Australian Shardball League: Difference between revisions

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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center; width:100%;"
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center; width:100%;"
|-
|-
! Year !! Premiers (score) !! Runners-up (score) !! Venue !! Attendance !! Best on Ground
! Year !! Premiers (score) !! Runners-up (score) !! Venue !! Date of Play !! Minor Premiers
|-
|-
| [[2011 Shardball season|2011]]
| [[2011 Shardball season|2011]]
| '''Melbourne Titans''' {{nowrap|16.12 (108)}}
| '''[[Melbourne Titans]]''' {{nowrap|16.12 (108)}}
| Sydney Shardhawks {{nowrap|14.11 (95)}}
| [[Sydney Shardhawks]] {{nowrap|14.11 (95)}}
| Melbourne Cricket Ground
| rowspan="3" | Melbourne Cricket Ground
| 64,500
| 28 August 2011
| Jaxon Reid (Melbourne)
| rowspan="2" | [[Melbourne Titans]]
|-
|-
| [[2012 Shardball season|2012]]
| [[2012 Shardball season|2012]]
|
| [[Sydney Shardhawks]] 16.14 (110)
|
| [[Adelaide Forge]] 14.16 (100)
| (TBD)
| 19 August 2012
| (TBD)
|-
| (TBD)
|2013
|
|—
|?
|?
|}
|}



Revision as of 18:34, 15 September 2025

Australian Shardball League
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event [[2012]]
File:ASLlogo.png
SportShardball
Founded2011
First season2011
CEO(TBD)
No. of teams8
CountryAustralia
Most recent
champion(s)
Melbourne Titans (2011)
Most titlesMelbourne Titans (1)
TV partner(s)Seven Network
Foxtel / Kayo
Official websiteshardball.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 quickly grown into one of the country’s most prominent national sporting competitions.

History

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 and angular kicking strategies. Formal codification of the sport led to the establishment of the Australian Shardball League in 2011, bringing together foundation clubs from Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth, Hobart, Darwin and Canberra.

The league’s inaugural season in 2011 saw the Melbourne Titans complete an undefeated campaign, defeating the Sydney Shardhawks in the first ASL Grand Final.

Competition format

The ASL season runs from March to September.

  • Home-and-away season: Each club plays 22 matches across 22 rounds, facing every other team three times in a rotating schedule.
  • Finals series: The top four clubs qualify for the finals, played over two weeks. 1st plays 3rd and 2nd plays 4th in semi-finals, with winners meeting in the ASL Grand Final.
  • Premiership points: Teams receive 4 points for a win, 2 for a draw, and 0 for a loss. Ladder positions are determined by points, then percentage (points for vs. against).

Clubs

As of the 2012 season, the ASL consists of eight clubs:

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 ? ?

Trophy and awards

  • Aurora Trophy – awarded to the premiership team
  • ASL Medal – league best and fairest, voted by umpires
  • Coleman Medal (Shardball) – leading goalkicker of the season
  • Grand Final Best on Ground Medal – awarded to the standout player in the ASL Grand Final

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. The ASL also operates digital streaming and highlights services.

See also

Notes and references

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