NewsBite

AFLW: News and stories in the lead up to the new women’s season

Sarah D’arcy’s grandparents have been her reassuring footy presence for over 15 years. Their influence so strong that she may not have pursued a footy career without them.

AFLW to expand to 18 teams for the 2022/23 season (7 News)

Rain falls steadily on a gloomy autumn day in Melbourne at Punt Road Oval.

The final siren sounds, marking a Richmond win, and players stand exhausted, hands on hips, after a tough slog in the rain.

As her fellow teammates catch their breath, a Richmond defender ambles across to the wing with a beaming smile.

Kayo is your ticket to the best local and international sport streaming Live & On-Demand. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial >

Sarah D'arcy with her grandparents, Margaret and Brian Walker.
Sarah D'arcy with her grandparents, Margaret and Brian Walker.

Two adoring grandparents await her, kitted out in rain jackets having spent an afternoon under heavy skies.

But the weather has not dampened their spirits, and the Tiger’s grandmother grins warmly as she embraces her granddaughter with open arms.

The photo that followed touched the footballing community and reminded us of the importance of family in trying times.

The defender is Sarah D’arcy, who has always enjoyed overwhelming support from her grandparents.

Since she was a fresh-faced 14-year-old playing for the Yarra Valley Cougars, D’arcy’s grandparents - Brian and Margaret Walker - have barely missed a game.

Devout followers of her footballing journey, they were often the sole spectators in her teen years at the Cougars.

D’arcy believes that without their support, she may not have pursued a career in football.

“It didn’t matter where I was playing, my grandparents made the journey down to watch me play and that’s from when I was 14 playing in the open women’s league,” D’arcy, 30, said.

“Sometimes they would be the only ones in the crowd watching us. I honestly believe that if I didn’t have that support, I might have given it up earlier.

“Having them around really motivated me to keep going and the love that they showed by coming to every game made me just want to play all the time.”

D’arcy is looking forward to her second season with the Tigers.
D’arcy is looking forward to her second season with the Tigers.

After four years with the Cougars, D’arcy joined the Eastern Devils in the VFLW and was eventually recruited by Collingwood in the 2016 AFLW draft.

During her time at the Pies, as well as playing AFLW football, she also ran out for the club’s VFLW team over the offseason.

D’arcy’s grandparents were in attendance each weekend, and her grandfather would religiously attend the huddle, before providing her with personalised feedback.

He was always the final spectator remaining on the ground and his words of wisdom would often spill over the siren.

D’arcy looks back fondly on her grandfather’s unwavering enthusiasm.

“Pa, he always comes on the ground and is always the last to go off,” D’arcy said.

“The umpires used to have to wait for him to step off the field to bounce the ball. Everyone would be in position still waiting for Pa to walk off the ground.”

“I found VFL footage of a quarter time break and Pa is walking straight up to me. Everyone else is walking off the ground but Pa is coming over to me to give me some feedback, to tell me what to do.

“You could see the security guard walking up and me trying to usher Pa off the ground. It always makes me laugh.”

After four seasons at Collingwood, D’arcy made the move to Punt Road. Yellow and black runs in D’arcy’s family.

Sarah D'arcy is forever grateful for the role her grandparents have played in her career.
Sarah D'arcy is forever grateful for the role her grandparents have played in her career.

Her grandfather’s cousin was the great Jack Titus, a star forward who booted 970 goals over 290 games for the Tigers from 1926 to 1943.

It was not surprising, therefore, that the news was particularly well received by her grandfather, a lifelong Richmond supporter.

“My Pa grew up as a Tigers supporter and he absolutely loved it.

“I had Christmas with him and he’s getting quite old now and struggling a bit, but he wouldn’t stop saying ‘Go Tigers’ to me!”

“When I made the move, he was one of the first people I called to tell and he was just over the moon because his cousin played for them (Richmond).”

Unfortunately, attendance has become more difficult for D’arcy’s grandparents in recent years as they grow older.

But she still speaks to each of them on game day, both before and after matches.

The moment captured in Richmond’s win against the Eagles last year is particularly special, as it was the first Richmond game that her grandparents attended.

“I can’t even describe how much it meant to me having them there for the first time in the yellow and black,” D’arcy said.

“I ran straight over to them as soon as the siren went and they were the first people who I wanted to see. Their support means so much and being able to get them there is something that I will always remember.”

D'arcy played four seasons with the Magpies.
D'arcy played four seasons with the Magpies.

This year, D’arcy enters her second year at the Tigers. While her father’s parents - Jim and Alma D’Arcy - are in aged care and will likely watch from home, she hopes that her mother’s parents will see her play in the flesh.

Onfield, D’arcy is keen to continue her development as a defender and is excited about the club’s prospects.

“I just want to build a bit more consistency in my own game. I am still learning the ropes down back as I was a forward at Collingwood. This is my second year in the backline, so I’m just establishing myself in my position over this season,” D’arcy said.

“As a team, I feel like we have this energy and buzz around which is really exciting. I have never felt this in a team before. We are a very young group and the girls have shown so much development over this pre-season.”

“I am really excited for this season and I think we are building something special down here at Tigerland.”

How huge ‘wild’ family primed Pie for tough AFLW choice

- Glenn McFarlane

Collingwood AFLW defender Imogen Purcell has always felt empowered being a part of a big team.

It’s been that way in most of the endeavours the 23-year-old has undertaken in her high-achieving, active life.

That sense of belonging from a family perspective – she is one of 10 children – and from a sporting sense – she excelled in two sports before deciding to take on football – has always stood her in good stead over the years.

It is something that drives her as she eyes off a potential AFLW debut for the Magpies against Carlton in the Round 1 clash at Ikon Park on January 9.

“I’d definitely love to be playing in that game; that’s what we are here for,” Purcell said. “Like everyone else, I’ve worked really hard to get to this position.”

Purcell, known as Immy to her teammates, had to make a choice between Collingwood and Carlton when she chose to give up a promising rowing career that took her to a bronze medal at the under-23s world championships in favour of football.

It’s a sport she hadn’t played since her one and only game when she was at school, at Loreto Mandeville Hall, as a teenager.

She chose the Magpies, given the club’s improving list profile, but stressed it was a tough decision to make.

Imogen Purcell is counting down to Collingwood’s Round 1 clash against Carlton on January 9. Picture: Michael Klein
Imogen Purcell is counting down to Collingwood’s Round 1 clash against Carlton on January 9. Picture: Michael Klein

She had a one-on-one session with Blues AFLW coach Daniel Harford, but as a cross-code athlete who knew she might take some time to develop, ultimately chose Collingwood.

“It was hard because it was done through Covid (lockdown) and I didn’t really get the chance to meet the girls,” she said.

“I just had to go off conversations. In the end, it came down to Collingwood, as they were more of a developing club and Carlton had had a really good season the year before.”

Having signed on with the Magpies, Purcell spent 2021 playing with the club’s VFLW side, honing her skills as a defender and an occasional ruck option.

“It was good to get a lot of games under my belt (in VFLW),” she said.

“I got off to a good start. I had something like 17 contested possessions in my first game, and I was like, ‘Yeah, I can do this’.

“I was thrown into the deep end. I hadn’t played a game of football since (having) one game at school. I was mainly playing half-back (in the VFLW) and through the end of the season I was rotating ruck. I loved that, you got to play like a midfielder.”

LIFE WITH NINE SIBLINGS

Purcell’s parents, Tom and Michelle, always planned on having a big family.

At around the same time they were expecting their first child, they took in two stepchildren, Lionel and Maurice, who would become part of the family before going on to have eight children themselves – Emily, Josh, Sebastian, Xavier, Elisha, Imogen, Anastasia and Isabel.

It has been a busy and at times chaotic ride, but Immy wouldn’t have had it any other way.

“I don’t know how Mum and Dad have done it,” Immy said. “Mum is like the rock of the family and dad does all the crazy stuff, which is fun.

“We are so lucky looking back, but in the moment because I like being so structured, it was like ‘What’s all this mayhem?’.

“It is a bit wild, but I’ve been lucky enough to have a lot of opportunities.

“Growing up in a big family, I think, you see your brothers and sisters above you having to work for everything they have got. I had those role models and probably didn’t realise that until now. They have always been there for me.

“I’ve recognised you have to be grateful for what you have got but you also have to work for whatever you want.”

Collingwood AFLW player Imogen Purcell with a photo of her family, including nine siblings. Picture: Michael Klein
Collingwood AFLW player Imogen Purcell with a photo of her family, including nine siblings. Picture: Michael Klein

Immy and Elisha are identical twins. That has made for some interesting moments including at a VFWL game this year, when her Collingwood teammates called Elisha over to sit with them thinking she was Immy.

She has had great support in her sporting switch from her partner Chris, who works with her every week on her footy skills and preparation, and her family, including her Dad, who has coached a number of teams over the years, including St Kevin’s female teams.

Sport has always been significant for the Purcell family, with their father (who played under-19s for South Melbourne) and brothers playing football, and the rest of the family taking on numerous other sports.

“Growing up, I always hated to have to choose because we used to play different sports on a Saturday,” she said. “I don’t know how Mum managed it all and I can understand why she was like, ‘You have to choose a sport’.”

PULLING PIN ON OLYMPIC DREAM

Immy always tried to fit in as many sports as she could, including athletics, rowing and netball.

She represented Victoria at the national championships in the 400m hurdles and looked to have a future in the sport before switching to rowing.

Her rowing career promised to go even further. She won a scholarship to UCLA in the US (the first time she had a bedroom to herself), spent a few years studying and competing there, and even won a bronze medal for Australia at the 2020 under-23s world championships.

“I guess the pinnacle for me was the worlds, which was representing Australia,” she said. “It was a really happy moment for me.”

A pathway through to the Olympics was potentially on the cards, but Purcell didn’t want that to distract her from her studies.

Purcell has just graduated from Melbourne University with a major in human nutrition and will next year work on a postgraduate medicine degree at Deakin.

Having missed the running aspect of sport, AFLW presented an exciting, new opportunity.

“The decision to stop rowing was tough, it was the hardest conversation to have with my coach because I didn’t want to let my teammates down,” she said.

“I had so many conversations. The biggest issue with rowing was that to get into the Olympics you have to go up to the National Training Centre in Penrith.

“I wanted to continue my studies and that has always been my biggest priority. Sport has always been my fun.”

Imogen Purcell at Olympic Park. Picture: Michael Klein
Imogen Purcell at Olympic Park. Picture: Michael Klein

Purcell can’t wait for the AFLW season to start as she is confident the Magpies can have a good year under coach Steve Symonds.

“At training, we’ve really stepped it up and we are challenging each other and making sure we hold each other accountable,” she said. “It’s a great place to be.

“Steve is great, he has been really supportive and so has the whole coaching staff. Roughy (Jordan Roughead) has been amazing, too. I couldn’t speak more highly of him. He has been supportive and treats everyone equally and gives everyone a voice.

“The leaders (Brianna Davey and Steph Chiocci) have also been great.”

She is also buoyed by the AFL’s recently released vision for women’s football through to 2030, saying it would encourage more people to take up the sport and stay in it for longer.

Part of that is the AFL aiming for AFLW players to become the highest-paid sportswomen in a domestic competition in Australia.

“For them (the AFL) to come out and say, ‘We see what you are doing and we value it’ is definitely something to us,” she said. “It’s an important way forward for women in the sport.”

Tiger’s remarkable path to big time

– Jon Ralph

It was during a game of Melbourne University “chicks footy” while chasing her second passion that Hannah Burchell realised a long-dormant dream might be in reach.

Studying paramedicine and living at St Mary’s College, Ocean Grove’s Burchell had long ago been forced out of football by under-14 level like so many girls before her.

Her dad was a doyen of the Ocean Grove Football Club but when she was “aged out” she moved on and decided her dream of becoming a paramedic would be her No.1 goal.

Five years later Burchell is about to enter her third year at Richmond after that single game reignited the flame.

Hannah Burchell is a paramedic turn footballer, who is juggling her professional career and an AFLW career. Picture: Alex Coppel
Hannah Burchell is a paramedic turn footballer, who is juggling her professional career and an AFLW career. Picture: Alex Coppel

The journey has taken her via Geelong’s VFLW and AFL teams to a club at Punt Rd Oval her family has supported for her whole life.

It is an extreme juggling act, with Burchell balancing a burgeoning professional football career with her work as a paramedic in Ocean Grove and Melbourne.

It means turning up at pre-season training the day after an all-night 16-hour shift, but Burchell is determined she won’t compromise either pursuit.

“Footy was always No.1 and dad was heavily involved at Ocean Grove Football Club as a life member and, like many of us, I had to pull the pin once we got to under-14s,” she said.

“So I stepped away and got into boundary umpiring. It wasn’t what I wanted to do but I still loved footy.

“I went to Australian Catholic Uni but lived on residence at Melbourne Uni and there was a girls’ footy team. They called it “chooty”. Chicks footy. So I gave it a go and I don’t want to say I dominated but I did better than I thought I would and thought, ‘This is quite fun’.

Burchell’s “chooty” performance led to a talent ID day at Geelong, where she progressed from the VFLW to representing the AFLW side in its first season before repeated quad tears saw her delisted.

“I played one game and I was delisted and devastated,” she said. “I reached out to Richmond the old-fashioned way. I grew up a mad Tiger and so I reached out to (footy boss) Kate Sheahan and fortunately signed as an AFLW player in their first team.”

Burchell, 26, has played 14 games across two seasons as a hard-running winger while learning to integrate her football life into her off-field employment.

Darcy Vescio is tackled by Burchell during their AFLW Round 4 at Ikon Park in February.
Darcy Vescio is tackled by Burchell during their AFLW Round 4 at Ikon Park in February.

“I get to live two dreams,” she said. “I think it gives me a greater perspective on things.

“You have that part of my life where you see some nasty and sad things, but it just gives you a greater appreciation of what you have, as clichéd as it sounds.

“It’s certainly tough but I love the challenge of it. I love having to think at 3am in the morning, helping people, seeing smiles on patients’ faces and the gratitude they have.

“It’s tough at times. I have been fortunate to have a part-time arrangement, which wasn’t an easy process, but I have had really good support around me and I can’t thank them enough for that.

“Working full-time and training and doing gym and tough sessions can be really tough.”

Burchell says sleep deprivation is the hardest challenge leading into training sessions or games.

“I do 14-hour night shifts that can turn into 16-hour night shifts,” she said. “So if you work Thursday night and then drive back from Ocean Grove to Melbourne and then get a few hours sleep and come to training early on Saturday.

Burchell says sleep deprivation is the hardest challenge heading into games.
Burchell says sleep deprivation is the hardest challenge heading into games.

“On paper it seems OK but in reality you miss a lot of sleep and meal times and you are fatigued because of work.

“That was a struggle, but I worked closely with the dietitian and performance coach and we adjusted things and managed it as we went.”

Now for Burchell comes what all athletes aspire to as soon as they make the grade – team success after 0-6 and 3-6 seasons.

“The initial novelty of the first and second seasons is done,” she said. “We are out there to win. Not that we weren’t in the first seasons. We are settled as a group, we have found our connection. We have a very solid coaching group in place and our whole core group feels very settled.”

The Matildas dream that became a Saintly AFLW reality

—Rebecca Williams

Since she was a kid kicking the round ball in her backyard in Traralgon, St Kilda forward Jacqui Vogt had always dreamt of playing for the Matildas.

An aspiring defender, Vogt looked up to players like former Matildas goalkeeper Melissa Barbieri, as she started to make her way through the junior football pathways.

Vogt was selected in Victorian representative teams, played for the Melbourne Victory in the W-League and attended young Matildas training camps.

But in 2012, her dreams were struck down.

Not long after she had been invited to attend the national team camps, Vogt ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament, which was to ultimately spell the end of her soccer career.

After a year of rehab, Vogt was unable to make the Melbourne Victory squad again.

A year in the second tier National Premier Leagues followed, before Vogt decided to take a year off to focus on her podiatry studies.

Vogt feared her hopes of playing elite sport were all but over.

“I probably thought my time was up and I had to move on,” Vogt, 27, said.

“But I wasn’t ready to move on, I was still young and I had always dreamt of being elite and playing elite sport.

“From a young age, I had always wanted to play for the Matildas. That was definitely my aspiration to play for them and even just to make a camp with the young Matildas was an amazing feeling.

“I did think that my time was up and I needed to do something at the community level but, for me, I just can’t do anything at that level.

“I need to try and be the best that I can be so I always want to push the barriers.”

Then the unexpected sporting career shift happened.

A St Kilda supporter growing up, Vogt noticed an advertisement for a VFL trial day for the club in 2017 and decided to give it a go.

“I always loved footy and thought it was amazing but there was no real pathway for females at that time when I was growing up and I was picking what I wanted to do,” Vogt said.

“So I had seen the AFL set up and thought it would be an amazing opportunity and thought that I could take some of what I had learned in soccer over to footy.”

Vogt hasn’t looked back – even if her transition to playing Aussie rules initially presented a bumpy road.

After making the VFL training squad, Vogt was hit with another injury setback when she hurt her meniscus and needed surgery.

She returned playing local footy and worked hard to get herself fit for the 2019 VFL season with the Southern Saints but missed seven games that year after a nasty concussion.

Knowing the Saints would be entering the AFLW, Vogt kept at it with an eye to being drafted or elevated.

Vogt missed out that year but was invited to join the club as a train-on player for its inaugural season as Covid hit and wiped out the VFL year. She would finally get her chance to join the AFLW list after being drafted ahead of 2021.

Vogt missed just the one game in her debut season and, after spending all her time trying to stop goals as a defender in soccer, she is now relishing her new role as a forward.

“I was a centre-back and now I’m playing in the forward line for the Saints, so it’s definitely different,” Vogt said.

“But I think being able to read the game as a defender really helps as a forward. You know as a defender what you don’t like forwards to do so you try and do that as a forward.

“I obviously still have to learn a few things like running patterns and things like that but I feel like soccer has given me some really good concepts and things that I can take into footy.”

Despite her late start in footy, and injury setbacks, Vogt, who has recovered from off-season surgery on her ankle, is confident she still has plenty of time to carve out an AFLW career.

“Ideally I would have liked to have been younger, but I still think I have got some good footy in me,” said Vogt, who helps manage her parent’s hotel in Traralgon.

“I’ve had a few injury setbacks, there is no doubt about that with the knees and the recent surgery during the off-season for a fractured medial malleolus in my ankle, which I played all last AFL season with.

“But I always hold myself to high standards in terms of recovery which can hold you in good stead for longevity with your body.

“I think even though I’m 27 I still feel like I’ve got really good footy in me to come that’s for sure.

“I’m really glad that I went down to that trial day.”

The OGs: Melbourne’s six foundation players Lauren Pearce, Sarah Lampard, Karen Paxman, Daisy Pearce, Lily Mithen and Shelley Scott. Picture: Michael Klein
The OGs: Melbourne’s six foundation players Lauren Pearce, Sarah Lampard, Karen Paxman, Daisy Pearce, Lily Mithen and Shelley Scott. Picture: Michael Klein

Dees’ OG says AFLW stars inspired by men’s success

—Nick Smart

Melbourne AFLW star Karen Paxman says the Demons’ premiership success has created a “happy energy” at the club as the women’s team attempts to emulate the men’s side.

With the AFLW season less than a month away, Paxman is one of six foundation players at Melbourne about to enter their sixth season.

They’re still on the hunt for their first AFLW premiership after playing in a preliminary final last season.

“I’ve loved my time at Melbourne and really can’t imagine being elsewhere, so it’s nice to have been there from the start and to have seen the program grow over the years,” she said.

“Coming into our sixth season it’s been an awesome transformation and seeing not just the program grow but the players involved grow as well, it’s been a pretty cool journey.

“Hopefully we’ve got some time left, that would be nice.

“It would be super rewarding (to win a premiership) and it’s what we’re aiming for.

“And for those original girls that have grinded out the journey from the beginning, it would be awesome to win one alongside those girls too.”

Karen Paxman is one of the Dees’ best players. Picture: Getty Images
Karen Paxman is one of the Dees’ best players. Picture: Getty Images

The Demons’ ball magnet said the recent premiership success was even more inspiration for the AFLW side.

“There’s definitely a pretty happy energy around the club,” she said.

“You look at the boys’ success and not that it makes you want it any more because we’ve always wanted to win the flag, but certainly you get pretty motivated watching them and how they’ve gone about it.

“We’ve probably taken some learnings from their success, which is pretty valuable.”

The Demons are looking to grow their AFLW membership base this season and they are available on the club’s website.

“Hopefully the momentum of the boys’ success gets a few people turning Melbourne’s way, that would be awesome,” Paxman said.

“We’d love to get more memberships and more people coming down and supporting.”

AFLW PRACTICE MATCHES DURING WEEKEND

Melbourne 6.5 (41) d Collingwood 3.4 (22) at Casey Fields
Carlton 6.10 (46) d St Kilda 4.4 (28) at Princes Park
North Melbourne 8.11 (59) d Western Bulldogs 1.2 (8) at Whitten Oval
Geelong 6.12 (48) d Richmond 3.7 (25) at Punt Road Oval 
Brisbane Lions 9.15 (69) d Gold Coast Suns 1.2 (8) at Leyshon Park
Adelaide Crows v GWS Giants was cancelled due to Covid 

Bre Koenen is an AFLW Brisbane Lion and her sister Cara Koenen is on the Sunshine Coast Lightning roster. Picture Mark Cranitch
Bre Koenen is an AFLW Brisbane Lion and her sister Cara Koenen is on the Sunshine Coast Lightning roster. Picture Mark Cranitch

How island paradise shaped Lions’ Magnetic captain

– Chris Honnery

A few kilometres off the coast of Townsville sits the grand, tropical haven of Magnetic Island – aptly named because of the way it attracts you in with its palm-fringed golden beaches and spectacular coral reefs.

It’s home to hundreds of koalas, countless schools of fish and a handful of resident rock wallabies.

It’s also the home of Brisbane Lions new skipper Bre Koenen.

The 26-year-old now lives in Brisbane but her parents still run a newsagency store on the island – which makes for a handy excuse for Koenen to get back to the tropical paradise as often as she can.

The island is only about 52 square kilometres in size – just slightly bigger than inner-city Melbourne – and exactly how you would picture a tropical Queensland getaway.

Brisbane Lions AFLW captain Bre Koenen as a youngster on Magnetic Island. Picture: Instagram
Brisbane Lions AFLW captain Bre Koenen as a youngster on Magnetic Island. Picture: Instagram

Palm trees, beaches, granite boulders and coral reefs – the perfect backdrop for any childhood.

“Every afternoon we were out on the beach or doing something outdoorsy,” Koenen recalled.

“It was pretty amazing.”

The eldest of four children, Bre has always harboured leadership qualities, especially when her siblings are as gifted as she is.

Her sister Cara is a foundation player for the Sunshine Coast Lightning netball team, her other sister Alyssa is a national representative in Surf Life Saving while her brother Dirk is another talented Aussie rules player.

And it was inevitable for the four athletic, competitive Koenen kids to butt heads every now and then.

“There were a lot of sibling rivalries between us,” Bre laughed.

“There were a lot of tears over board games and we’ve always been ultra competitive.

“We were always active growing up, always playing different sports together so that played a big part in getting to where I am today.

“As we’ve gotten older though, we’ve become a bit more supportive and we like to see each other succeed in our separate sports.”

Not very many sports were played solely on the island though, forcing the Koenen’s to travel onto the mainland and into Townsville to play each and every weekend.

Koenen is a key member of the Lions outfit. Picture: Getty Images
Koenen is a key member of the Lions outfit. Picture: Getty Images

There was, however, the Magnetic Island Magpies Junior AFL Club on the island which Bre played for since she was around five years old, sparking her love for footy from an early age.

Koenen tried her hand at several other sports during her junior years but it was always footy which proved to be her calling.

After taking a gap year when she finished Year 12, Koenen then moved down to Brisbane with her sister Cara, to begin a physiotherapy course at the University of Queensland – a move which she admitted to being an eye-opener to say the least.

“There’s not even any traffic lights back home so it was a big learning curve for me moving down to Brisbane,” she said.

“I definitely enjoyed it though.”

While at uni, Koenen joined the University of Queensland Red Lions squad where her footy career really took off – to the point where she took out the best and fairest award two years in a row.

Koenen with a big catch on Magnetic Island. Picture: Instagram
Koenen with a big catch on Magnetic Island. Picture: Instagram

“I had played a little bit of women’s footy (before UQ) but nothing to the level that south east Queensland was back then,” she said.

“It was massive for my development, playing for UQ.

“Being fresh out of high school, I had a lot to learn but I loved it.

“I learnt a lot during those years.”

Then came along the AFLW competition in 2017.

Koenen was Brisbane’s pick number 50 during the 2016 AFLW Draft to become one of the club’s foundation players.

Since then, Koenen has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the AFLW, becoming a crucial cog for the Lions since their inception and handed the vice captaincy during the club’s premiership-winning season in 2021.

So it was almost a no-brainer that her peers voted her in as the captain for the upcoming 2022 season.

“It was fairly unanimous that they wanted Bre to lead the team,” Lions head coach Craig Starcevich said.

“She’s got great off-field care for people.

“Anyone who doesn’t watch our games that doesn’t know the character or the person can just see in the way Bre plays that she is the type of person who upholds team values on the ground.

“She performs roles even at the detriment of her own personal performance as well as being skilful and tough as well.”

Emma Zielke and Bre Koenen at the W-Awards.
Emma Zielke and Bre Koenen at the W-Awards.

Teammate Emily Bates was also full of praise at the announcement.

“Bre has had an amazing leadership journey over the years,” Bates said.

“She’s just a really caring and supportive leader but she also plays by example.

“She will do anything we need to get the win.

“It’s a new chapter for our team and a very exciting one for Bre and all of us.”

Though the decision came somewhat as a surprise for Koenen, she admitted it was something she had been working hard to achieve over the last few years.

“My first thoughts were of shock and relief,” she said of being named the 2022 captain.

“It’s not something I thought about overnight or just decided on the spot, it’s something that I’ve put a lot of time and effort in developing myself personally and my relationships on and off the field.

“I’ve had very good leaders along the way to model what I try and do.”

Koenen in action for the Lions. Picture: Getty Images
Koenen in action for the Lions. Picture: Getty Images

There may not be the palm trees and golden beaches of her childhood in Brisbane, but Koenen – along with the rest of the AFLW reigning premiers – is still as competitive-driven as she was with her siblings back on the idyllic Magnetic Island.

“The reason we play is to win a premiership but this year we’re taking the approach of it being a completely new season,” she said.

“We haven’t played any teams yet, there’s been a lot of list changes this year and it’s a completely new comp.

“We tasted that success last year and it almost makes you more hungry to taste that again.

“Everyone is pretty competitive and driven at training at the moment.

“Hopefully we can back it up again this year.”

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/aflw/aflw-news-and-stories-in-the-lead-up-to-the-new-womens-season/news-story/81ab53ca06d055203217aaec7a72a824