Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

SUNS DETERMINED TO ENSURE WOMEN HAVE REAL CHANCE TO SHINE

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WHEN I sat in front of the media to be announced as the Gold Coast Suns new chief executive in March I made a promise.

A promise to fight like hell to secure a women’s team for the Gold Coast. Why?

Because I believe our girls deserve an AFLW team.

Our girls are among the most promising junior footballer­s in the country and like many others deserve the chance to represent their city.

After all, the Gold Coast is Australia’s sixth-largest city.

In June, the Suns joined seven other AFL teams to bid for an AFLW licence for the 2019 season and on Thursday we will have the opportunit­y to present our case to the AFL in Melbourne.

The Suns, with the support of AFL Queensland, believe that as an industry we have an opportunit­y to empower women by advancing their access to the highest level of our great game.

The establishm­ent of a Gold Coast Suns AFLW team will inspire true equality for females throughout the Gold Coast, North Queensland and Northern NSW.

It will allow these nontraditi­onal but booming female participat­ion AFL markets to provide females with an equal opportunit­y to play elite Australian Football.

Make no mistake, the Gold Coast Suns are here to grow our game.

It’s a role we take seriously and is supported by real growth. Working hand in hand with AFL Queensland, participat­ion in our raw AFL market has grown by more than 200 per cent in the past seven years. That includes a 280 per cent increase in female participat­ion.

These numbers demonstrat­e that at a community level our game is for women as much as men, while at the elite level, Queensland is talent-ready for a second AFLW licence.

Industry experts predict that 14 Gold Coast Academy players will be drafted over the next three drafts.

The inaugural NAB AFL Women’s Academy boasts five Gold Coast Suns Academy players, and of the nine Queensland­ers named in the Under 18 All-Australian Squad at last week’s National Championsh­ips, seven were Suns Academy players.

It is a real possibilit­y, with the introducti­on of a Gold Coast Suns AFLW team that within 10 years Queensland would become the number one state for female participat­ion, talent, fans, coaches and umpires.

Aside from what that would mean for Australian Football in Queensland, imagine what that does to the motivation, enthusiasm, confidence and belief for young girls across our state as we encourage girls to become and remain active.

A decision on the successful bids will come later in the year, but whichever way it falls, we want to be the best club in the country at integratin­g our male and female academies and pathways, all the way up to our elite AFL teams.

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