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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Division 2  







2 Clubs  



2.1  Current clubs  





2.2  Affiliated (non-league) clubs  





2.3  Past Men's clubs  







3 Past champions  





4 Principal venues  





5 Participation  





6 See also  





7 Notes  





8 References  





9 External links  














AFL Ontario







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


AFL Ontario
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2023
SportAustralian rules football
Founded1989; 35 years ago (1989)
PresidentJaclyn Halliday
No. of teams9
CountryCanada
HeadquartersOntario
Level on pyramid1
Official websiteAFLOntario

AFL Ontario is the largest Australian football league in North America. It is currently composed of teams from the Greater Toronto Area, Southwestern Ontario and the National Capital Region, who play off for the Conacher Cup (named after Lionel Conacher), presently awarded to the winner of the annual AFL Ontario Grand Final.

AFL Ontario, along with the North West Pacific Football League is a member of AFL Canada, the governing body for the sport in Canada.

History

[edit]

AFL Ontario which was originally known as the Canadian Australian Football League (CAFA) and more recently as the Ontario Australian Football League (OAFL), was established in 1989. Two teams were formed that year - the Toronto Panthers and the Mississauga Mustangs, with a draft of interested players prior to a three-game season and Grand Final. The coaches of those inaugural teams – John Pearson (Toronto Panthers) and Terence Wallis (Mississauga Mustangs) brought a significant amount of experience from playing at a high level in Australia. An interesting fact is that the first Grand Final was attended by a number of AFL executives including Ron Barrassi and members of the Geelong Cats and Melbourne Demons.

Founding members of the original competition include: Kingsley Ellis (ex-Fitzroy VFL - lead central Umpire, founder of the Hamilton Tigers), Terence Wallis (founded & coached the Mississauga then Toronto Dingos), Wild Bill Fampton (Mississauga then founded the Brampton Bulldogs), Sandro Mancino (Toronto Eagles, Scarborough Rebels and then founded the Balmy Beach Saints). These pioneers set the foundation for the current competition. During the early years CAFA played a number of International games against visiting teams from Australia (Balmain FC, Golden Oldies touring team) as well as the team representing the Australian Rules league in England. The Canadian team narrowly missed beating the touring Australian teams over the years, but soundly defeated England on the four occasions that it played them (1990–1996) culminating in a strong win by the touring Canadian team in London (1996) coached by Terence Wallis.

In 2011, with the increased interest in women's football, AFL Ontario established their Women's League with great success. With the help of the Ontario Trillium Foundation, 2011 also saw the development of AFL Ontario's junior competition. 2012 saw the women's division double in size to 6 teams competing, and the junior competition continued over the summer holidays.

Division 2

[edit]

In 2009, AFL Ontario launched a second division originally consisting of six founding teams. London (Ontario) AFC withdrew before the official start to the season and the team's players were absorbed into the Quebec Saints. Along with the Saints, the Toronto Central Blues, Broadview Hawks, Etobicoke 'Old Boys' Roos and Toronto Eagles made up the founding five teams of the new OAFL Division 2 competition. In honour of the first Canadian to ever play in the AFL the competition's premiership cup was named the Mike Pyke Cup (named after Mike Pyke).

The OAFL Division 2 season was traditionally shorter than that of the OAFL. In 2009 due to teams playing different numbers of matches the ladder was determined by 'Match Ratio' rather than premiership points. In 2010 all teams competed in 8 rounds and thus the ladder reverted to determining positions by premiership points.

2010 also saw the introduction of hybrid teams. New team the Toronto Rebel Dogs (a partnership between the Toronto Downtown Dingos and the Toronto Rebels) and the 'DevilRoos' (a partnership between the Etobicoke Roos and High Park Demons). The Toronto Eagles withdrew their team from the 2010 season.

Clubs

[edit]

Current clubs

[edit]
Gargoyles
Wildcats
Swans
Location map of current clubs in the league.
Colours Club Location Formed Premiers
(Men's)
Premiers
(Women's)

Central Blues

Toronto

2006 1 -

Etobicoke Kangaroos

Etobicoke

2003 4 4

Grand River Gargoyles

Guelph

2001 -

Hamilton Wildcats

Hamilton

1990 1

High Park Demons

High Park

1989 1 2

Ottawa Swans

Ottawa

2007 2 1

Toronto Dingos

Toronto

1996 4 -

Toronto Eagles

Toronto

1989 12 1

Toronto Rebels

Toronto

1990 4 -

Affiliated (non-league) clubs

[edit]
Colours Club Location Formed
Barrie Giants AFC Barrie 2017
Kingston AFC Kingston 2018
Forest City Crows London 2018
Aussie X Ontario 2008 (junior development)

Past Men's clubs

[edit]
Club City
London Magpies (2003–2005) London
Windsor Mariners (2002–2005) Windsor
Brampton Wolverines (1993–1999) Brampton
Balmy Beach Saints (1992–1997) Toronto
Quebec Saints (2009–2010) Montreal
Broadview Hawks (1989–2017) Toronto
Etobicoke Kangaroos (2003-2018) Toronto

Past champions

[edit]
Year Premier Runner-up
1989 Toronto Panthers Mississauga Mustangs
1990 Toronto Panthers Mississauga Mustangs
1991 Toronto Panthers Scarborough Rebels
1992 Scarborough Rebels Mississauga Mustangs
1993 Lawrence Park Rebels Toronto Panthers
1994 Mississauga Mustangs Lawrence Park Rebels
1995 Toronto Eagles Broadview Hawks
1996 Toronto Eagles Hamilton Wildcats
1997 Toronto Eagles Lawrence Park Rebels
1998 Toronto Eagles Lawrence Park Rebels
1999 Toronto Eagles Broadview Hawks
2000 Toronto Dingos Toronto Eagles
2001 Lakeshore Rebels Toronto Eagles
2002 Toronto Eagles Toronto Dingos
2003 Toronto Dingos Etobicoke Kangaroos
2004 Toronto Dingos Toronto Eagles
2005 Toronto Dingos Lakeshore Rebels
2006 Toronto Eagles Broadview Hawks
2007 Toronto Eagles Etobicoke Kangaroos
2008 Etobicoke Kangaroos Toronto Eagles
Year Premier Runner-up Division 2 Premier Division 2 Runner-up Women's League Women's League Runner-up
2009 Toronto Eagles Etobicoke Kangaroos Quebec Saints Broadview Hawks Not contested
2010 Central Blues Toronto Dingos Quebec Saints Central Blues
2011 Etobicoke Kangaroos High Park Demons Etobicoke Kangaroos Broadview Hawks Toronto Eagles Etobicoke Lady Roos
2012 Etobicoke Kangaroos Broadview Hawks Broadview Hawks High Park Demons High Park Demons Hamilton Wildcats
2013 Broadview Hawks Toronto Dingos Toronto Dingos Broadview Hawks High Park Demons Hamilton Wildcats
2014 Broadview Hawks Central Blues Toronto Rebels Toronto Dingos Ottawa Swans Hamilton Wildcats
2015 Etobicoke Kangaroos Toronto Eagles Toronto Dingos Toronto Rebels Etobicoke Kangaroos Hamilton Wildcats
2016 Toronto Rebels Ottawa Swans Not contested Etobicoke Kangaroos Hamilton Wildcats
2017 Toronto Eagles Toronto Rebels Etobicoke Kangaroos Central Blues
2018 Ottawa Swans Toronto Eagles Etobicoke Kangaroos Ottawa Swans
2019 Ottawa Swans Hamilton Wildcats Hamilton Wildcats Etobicoke Kangaroos
2022 Hamilton Wildcats Toronto Rebels Etobicoke Kangaroos Hamilton Wildcats

Principal venues

[edit]

Participation

[edit]

In 2006, AFL Ontario had around 330 senior players consisting of over 170 Canadian nationals.[1] With the rapid increase in awareness and interest in Australian football in Ontario, this has increased in 2012 with almost 650 senior men and women members.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=AFL_Ontario&oldid=1231243643"

Categories: 
Ontario Australian Football League
Sport in Ontario
Australian rules football leagues in Canada
Sports leagues established in 1989
1989 establishments in Ontario
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This page was last edited on 27 June 2024, at 07:57 (UTC).

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