Australian Women's Rugby League
This article needs to be updated.(January 2011) |
The Australian Women's Rugby League is the governing body of female rugby league in Australia and other parts of Oceania and was established in 1993. It currently falls under the Australian Rugby League Commission which oversees its running and management but it took the association five years to be recognized by the Australian Rugby League.[1][2][3]
The AWRL is run at state level by its own governing organizations in the Queensland Women's Rugby League, New South Wales Women's Rugby League, Canberra Women's Rugby League and the Western Australian Women's Rugby League. The main women's competitions in Australia are the Sydney Metro. Women's Rugby League and the QWRL and Brisbane and District Women's Rugby League.[4]
At international level the Women's Australian side is commonly referred to as the Australian Jillaroos.
Since 1995 the AWRL has staged international fixtures against other women rugby league countries.
- 1995 Australia vs New Zealand 2 Test Series
- 1996 Australia vs Great Britain 3 Test Series
- 1997 Australia vs New Zealand 2 Test Series
- 1998 Australia vs Fiji 2 Test Series
- 1999 Australia vs New Zealand 3 test series
- 2000 1st Women's RL World Cup staged in Great Britain
- 2001 Australia vs New Zealand test match
- 2002 Australia vs Great Britain 3 test series
- 2003 Australia vs New Zealand Maoris
- 2nd Women's RL World Cup staged in New Zealand
- 2004 Australia vs New Zealand 2 test series
- 2005 Australian u21s vs Auckland u21s in Auckland
AWRL National Championships
[edit]- 1998 - Queensland
- 1999 - Canberra
- 2008 - South East Queensland
See also
[edit]- Women's rugby league in Australia
- NRL Women's – the official league for women's rugby league in Australia starting in 2018
References
[edit]- ^ "Australian Womens [sic] Rugby League team - JILLAROOS". foxsportspulse.com. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ Walsh, Gerard. "Jillaroos win women's rugby league World Cup". warwickdailynews.com.au. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Australia wins women's, students and police rugby league world cups". dailytelegraph.com.au. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Australian Services Rugby Union - Early Years". servicesrugby.asn.au. Archived from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2014.