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Southern Football Netball League
Australian rules football league From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Southern Football Netball League (SFNL) is an Australian rules football league, based in the south and south eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, for senior clubs.
History
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The South East Suburban Football League was formed in 1963 as a merger of the Caulfield Oakleigh District Football League with the East Suburban Football League after a number of its clubs moved to the Croydon Ferntree Gully FL (now Eastern Football League).
When the Federal Football League folded at the end of 1981, the SESFL had twenty clubs. After the addition of all but one of the Federal clubs for 1982, the league had a 16 team A grade, and a 12 team B grade competition. The league twice tried 3 divisions but the idea was later dropped as clubs left or folded.
In a major project in 1991, the league underwent a major revamp of its administration and opted to employ a full-time administrator and staff to manage the league's affairs. The League's administration along with its member clubs undertook a far-reaching corporate planning programme to map out future directions and objectives. The extra manpower allowed the elevation of League and club standards and the improved marketability of attracting the corporate sponsorship that modern football now required to keep the organisation afloat. Much of this work was completed by early 1992 and it was decided that a new name would be required to flow on from the work already achieved. The Southern Football League was adopted to show that a new professionalism was running football in the southern suburbs.
The league had another major change in 1993, when it absorbed the Eastern Suburbs Churches Football Association (ESCFA). The newly merged league began in 1993 with around 50 clubs playing 5 divisions, though this had dropped to 28 clubs in 3 divisions by 2002 due to clubs folding, merging, or moving to other competitions.[1]
In April 1997, the Southern Football Show began on Optus Vision's Localvision channel, covering the weekly news of the league.[2][3] It moved to Channel 31 Melbourne the following year. This program soon became known as the Southern Footy Show. It later expanded its scope to become the Local Footy Show, covering many Melbourne leagues until 2011.
In the new millennium, the league grew slightly with the addition of the Southern Dragons in 2009, Endeavour Hills in 2011 and Hallam in 2012. The Dragons returned to the VAFA after the 2012 season,[4] but the revival of Carrum Patterson Lakes FC in 2013 after almost 20 years in recess kept the league at 31 clubs.[5]
The 2014 SFL third division seniors grand final was called off after a brawl broke out between players and supporters. The game in which Mount Waverley was taking on Carrum Patterson Lakes. A police spokeswoman said supporters started heckling one of the teams as it left the ground at half-time. A fight broke out and one person was treated in hospital. The game was called off when one of the teams refused to return to the field."[6]
On 11 April 2015, acknowledging the netball part of the competition, the SFL changed its name to the Southern Football Netball League (SFNL).[7] The 2015 season was also a time when the Southern Dragons went into recess.
In 2016 Port Melbourne Colts transferred in from Western Region Football League, and Lyndhurst FC fielded a senior side for the first time.[8]
2017 saw the introduction of women's football.
The inclusion of 3 new clubs - Hampton Park, Frankston Dolphins and Cerberus - enabled the league to have 4 men's divisions for 2018.
In 2022 Cranbourne and Doveton Park joined the league from the Outer East Football Netball League.
Narre Warren and Berwick Springs entered the SFNL from the Outer East Football Netball League in 2025, while Clyde fielded an Open Grade side for the first time.
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Current Clubs (2025 season)
Locations

4km
2.5miles
2.5miles

Casey Thunder

Heatherhill

Clyde

South Yarra

Narre South Saints

Moorabbin

Lyndale

Hallam

Doveton Eagles

Dandenong West

Clayton

St Kilda City

South Mornington

Skye

Lyndhurst

Heatherton

Hampton

Carrum Patterson Lakes

Black Rock

Berwick Springs

Ashwood

Mordialloc

Keysborough

Highett

Hampton Park

Frankston Dolphins

Endeavour Hills

East Malvern

Doveton

Chelsea Heights

Caulfield Bears

St Pauls

Springvale Districts

Port Melbourne

Narre Warren

Murrumbeena

East Brighton

Dingley

Cranbourne

Cheltenham

Bentleigh
Locations of the 2025 SFNL clubs. Red indicates clubs in Division 1, orange clubs in Division 2, yellow clubs in division 3, green clubs in Division 4, purple clubs that only field women's sides and blue clubs that play in the open grade only. South Mornington play 16 km south-west of Frankston.
Division 1
Division 2
Division 3
Division 4
Open Grade Only
Women's Division 1
Women's Division 2
Women's teams in recess
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Former Clubs
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Premiers
Men's seniors
Women's seniors
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References
External links
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