AFL Play AFL Play

More from Telstra

Australia's best network.

AFL Match Centre McDonald's Header
2024 NAB AFLW Season
Brisbane Lions v Adelaide Crows
Preliminary Finals •
50 7.8
Full Time
32 4.8
Lions Won By 18
Live and On-Demand on your favourite device

Match Timeline

Hover timeline to view key events

The Match Timeline Explained
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)

Match Feed

Live Interchange Bench

Loading…

No interchange bench data available

There is currently no interchange bench data available for this match

Quarter Breakdown

The latest score breakdowns

--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-

Recent Scoring Events

Match Feed

Live Interchange Bench

Loading…

No interchange bench data available

There is currently no interchange bench data available for this match

Match News, Videos and Photos

Recent Encounters

The last 3 meetings between the teams...

Loading…

No Recent Encounters Available

There are currently no recent encounters available for this match

Form Guide

Find out how each teams season is shaping up!

Loading…

No recent form available

There is currently no recent form available for this match
Click for More

Line-Ups

The latest team changes…

'
Click For More

Team Head-to-Head Stats

How the teams performed

    Loading…

    No Team Stats Available

    There are currently no Stats available for this Match
    Click For More

    Match Leaders

    Who performed the best this match

    Lions v Crows PF preview: Rivals meet again on finals stage

    Gemma Bastiani previews Saturday night's preliminary final between Brisbane and Adelaide

    Ebony Marinoff tackles Belle Dawes during Adelaide's clash against Brisbane in round five, 2024. Picture: AFL Photos

    FOR THE 13th time across AFLW history, and the fifth time in finals, Brisbane and Adelaide will meet.

    The two most successful clubs in the League, and arguably the truest women's rivalry, will once again play out in a do-or-die preliminary final in the hopes of reaching a sixth (Lions) and fifth (Crows) Grand Final.

    SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23

    Brisbane v Adelaide at Brighton Homes Arena, 6.30pm AEST

    Head-to-head: Brisbane – nine wins, Adelaide – three wins
    Last time they met: Brisbane 5.5 (35) defeated Adelaide 5.3 (33), week five, 2024

    It was essentially a tale of two – very tight – halves, as Brisbane narrowly won out by way of a late Taylor Smith goal. Ally Anderson's 32 disposals and 456 metres gained, and Belle Dawes' 18 disposals and 10 tackles were crucial for the Lions around the contest, while Adelaide's combination of Ebony Marinoff (31 disposals, 522 metres gained) and Anne Hatchard (27 disposals, seven clearances) also proved important. But it was in the small moments where this game changed. The speed of Crows Madison Newman and Hannah Munyard threatened the Lions, while Bre Koenen's contested marking down back stopped Adelaide's late surge.

    Key match-up: Charlie Mullins v Madison Newman

    Both Brisbane and Adelaide rely heavily on their wingers to enact their respective game styles, and Charlie Mullins and Madi Newman are each side's biggest improvers this year. Their ability to break games open and connect different lines down the ground is both eye catching and crucial to their team's ability to establish control.

    In her second season, Mullins is averaging 13.6 disposals, 2.8 marks, and 216.8 metres gained, while Newman is contributing 19.9 disposals, 3.2 marks, and 303.4 metres gained.

    While each winger's willingness to get dangerous in an attacking sense, what will be arguably more interesting is how effectively each can nullify the other's aggression, and limit their run. Remaining accountable to one another will be a push and pull throughout the game, but there is a very real possibility they allow each other to play their own game, and back in their own strengths to exploit any space afforded.

    27:55

    Where it will be won

    The real appeal of any Brisbane v Adelaide game is the willingness from both coaches to back themselves and their brand in, rather than leaning too heavily on nullification tactics. Both boast a strong style that lacks any real element of surprise, but proves effective and reliable enough to still consistently establish control.

    The Lions generally like to move the ball with speed, playing on from marks, shifting off the line and establishing free-flowing movement out in space. Powerful breaks from stoppage by way of Cathy Svarc, Belle Dawes, and Sophie Conway allow quick territory gains, while disciplined structure outside of the contest, largely from wingers like Mullins, Orla O'Dwyer, and recent addition Evie Long, adds strength in layers.

    Cathy Svarc celebrates a goal during Brisbane's qualifying final against Hawthorn on November 10, 2024. Picture: AFL Photos

    Adelaide, meanwhile, prefers to go marginally more direct, using uncontested marks and forward movement. It can still reliably execute a switch, and get the ball moving quickly, but will more often work to slice open the opposition with neat kicks and marks around the ground.

    Forward-half intercepts are where the Crows excel, generating more than any other team and relishing repeat forward 50 entries, but it is the Lions who have been best at turning their forward-half intercepts into scores, so the territory armwrestle will be a fascinating watch.

    Contested marking will also be on show, following on from their match-up back in week five where Taylor Smith and Caitlin Gould took three each. Adelaide is the No.1 contested marking team in the League, taking 6.8 per game, and Brisbane isn't too far off that with 5.2 of its own.

    At the ground
    Check out the Oxygen Bar and pick up a free disposable camera, while there will also be face-painting and rock-climbing at the ground.

    Tip: It will be preliminary final heartbreak for the Crows again. Brisbane by one point.

    Lions set up GF re-match after third-quarter blitz against Crows

    A four-goal third quarter steers Brisbane past Adelaide and into a third consecutive NAB AFLW Grand Final

    Dakota Davidson celebrates a goal for Brisbane against Adelaide in the 2024 preliminary final. Picture: AFL Photos

    AN IRRESISTIBLE third quarter from Brisbane has set up a rematch of the 2023 Grand Final, with the premier storming past Adelaide by 18 points at Brighton Homes Arena on Saturday night.

    The Lions kicked four unanswered goals in the third term to overturn a half-time deficit and qualify for a sixth decider and the second in succession against North Melbourne at Ikon Park.

    LIONS v CROWS Full match coverage and stats

    Nat Grider played one of the best games of her career in defence, Orla O'Dwyer was magnificent on a wing and Ally Anderson was tireless as the hosts stormed into the Grand Final with a 7.8 (50) to 4.8 (32) triumph.

    It was their sixth-straight win over the Crows and sets up an opportunity to become the first team to win back-to-back AFLW premierships.

    ALL THE HIGHLIGHTS

    Trailing by 13 points late in the first half, Brisbane went up a couple of gears in the third quarter and Adelaide simply couldn't go with them.

    With Courtney Hodder injecting speed into the midfield, O'Dwyer (24 disposals) saving goals at one end and sparking attacking forays at the other, and Anderson (24) bobbing up everywhere, the Lions put the game away in a 10-minute avalanche.

    Ellie Hampson finished off a sweeping movement that went from one end of the ground to the other, Jade Ellenger gave the Lions their first lead after a costly Crows turnover, Cathy Svarc was rewarded for her hard work with a goal and Dakota Davidson soccered one off the ground to have the home fans in raptures.

    04:50

    The Lions got the ball in space and used their speed to pry open the stingy Crows defence.

    Svarc was again influential at half-forward, Bre Koenen a rock in defence and Davidson just as impactful with her defensive pressure as her two goals.

    Both teams were incredibly nervous early on, missing gilt-edged chances to kick the game's first goal.

    Chelsea Randall pulled a set shot, Danielle Ponter hung a snap out to the right, but perhaps the most egregious miss came from Lion Sophie Conway, who was streaming into an open goal before spraying her kick wide from 10m.

    00:54

    It took a contested mark and calm set shot from Randall to break the deadlock late in the quarter to give Adelaide a lead it deserved.

    The Crows continued to keep the ball camped in their front half early in the second quarter, winning back possession from clearing Brisbane kicks, so well were they set up.

    Caitlin Gould gave the Crows a 13-point lead courtesy of a towering pack mark and goal, before the home team sprung to life with two goals in a quick burst.

    00:32

    Davidson held out Sarah Allan to mark strongly and convert, quickly followed by Hodder's running goal after nice lead-up play from Svarc and Evie Long.

    It was fitting that Randall, who looked like taking the game over, kicked the visitors clear just prior to half-time after her juggling one-handed effort.

    The turning point
    Brisbane had not led at any stage of the first half and even following an Ellie Hampson goal to open the third quarter, the Lions still trailed by three points. That was until the ever-alert Sophie Conway stepped in. After Chelsea Biddell took a saving mark at the top of the goal square for the Crows, she took one step off her mark, was called to play on and Conway pounced. The resulting under-pressure clearing kick was scooped up by Jade Ellenger, who sent it sailing back over the goal umpire's head to give Brisbane the lead. And they never looked back.

    Brisbane's second half midfield moves
    Trailing at the main break by seven points, Brisbane coach Craig Starcevich was not about to sit idle. From the first centre bounce of the second half, Ellenger was stationed in the centre square alongside Ebony Marinoff. From there she would play a run-with role on the star Crow, and although Marinoff would finish with 30 disposals, her influence was somewhat nullified. Courtney Hodder was another to spend more time in the middle, with her six disposals in the third quarter influential in turning the match. Brisbane has become more flexible than ever in 2024 and it was never more on display than in the second half.

    00:39

    BRISBANE     0.3    2.4    6.5    7.8 (50)
    ADELAIDE     1.3    3.5    3.7    4.8 (32)

    GOALS
    Brisbane:
    Davidson 2, C.Svarc, Ellenger, Hodder, Hampson,, Dawes
    Adelaide: Randall 2, Gould, Kustermann

    BEST 
    Brisbane:
    Grider, O’Dwyer, Anderson, C.Svarc, Hodder, Davidson, Koenen
    Adelaide: Marinoff, Randall, Biddell, Hatchard, Ponter

    INJURIES 
    Brisbane:
    Nil
    Adelaide: Nil

    Reports: Nil

    Crowd: 4519 at Brighton Homes Arena

    Player Stats

    See how the players are performing...

    Team Stats

    See how the teams are performing…

    Disposals

    Stoppages

    Possession

    Marks

    Scoring

    Defence

    General

    Loading…

    Team Line-Ups

    The latest team changes…

    Match Feed

    The latest team changes....

    The Match Timeline Explained
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
    Drag me!
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    -.- (-)
    Refresh Match Feed
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-
    --.-

    Match Feed

    Loading…
    Expand match timeline Close

    Match News, Videos and Photos

    Loading…