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Brunswick Street Oval has been called the spiritual home of both Fitzroy and the Brisbane Lions. During their premiership years, the club took the premiership cups to Brunswick Street Oval, Fitzroy, the home of the Fitzroy Football Club, each morning after the grand final. Honouring Fitzroy's history at their traditional home ground was seen as ...
Awarded 2014–2019 and 2021–present, as 'Reserves Player of the Year' in 2014 and as 'Neville Fallon Brisbane Lions Reserves Best & Fairest' from 2015–2019 and 2021–present. 2014: Nick Hayes 2015: Zac O'Brien 2016: Billy Evans 2017: Oscar McInerney 2018: Ryan Bastinac/Claye Beams/Ben Keays/Corey Lyons 2019: Ryan Bastinac 2021: Connor ...
The Brisbane Lions are an Australian rules football club. The Queensland-based expansion club was formed in 1987, as the Brisbane Bears. [1] In late 1996, via a deal with the administrator of the 1883 VFL/AFL foundation club Fitzroy Football Club, Fitzroy's club operations at the AFL level were merged with that of the Bears.
A list of all players that were a part of the team that won the AFL/VFL premiership at least once with the Brisbane Lions. Pages in category "Brisbane Lions premiership players" The following 51 pages are in this category, out of 51 total.
Copeland was born in Redcliffe, Queensland and raised in Kilcoy. [1] He played his junior football with the Strathpine Swans in Brisbane's northern suburbs. [1]Overlooked in successive AFL Drafts, Copeland was recruited to the Brisbane Lions through the 2001 Rookie Draft (QLD Zone) from the Northern Eagles and was elevated to the Senior list on 10 May that year after Michael Voss was placed on ...
This is a list of every player to have been listed in the Australian Football League or the AFL Women's for the Brisbane Lions in the club's history.. Players are listed in order of debut, and the start of their Brisbane Lions career is determined by their year of debut, and the end is determined by the year of their final game playing for the Brisbane Lions.
In 1997 he was a member of the inaugural Brisbane Lions team following the Bears merger with Fitzroy. Known by some as the "September Specialist", Keating's history of shoulder injuries sidelined him during the 2002 and 2003 seasons, but he went on and played magnificent finals series to taste premiership success with the Lions 3 times in a row.
The Lions' 1998 wooden spoon came in a year in which their National Rugby League neighbours, the Brisbane Broncos, won the premiership. [ 2 ] Most of the players on the Lions' 1998 playing list would later feature in their run of three consecutive premierships between 2001–03.