After a ‘messy’ year, the time has come for the AFL to go all-in on AFLW’s future

Hannah Ewings stands with her hands on her hips looking despondent.

Holding two AFLW seasons in one year was always going to be messy.

When season six ended with the sealing of an Adelaide Crows dynasty in April this year, rumours were already swirling that the following season would be pulled forward, beginning just a few months later.

After years of holding AFLW in the sweltering heat of the Australian summer — in search of somewhat-mythical “clean air” in the sporting calendar — headquarters, and many of the playing cohort, were keen to try something new.

The AFL pulled forward the start date of season seven, hoping to attract new fans to the game. (Getty Images: AFL Photos/Michael Willson)

One of head office’s hopes was that launching an AFLW season around the time of the men’s finals would encourage new and different fans to the women’s game.

It wasn’t until late May, however, that the official start date for the season — the pre-finals AFL bye — was confirmed, after protracted collective bargaining negotiations saw the players secure a much-deserved pay rise.

This meant that the four teams who were yet to enter the competition — Essendon, Hawthorn, Port Adelaide and Sydney — were effectively given just weeks to pull their lists together, before completing rushed pre-seasons and going up against the hardened bodies of long-established teams.

Hannah Ewings stands with her hands on her hips looking despondent.
The four expansion clubs were arguably the hardest done by with the re-scheduled start to the season. (Getty Images: AFL Photos/Michael Willson)

As has been customary with AFLW for a long time, players and staff agreed to the changes with a fair dose of goodwill, up-ending and putting lives on hold for the greater good and growth of the competition.

The jury is out on whether the short-term pain will pay off.

Meanwhile, the AFLW’s head of football, Nicole Livingstone, is on record, saying that the switch to August was a success, and there are multiple reasons why the gamble was worth the risk.

Although many in the industry are exhausted and burnt out from running two seasons in 2022, it wasn’t viable to wait almost a year and half to run AFLW season seven in August 2023.

That would almost certainly have spelled the end of a multitude of the game’s much-loved veterans, including — potentially — now premiership captain Daisy Pearce.

Daisy Pearce pumps her fists and yells in delight while wearing her premiership medal in the Demons changerooms
Players such as Daisy Pearce may have been lost to the game if season seven was delayed until August 2023.(Getty Images: Matt Roberts)

There was also a plausible romanticism in the idea of making AFLW front and centre for AFL men’s fans to get behind because their teams missed or were bundled from finals and they entered their customary post-season malaise.

Season seven’s metrics — particularly crowd attendances — would suggest this is yet to occur, but there is something to be said for being patient, too.

Author: Ivan Robinson