Wimmera's new female football league behind rise in footy memberships
On a still autumn day in Victoria's Wimmera region, two groups of women walk from a football field, exhausted and a little bruised, but with big smiles on their faces.
Their footy boots and jerseys are splattered with mud.
And even though just 11 points decided the game, every player felt like a winner because they knew they had just made history.
These women and girls know they are part of something big and new, bringing a women's Aussie rules football league to town for the first time.
Like many parts of rural Australia, the population of the Wimmera-Mallee region has declined in recent decades.
So too has participation in community sport, with four local football-netball clubs merging and one club folding completely since 2022.
The inaugural Wimmera female football competition is a league of three senior and three junior clubs played over nine rounds.
Its first-ever seniors match was a clash between two existing clubs, the Minyip-Murtoa Burras and Laharum Demons.
Laharum co-captain Jess Cannane said being able to play the sport she loved closer to home was a game changer.
"We've always had to travel two-and-a-half hours to play some footy down in Warrnambool, so to be able to play at home, where we're all born and bred, is fantastic," she said.
"We're now seeing pathways where girls can just play footy, they don't have to drop out at under 14s when they used to at Auskick."
Cannane's co-captain and fellow midfielder Ruby Manson hopes it's the start of something big.
"It is a big ask of parents of young people to be driving hours and hours, putting a whole Sunday in, especially if they're playing netball and things like that.
"Hopefully, this is the beginning of what is going to be a really long history of women's footy in this area."
Many players in the competition have never played competitive football before.
Until now, the nearest female football competition was the Western Victorian Female Football League of which Horsham and Stawell clubs were members.
But most of the sides in that league are based several hours' drive to the south.
Laharum Demons coach Rodney Hogan said he was "proud" of his club for taking part in the first season.
"For me, winning's down the bottom of the list, or well down the list, as far as our priorities [are concerned].
"It's more about personal development, skill development, all that sort of stuff, and teaching footy."
The Wimmera Football League was founded in 1937 and has produced numerous notable VFL/AFL players, including Tim Watson, Adam Goodes and Seb Ross.
Several prominent AFLW players, including Maggie Caris, have also grown up in the area but had to move elsewhere to play football.
It has a list of nine clubs, but league chair Peter Ballagh said memberships had already swelled as a result of the new competition.
"The feedback from the clubs that are involved is that the memberships and supporter bases have grown considerably because of the women's competition," he said.
"They've had some major sponsors jump on board as well, so it's been a win-win for everybody."
Mr Ballagh said the establishment of the women's competition was 12 months ahead of schedule.
"We thought this might happen in 2026, but the support from the clubs and the local community has been amazing."
He said three more clubs in the Wimmera league were now working on launching female teams next year.
Essendon AFLW player Alex Morcom is originally from the Wimmera town of Warracknabeal and tossed the coin for the inaugural match in the new women's competition earlier this month.
"It's been an amazing game … it was really competitive, and they looked like they were having a lot of fun," she said.
Morcom said she was glad the local women and girls were getting an opportunity she never had.
"It's just incredible to see women's AFL being played in the area," she said.
"It hasn't always been a thing, and it's obviously taken a few people to get it all running."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Telegraph
5 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
Storm v Cowboys and Dolphins v Dragons live updates, SuperCoach scores
Welcome to our live SuperCoach coverage of round 14 in the NRL. Tonight, the Storm will take on the Cowboys in Melbourne, with Harry Grant, Xavier Coates and Reece Robson all named in the lead-up to Origin II. At Suncorp Stadium, the Dolphins have a big chance to push into the top 8 if they overcome the Dragons. FOLLOW OUR LIVE BLOG BELOW

ABC News
31 minutes ago
- ABC News
Scientist rejects 'gag' accusation over Murujuga rock art report
A lead scientist behind a major report monitoring the impact of pollution on the ancient rock art of Murujuga in Western Australia has broken his silence, saying industry and the more than one million petroglyphs can co-exist, while rejecting accusations of a gag on researchers. Professor Ben Mullins, who helps lead a team of dozens of scientists doing long-term research on the site, hasn't spoken publicly since their 800-page report was released a fortnight ago. On Friday morning he spoke publicly for the first time and told ABC Radio National Breakfast host Sally Sara the group's findings suggest there may have been some impact on the rocks, but that air quality has improved in the area over time. "The evidence [is] that the effects we have measured, this increased porosity in the rocks, most likely happened in the past," he said. "There's nothing in our report that suggests industry and the rock art can't coexist and the emissions can't be managed to an appropriate level." The federal government has given provisional approval to Woodside Energy's bid to extend its controversial North West Shelf gas project until 2070, angering climate activists and some traditional owners who say the emissions produced would be a "death sentence" for the ancient rock carvings. The provisional approval came shortly after a major blow to efforts to have the Murujuga Cultural Landscape listed as a World Heritage site, which has been supported by the federal and state government, as well as the Murujuga Aboriginal Corporation. Professor Mullins said he supported the effort to have the landscape listed. 'It's a really amazing place and it really deserves World Heritage protection,' he said. Just days before federal Environment Minister Murray Watt confirmed his provisional approval of the North West Shelf project extension, the West Australian government released the 800-page monitoring report. WA Premier Roger Cook pointed to its findings to argue industrial activity was having no ongoing impact on the rock art. That led to a furious response from University of Western Australia professor of archaeology Benjamin Smith, who accused the state government of misrepresenting the full report in shorter summary report he described as 'propaganda'. Professor Smith spectacularly ripped up a copy of the summary report in front of cameras at the Western Australia State Parliament last week. He said the academics who worked on the paper had been under a "lockdown" and weren't allowed to speak about the work. His comments came alongside a report by 7:30 that another leader of the rock art monitoring project, Emeritus Professor Adrian Baddeley, wrote to WA's Department of Water and Environmental Regulation to complain about "unacceptable interference" in the summary report, calling it "factually incorrect". But Professor Mullins rejected claims the summary report had been misleading. "[It] was always intended to be a simple lay person summary for the general public. It went through a process to develop it," he said "I don't think it misrepresents the findings in the main report and the important thing is that the full report, all 800 plus pages plus the associated documents, have all been published exactly as we the scientist wrote them. "We all stand by them." He said researchers had "certainly not" been gagged. The federal Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water is now in talks with Woodside Energy over conditions on the final approval of the North West Shelf extension. Environmental groups have written an open letter to Minister Watt calling on him to open the consultation process to the public. The letter, also signed by former WA Labor premiers Peter Dowding and Dr Carmen Lawerence, called the North West Shelf extension "one of the most significant decisions that has or will ever be made by any Australian Minister for the Environment". "The last time public comment was invited on the overall proposal was nearly six years ago — during the WA state EPA assessment in 2019," the letter said. "A huge amount of new information has become available on the impacts and implications of the proposal since that time, including groundbreaking new information released in recent days." It's understood the minister will not open the project to further public consultation. A spokesperson for Woodside said the company has taken proactive steps over many years to manage the impacts of the North West Shelf project. "The latest findings from the state-led, independent peer-reviewed Murujuga Rock Art Monitoring Program build on earlier independent research," they said. "They support the view that responsible operations, backed by science, Traditional Custodian leadership and collaboration, can help protect the unique heritage for future generations."

News.com.au
38 minutes ago
- News.com.au
NRL round 14: Storm v Cowboys and Dolphins v Dragons live updates, SuperCoach scores
Origin stars return to the fold for the Storm and Cowboys, with a key pair back in purple for Melbourne as they look to keep the pressure on top spot. See the late mail and FOLLOW LIVE.