder positions. Teams receive four points for a win, two points for a draw, and no points for a loss. If two or more teams finish on the same number of premiership points, positions are separated by percentage. Percentage is calculated by dividing total points scored for by total points conceded against, multiplied by 100.
Clubs
By the end of the 2015 season, the Australian Shardball League still consisted of its original eight foundation clubs. The league repeatedly rejected early expansion proposals during its first five seasons, preferring to strengthen the existing clubs before increasing the number of teams.
| Club | City / Region | Home venue | Premierships | Best finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melbourne Titans | Melbourne, Victoria | Melbourne Cricket Ground | 2 | Premiers: 2011, 2015 |
| Sydney Shardhawks | Sydney, New South Wales | Sydney Football Stadium | 1 | Premiers: 2012 |
| Brisbane Breakers | Brisbane, Queensland | The Gabba | 1 | Premiers: 2014 |
| Adelaide Forge | Adelaide, South Australia | Adelaide Oval | 1 | Premiers: 2013 |
| Perth Ironfangs | Perth, Western Australia | Subiaco Oval | 0 | Semi-finalists: 2014, 2015 |
| Hobart Crags | Hobart, Tasmania | Bellerive Oval | 0 | Runners-up: 2013 |
| Darwin Cyclones | Darwin, Northern Territory | TIO Stadium | 0 | Seventh: 2014, 2015 |
| Canberra Sentinels | Canberra, Australian Capital Territory | Manuka Oval | 0 | Sixth: 2012 |
Seasons
| Year | Premiers (score) | Runners-up (score) | Venue | Date of Play | Minor Premiers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Melbourne Titans 16.12 (108) | Sydney Shardhawks 14.11 (95) | Melbourne Cricket Ground | 28 August 2011 | Melbourne Titans |
| 2012 | Sydney Shardhawks 16.14 (110) | Adelaide Forge 14.16 (100) | 19 August 2012 | ||
| 2013 | Adelaide Forge 17.11 (113) | Hobart Crags 15.12 (102) | 18 August 2013 | Adelaide Forge | |
| 2014 | Brisbane Breakers 15.16 (106) | Melbourne Titans 14.10 (94) | 24 August 2014 | Brisbane Breakers | |
| 2015 | Melbourne Titans 16.13 (109) | Sydney Shardhawks 13.14 (92) | 23 August 2015 | Melbourne Titans |
Trophy and awards
The league’s premiership trophy is the Aurora Trophy, awarded to the winning club after the ASL Grand Final. The trophy became one of the central symbols of the league’s early identity, with each premiership club receiving a permanent engraved listing.
Major individual awards include:
- Aurora Trophy – awarded to the premiership team
- ASL Medal – league best and fairest, voted by umpires
- Coleman Medal (Shardball) – leading goalkicker of the home-and-away season
- Grand Final Best on Ground Medal – awarded to the standout player in the ASL Grand Final
- ASL Rising Star – awarded to the best young player of the season
- Coach of the Year – awarded by a panel of league officials, media representatives, and former players
Media
The league holds national broadcast agreements with the Seven Network and Foxtel/Kayo, with all matches televised live. Major finals matches are simulcast on free-to-air television. Seven’s Friday night coverage became the league’s most important broadcast slot during the early seasons, while Foxtel and Kayo provided full national coverage of every match.
The ASL also operates digital streaming, replay, and highlights services through its official website. By 2015, the league had introduced live match centres, short-form highlight packages, and expanded statistical coverage, helping the sport build a stronger online following.