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The Tasmanian State League (TSL) is the highest ranked Australian rules football league in Tasmania, Australia.
[edit] History Of The Tasmanian Football League[edit] District FootballIn 1944 TANFL directors met to discuss restructuring of the league which was scheduled to return in 1945 after three seasons in recession due to World War Two. [edit] Going Statewide And Its Eventual DemiseAt the end of the 1985 TANFL season, after many years of discussions, and after numerous pushes by administrators stretching back to the mid-70's it was decided upon to restructure the competition into a statewide format. The six former TANFL clubs would welcome famous northern club, the North Launceston Robins and its longtime NTFA rival East Launceston Demons into the now eight-team Cascade-Boags TFL Statewide League for season 1986. Its early steps into a statewide competition were rocky, the concept was treated with disdain by many southern fans and with great suspicion by northern football supporters. North Launceston continued to field a side in the NTFA whilst playing in the TFL and East Launceston lasted only seven rounds into the new season before announcing it would merge with NTFA club City-South on 26 May 1986 to become the South Launceston Bulldogs for the remainder of 1986 and beyond. In the same year the Cooee Football Club from the North West Football Union (NWFU) gazumped the Burnie Tigers from the same Association and joined the TFL and rebranded itself as the Burnie Hawks - starting a serious war between the two clubs that would damage both and later lead to them merging in 1993. After a period of sustained growth, a healthy standard of football, strong crowd attendances and great public interest from 1987-1990, the bubble burst for the league when the Recession of late-1990 hit Australia - and Tasmania in particular - very hard. After many years of overspending on players, new recruits and coaches from interstate, attendances and club memberships began to fall noticeably by 1991 - many clubs found themselves in financial difficulties and had to start cost-cutting to survive. Players were starting to trickle away to rival country leagues for more money and as a result, the playing standard had started to drop. The lopsided nature of the competition began to cause embarrassment for the TFL, South Launceston had been uncompetitive since it was founded and the admission of the Launceston Football Club (founded 1875) from the NTFL in 1994 was a PR disaster for the League as it was consistently thrashed in every match in its first two season and garnered poor attendances for its entire tenure at TFL level. Hobart - after a very successful 1986-1992 period - were beginning to unravel, and in 1997 would go through the season winless, North Hobart winning only one game in 1996 and New Norfolk winning one game in 1998 - both after periods of finals football - would show that the writing was on the wall for the league. Between 1989 and 1994 Hobart, Sandy Bay, Glenorchy, Burnie Hawks and New Norfolk had all faced financial ruin at some point and in the ensuing years would be joined by North Hobart, Devonport and the Burnie Dockers - a merged entity of the old Burnie Hawks and NTFL club Burnie Tigers that joined forces in 1995 - in a battle to stay afloat under burgeoning debts, increasing costs and dwindling attendances. In 1997 the TFL had rapidly started to implode as a jaded football public voted with its feet and stayed away from TFL football as the saturation coverage of AFL football on television increased, the playing standard continued to fall and fans grew tired of the constant talk of mergers. At the end of the 1997 season it was announced that the Hobart Football Club would merge with North Hobart and Sandy Bay Football Clubs' to field a merged entity from 1998. However, the mood of the fans from all three clubs was of widespread anger towards the TFL and the proposal was dropped a short time later. North Hobart opted to field a stand alone club in the 1998 roster, Hobart decided to leave the TFL and joined the SFL (the club would not be granted a licence to participate in the TFL in any case) and Sandy Bay Football Club, by then insolvent, was wound up by its directors and went out of existence in late 1997. At the same time, South Launceston and Launceston Football Clubs could see the future of the TFL as extremely shaky and both promptly pulled out of the competition and rejoined the NTFL in 1998. In 1998 the league then decided to re-brand the TFL as the TSFL Chickenfeed Super League and rebrand some of the clubs under commercial names in order to win back fans - the concept was not a winner and was widely scoffed at by club supporters. North Launceston would now be known as the Northern Bombers, North Hobart would end 118-years of tradition and rename themselves as the 'Hobart' Demons, New Norfolk would change their name to the Derwent Eagles to go with the Devonport Blues who changed their identity to Devonport Power in 1996 to cash in on Port Adelaide's entry to the AFL that year. To the surprise (and dismay) of many in the football world, a newly formed club - known as the Southern Districts Football Club (Southern Cats) was given a license to join the TFL in 1998. In 2000 the league was once again re-branded (this time as the SWL) and despite reasonably strong crowd attendances amongst the top three teams, the clubs below them were struggling to garner more than a few hundred people to matches. Players were flooding away to other competitions (both country and interstate) for better pay and better competition and the credibility and prestige the league had in years past had become tarnished in the eyes of the football public. This was the first TFL Grand Final to be held away from North Hobart Oval since 1921 and the crowd was the lowest since the Hobart v North Hobart Grand Final of 1960 which was played in appalling conditions, and was the second lowest Grand Final attendance in almost 70-years. [edit] DisbandmentThe league disbanded due to a dwindling of clubs able to financially cope and fell under the umbrella of Football Tasmania (which was soon renamed AFL Tasmania). [edit] Tasmanian State LeagueAfter a hiatus of eight years, AFL Tasmania announced plans for a return of the Tasmanian State League in 2009. Under the AFL Tasmania plan, ten (10) clubs were invited to join the competition. The response from many clubs was initially luke-warm at best with many concerned at the lack of detail in the AFL Tasmania plan and the rushed decision-making process of the move. Ulverstone Football Club from the North West Coast bowed to pressure from its playing list and some factional groups within the club to put in a submission to join the TSL in 2009. SFL Premier League club Kingborough also lobbied AFL Tasmania to be included in the competition, but their case for inclusion was dismissed by the game's governing body due to their inadequate facilities and poor standard Kingston Beach Oval headquarters. On April 4 2009, the opening match of the reformed TSL competition took place at King George V Park between the reigning premiers of the SFL Premier League, Glenorchy and reigning NTFL premier Launceston and resulted in a 21-point triumph to the Blues. [edit] 2009 Ladder
FINALS
[edit] Clubs[edit] Tasmanian State Football League Clubs: 20092009- [edit] Jumpers[edit] TANFL/TFL Statewide League Clubs: 1945-20001945-1997 [edit] TFA/STFA/TANFL Clubs: 1879-19411908-1941 [edit] MediaABC1 in Tasmania shows one live Saturday afternoon game each week of the season. [edit] Awards[edit] Wilson Bailey Trophy WinnersWas presented to the best & fairest player in the TFL/TANFL from 1927 until 1929. It was replaced by the William Leitch Medal in 1930. [edit] George Watt MedalistsWas Presented to the best & fairest player in the TANFL 1935 until 1939. It replaced the William Leitch Medal although it ended up being replaced by it in 1940 [edit] William Leitch MedalMain article: William Leitch Medal The William Leitch medal was presented to the best & fairest player in the TANFL/TFL Statewide League from 1930-1934 and 1940-2000. [edit] Tassie MedalistsPresented to the best & fairest player in the Tasmanian State League from 2009. [edit] See also[edit] References[edit] External links
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