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Bowls Premier League

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Bowls Premier League
FormerlyAustralian Premier League
SportBowls
Founded2013
No. of teams10
CountriesAustralia
Most recent
champion(s)
Melbourne Pulse
(BPL18)
Most titlesSydney Lions, Tweed Heads Ospreys (4)
TV partner(s)Fox Sports, Sky Sport
Official websitehttp://www.bowls.com.au/events-page/national-events/bowls-premier-league

The Bowls Premier League (BPL) is a biannual bowls competition involving teams from around Australia. The competition was founded in 2013 as a way to popularise the sport by presenting in a modernised format, using the term "made-for-television" in its promotion. The competition features faster play, modified rules, colourful clothing and comprehensive television coverage.

The BPL was founded by Bowls Australia and was initially contested by teams from the five major Australian cities plus a New Zealand side and has since expanded to 10 clubs. The week-long event attracts a large number of Australia's best bowls players to compete, as well as several high-profile bowlers from overseas.

History

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The first edition of the competition was held in November, 2013 under the name Australian Premier League. The inaugural clubs were Adelaide Endurance, Brisbane Gold, Melbourne Roys, New Zealand Blackjacks, Perth Suns and Sydney Lions, with Brisbane winning the first title.[1]

Two further teams – the Murray Steamers and the Gold Coast Hawks – joined the competition in 2014 to expand the competition to eight. The Murray Steamers defeated Adelaide Endurance in the final of the 2014 competition to be champions for the second running of the event.

In 2016, Bowls Australia announced there would be two tournaments held per year starting from 2017, with one event staged in Auckland in addition to the traditional event at Club Pine Rivers in Brisbane, Queensland.[2] The competition also underwent a name change to reflect the inclusion of the New Zealand leg, renaming to Bowls Premier League.

The Australian leg of the BPL has always been held in November while the first edition of the New Zealand event was held in March.

Adelaide Endurance were replaced by Illawarra Gorillas in 2017.[3]

BPL10 in 2019 marked a significant shift in the competition, as three teams - Gold Coast Hawks, Illawarra Gorillas and New Zealand Blackjacks - did not renew their licence. This opened the door to three new teams - Adelaide Pioneers, Melbourne Pulse and Tweed Heads Ospreys.[4][5]

In February 2020, Moama Bowling Club hosted the first BPL outside of Brisbane and New Zealand, with the New Zealand version of the event heading to the Victoria-NSW border town until at least 2022.[6]

BPL12, planned to be hosted by Club Pine Rivers in November 2020, was postponed due to COVID. Moama eventually hosted the event in February 2021, with Club Pine Rivers hosting BPL13 and BPL14 later the same year.

BPL14 was later moved to Moama and played in February 2022. The league expanded to 10 teams, dropping the Melbourne Roys and adding the Tasmania Tridents, Melbourne eXtreme and Gold Coast Hawks. The Murray Steamers changed their name to the Moama Steamers.[7]

Event structure

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Originally, BPL competitions began on a Thursday and ended on Sunday. That was eventually changed, with competitions beginning on a Tuesday and ending on a Friday evening.

Each BPL competition runs over the course of four days at one venue in a double round-robin and finals (playoffs) system; this makes for a total of 14 rounds consisting of four matches in each round. Four rounds are held on each of the first three days with two more on the fourth day, followed by the finals in the evening.

The first New Zealand edition of the competition in March, 2017 had its event held from Monday through to Thursday.

All five matches in the final round of each day, as well as the BPL Cup Final are televised on Fox Sports in Australia and Sky Sport in New Zealand, as well as through digital streaming platform Kayo. Bowls Australia also livestream round robin matches during the day via Facebook, using their popular Rinkside Live service.

Competition format

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Each match consists of a two five-end sets, with a one-end tie-break played if required. The game format is pairs, with three bowls for each player per end. A team coach also has a substitute player at their disposal which must be used during the game, but only immediately preceding the delivery of a bowl by their team player. Every player in the team, including the sub, must bowl at least nine bowls per game. The team with that wins both sets, or one set and then the tie-break, is the winner.

Instead of spending time rolling the jack, as per normal competitions, the players place the mat and advise the marker the length of the jack they would like to play to. Players have a 30-second shot clock in which they must deliver their bowl from the time the jack is placed at the start of an end or once their opposition bowl has come to a rest. Teams can nominate one Power Play end per set, enabling teams to earn double the shots scored in that end.

Finals system

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Each of the ten teams play each other twice during the competition. At the end of the double round-robin, the top five teams in the standings play off in the finals series.

If teams on the ladder are equal on points they will be split on net total shots (shots for minus shots against).

The finals series includes straight eliminations and double-chance matches.

Finals Series Format
Match Teams Notes
Elimination Final 1 4th place team vs 5th place team Winning team advances to Elimination Final 2. Losing team is eliminated.
Elimination Final 2 3rd place team vs Winner of Elimination Final 1 Winning team advances to Preliminary Final. Losing team is eliminated.
Semi Final 1st place team vs 2nd place team Winning team advances to the Grand Final. Losing team advances to the Preliminary Final.
Preliminary Final Winner of Elimination Final 2 vs Loser of Semi Final Winning team advances to the Grand Final. Losing team is eliminated.
Grand Final Winner of Semi Final vs Winner of Preliminary Final Winner is the Event Champion.

Prizemoney

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The BPL competition carries more than $100,000 in prize-money, with the winning franchise collecting $28,000.

Franchises

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The Bowls Premier League expanded to 10 teams for BPL14, held at the Moama Bowling Club.

Current franchises

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Team name Colours Location Region/State/Territory Franchise owner Coach First season Titles Last title Notes
Adelaide Pioneers
Adelaide South Australia Adelaide Bowling Club Les Carter BPL10
Gold Coast Hawks
Helensvale Queensland Club Helensvale Mark Thatcher APL02 1 BPL07 Did not compete in 2020-2021
Melbourne eXtreme
Melbourne Victoria Club Sunbury Kelvin Kerkow OAM BPL14
Melbourne Pulse
Melbourne Victoria Dandenong Club Jeremy Henry BPL10 3 BPL19
Moama Steamers
Moama New South Wales Moama Bowling Club Kevin Anderson APL02 3 BPL17 Formally Murray Steamers
Moreton Bay Pirates
Brisbane Queensland Club Pine Rivers Ryan Burnett APL01 2 BPL08 Formally Brisbane Gold & Brisbane Pirates
Perth Suns
Perth Western Australia Bowls Western Australia Bill Brandsma APL01
Sydney Lions
Sydney New South Wales Club Mount Lewis Steve Glasson OAM APL01 4 BPL14
Tasmania Tridents
Hobart Tasmania Bowls Tasmania Mark Strochnetter BPL14
Tweed Heads Ospreys
Tweed Heads New South Wales Club Tweed Wayne Turley OAM BPL10 4 BPL18

Former franchises

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Team name Colours Location Region/State/Territory Franchise owner First season Last season Titles Last title
Adelaide Endurance
Adelaide South Australia Bowls South Australia APL01 BPL05 - -
Illawarra Gorillas
Illawarra New South Wales Warilla Bowls & Recreation Club BPL06 BPL09 1 BPL09
Melbourne Roys
Melbourne Victoria Fitzroy Victoria Bowling & Sports Club APL01 BPL13 - -
New Zealand Blackjacks
Various Cities Various Regions Bowls New Zealand APL01 BPL09 1 APL03

Champions

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Year Edition Location Winner Score Runner-up MVP
2013 APL01 Brisbane Brisbane Gold 7–4, 8-2 Adelaide Endurance Scott Thulborn (Adelaide Endurance)
2014 APL02 Murray Steamers 6–2, 5-3 Adelaide Endurance Alex Marshall (Murray Steamers)
2015 APL03 New Zealand Blackjacks 6–3, 0–8, 1-0 Adelaide Endurance Mark Casey (Gold Coast Hawks)
2016 BPL04 Sydney Lions 6–4, 10-6 Murray Steamers Ryan Bester (Murray Steamers)
2017 BPL05 Auckland (NZ) Sydney Lions 3–2, 6-3 New Zealand Blackjacks Shannon McIlroy (New Zealand Blackjacks)
BPL06 Brisbane Sydney Lions 10-0, 8-1 Illawarra Gorillas Aron Sherriff (Sydney Lions)
2018 BPL07 Wellington (NZ) Gold Coast Hawks 5-3, 7-7 Brisbane Pirates Aron Sherriff (Gold Coast Hawks)
BPL08 Brisbane Brisbane Pirates 9-2, 6-2 Murray Steamers Ryan Bester (Murray Steamers)
2019 BPL09 Lower Hutt (NZ) Illawarra Gorillas 6-9, 7–1, 1-0 Brisbane Pirates Alex Marshall (Brisbane Pirates)
BPL10 Brisbane Tweed Heads Ospreys 9-0, 8-1 Sydney Lions Aaron Teys (Tweed Heads Ospreys) [8]
2020 BPL11 Moama Murray Steamers 6-1, 3–11, 1-0 Melbourne Roys Aron Sherriff (Sydney Lions) and Aaron Wilson (Melbourne Roys)[9]
2021 BPL12 Tweed Heads Ospreys 6-0, 4-1 Adelaide Pioneers Scott Thulborn (Adelaide Pioneers)[10]
BPL13 Brisbane Tweed Heads Ospreys 12-2, 7-1 Murray Steamers Aaron Teys (Tweed Heads Ospreys)
2022 BPL14 Moama Sydney Lions[11] 5-11, 7–4, 1-0 Moama Steamers Aron Sherriff (Gold Coast Hawks)[12]
BPL15 Brisbane Melbourne Pulse 5-3, 3-8, 1-0 Melbourne Extreme Aron Sherriff (Moama Steamers)
BPL16 Brisbane Melbourne Pulse 6-3, 10-1 Adelaide Pioneers Corey Wedlock (Tweed Heads Ospreys)
2023 BPL17 Moama Moama Steamers 5-2, 6-2 Sydney Lions Aron Sherriff (Moama Steamers)
BPL18 Brisbane Tweed Heads Ospreys 4-6, 6-5, 1-0 Melbourne eXtreme Aaron Teys (Tweed Heads Ospreys)
2024 BPL19 Moama Melbourne Pulse 1-10, 7-4, 1-0 Moreton Bay Pirates Gary Kelly (Melbourne Pulse)

BPL All Star Team

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Year Edition Location Bowlers Coach
2022 BPL14 Moama Aron Sherriff (Gold Coast Hawks), Ben Twist (Sydney Lions), Kelsey Cottrell (Gold Coast Hawks).[12] Steve Glasson (Sydney Lions)
BPL15 Brisbane Aron Sherriff (Moama Steamers), Matt Flapper (Melbourne Extreme), Rebecca Van Asch (Tasmania Tridents) Jeremy Henry & Scott De Jongh (Melbourne Pulse)
BPL16 Brisbane Corey Wedlock (Tweed Heads Ospreys), Gary Kelly (Melbourne Pulse), Rebecca Van Asch (Tasmania Tridents) Jeremy Henry (Melbourne Pulse)
2023 BPL17 Moama Aron Sherriff (Moama Steamers), Aaron Wilson (Sydney Lions), Jo Edwards (Moreton Bay Pirates) Kevin Anderson (Moama Steamers)
BPL18 Brisbane Aaron Teys (Tweed Heads Ospreys), Aron Sherriff (Moama Steamers), Kylie Whitehead (Melbourne eXtreme) Wayne Turley (Tweed Heads Ospreys)
2024 BPL19 Moama Gary Kelly (Melbourne Pulse), Aaron Wilson (Sydney Lions), Dawn Hayman (Moreton Bay Pirates) Jeremy Henry & Andrew Breeden-Walton (Melbourne Pulse)

Championships by club

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Team Champions Runners-up Competition won
Sydney Lions 4 2 BPL04, BPL05, BPL06, BPL14
Tweed Heads Ospreys 4 0 BPL10, BPL12, BPL13, BPL18
Moama/Murray Steamers 3 4 APL02, BPL11, BPL17
Melbourne Pulse 3 0 BPL15, BPL16, BPL19
Brisbane Pirates/Gold 2 2 APL01, BPL08
New Zealand Blackjacks 1 1 APL03
Illawarra Gorillas 1 1 BPL09
Gold Coast Hawks 1 0 BPL07
Adelaide Endurance 0 3 -
Adelaide Pioneers 0 2 -
Melbourne eXtreme 0 1 -
Melbourne Roys 0 1 -

BPL Cup

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In 2017, Bowls Australia announced the introduction of the BPL Cup,[13] a nationwide tournament for all clubs in the same mould as football cup competitions, such as the FA Cup.

Each of the eight Australian states and territories hold statewide competitions for all bowls clubs where an eventual state winner will progress to the national BPL Cup finals at Club Pine Rivers.

BPL Cup Champions

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Year Club State Players
2017 Club Merrylands NSW Michael Clarke, Neil Burkett, Shawn Thompson
2018 Narrabri NSW Graham Spence, Cameron Yates and Peter Hobday
2019 South Perth WA Glenn Pauling, Scott Walker, Ashley Sharp
2020 West Lakes SA Craig Mills, Nathan Black, TJ Saunders
2021 City Memorial Bowls Club (Warrnambool)[14] VIC N. Billington, W. Hall, V. Moloney, C Davey
2022 Highton VIC Craig Polwarth, Rob Chambers, Jeremy Fitzgerald, Dan Priddle
2023 Ettalong NSW Nathan Malloy, Lee Trethowan, Darren Morrison

Media coverage

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Brisbane's panning for Gold pays off". Australian Premier League. 22 November 2013. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
  2. ^ "Second annual $100,000 Premier League announced". Australian Premier League. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  3. ^ "Illawarra Gorillas muscle in on BPL06". Australian Premier League. 21 September 2017. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  4. ^ "Bowls Premier League: Adelaide and Tweed Heads confirmed for #BPL10". Bowls Australia. 19 August 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  5. ^ "Dandenong Club poised to enter the BPL". Bowls Australia. 10 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  6. ^ "Bowls Premier League: Moama confirmed as February host venue until 2022". Bowls Australia. 20 August 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  7. ^ "Bowls Premier League (BPL14)". bowls.com.au. Bowls Australia. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  8. ^ "#BPL10: Teys shines to collect tournament MVP". Bowls Australia. 15 November 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  9. ^ "#BPL11: Sherriff, Wilson share MVP honours". Bowls Australia. 28 February 2020. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  10. ^ "#BPL12: Thulborn claims second MVP crown". Bowls Australia. 26 February 2021. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  11. ^ "Results Portal". results.bowlslink.com.au. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  12. ^ a b "#BPL14: Lions create history with memorable title win". Bowls Australia. 25 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  13. ^ "BPL Cup". Bowls Australia. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  14. ^ "Results Portal". results.bowlslink.com.au. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
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