2020 AFL season


The 2020 Australian Football League season is the ongoing 124th season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 31st under the name "Australian Football League", having changed from "Victorian Football League" after the 1989 season. There will be 18 teams competing in the league, the same as the previous eight seasons.
On 22 March 2020, the season was suspended at the conclusion of round 1 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The season resumed on 11 June 2020, and if there are no further disruptions would conclude with a Grand Final in late October.

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

The 2020 season was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, which was formally declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization on 11 March 2020, eight days prior to the scheduled start of the premiership season. Restrictions imposed by the different state governments related to social distancing, lockdowns of non-essential services which lasted for three months across the country, and border controls for interstate and international travel, all had significant effects on the completion of the 2020 season.

Fixture

Prior to the commencement of the season, anticipating that the season would be forced to cease at the peak of the virus, the AFL announced the fixture would be shortened from 22 matches per team to 17, with each team playing each other once. The season then commenced on 19 March as originally scheduled; but as restrictions, followed for periods of formal quarantine, were introduced on interstate travel, the season was suspended after round one.
The season was suspended for more than two months. On 15 May, as most states began easing restrictions, the league's plan to resume the season was announced: clubs began non-contact training from 18 May, and full contact training from 25 May, ahead of resuming competitive matches from 11 June, with the revised fixture released gradually throughout the year, and changing regularly and often at short notice when the situation forced it.
The first major fixturing challenge occurred in the aftermath of Round 4, when a spike in Victorian COVID-19 cases prompted other states to either impose tighter quarantine restrictions on Victorians, or defer the relaxation of restrictions already in place. Although this forced two planned Round 5 matches to be redrawn at less than a week's notice, and the entire planned Round 6 and 7 fixtures to be redrawn, the season continued without suspension.
As of Round 4, the only other fixture which has not gone ahead as scheduled was:
When games were postponed or rescheduled, other games within the same round were often also rescheduled to ensure the primetime television slots were filled.

Club medical restrictions

During the peak of the hiatus, players were allowed to train only within the strict limits of the government restrictions on public gatherings; at the height of the pandemic in April and May, when gatherings larger than two were restricted, this means players could train only in pairs. Sixteen players, as well as assistant coach Ben Hart, were sanctioned for inadvertently breaching these guidelines when training too close to each other on a quarantine camp in early May; Hart was suspended for six weeks and the players each received a suspended sentence of one week.
When the league returned to training and playing, it was done with strict, enforceable protocols and monitoring in place to ensure that the clubs would not suffer a virus outbreak, and that any virus cases could be contained with minimal impact to the wider competition. To this effect, players, umpires and staff were regularly tested for the virus and continued to train mostly in small groups, allowing individual players or small groups to be segregated and contained in the event of positive cases. Players and club personnel were also subject to protocols which extended to players' personal lives, which were above and beyond the lockdown guidelines still in place for the general public; several players received suspensions for transgressions such as attending non-essential gatherings or riding in Ubers during the season.
Throughout the season, AFL-listed players were not permitted to participate in the state league competitions due to the greater risk of external threats in the semi-professional state league environment; this meant there was no formal competitive reserves football for players who were not selected in the seniors. Clubs based in the same state were permitted to arrange ad hoc scratch matches for their unselected players against each other and in empty stadiums to enable some match practice; these could be stand alone games or curtain raisers to senior games.
Prior to Round 5, ten Melbourne suburbs were placed back into stage three lockdown, and the New South Wales government closed its border to people from those suburbs. Players and officials living in those areas were forced to move to other accommodation at less than a day's notice to ensure they would be able to travel to the planned New South Wales hubs from Round 6.

Quarantine hubs

Interstate travel restrictions and quarantine periods were a significant impediment to the completion of the season. When the season resumed, the South Australian and Western Australian governments still had in place strict 14-day quarantine periods for interstate travellers which were not waived for football clubs; and, by Round 5, a 14-day quarantine was imposed for travel from Victoria in all states except New South Wales.
To overcome this, the fixture featured several quarantine hubs, in which clubs travelled to a restricted state for an extended three- or four-week trip, quarantined there and played several games against other teams in the hub. Players' immediate families were permitted to join them at the league's expense, but were subject to the same virus testing regime. Hubs established during the season were:
The hubbing arrangement resulted in some fixturing anomalies, the most notable of which occurred in Round 6 when all nine games were played in New South Wales and Queensland, traditionally rugby league territory. Whole rounds were played with no matches in Melbourne, which had only previously occurred in Round 8, 1952. Clubs hosted several fixtured home games at interstate venues, and hub stadiums were sometimes used for multiple games on the same day – the first double-headers in senior VFL/AFL football since round 19, 1986.

Crowds

Government restrictions on gatherings meant that, starting in Round 1, crowds were locked out of senior VFL/AFL matches for the first time in the code's history. State governments gradually allowed crowds, often small and restricted in size, into games, starting immediately from the resumption in Round 2 in South Australia and New South Wales, from Round 3 in Queensland, and from football's resumption in Round 7 in Western Australia. The sizes of allowable crowds changed as the season progressed, with early season Queensland and New South Wales crowds limited to only a few hundred, while half crowds were allowed in the largely virus-free Western Australia from Round 7.
Starting in Round 2 after the resumption of the season, broadcasters experimented with adding artificial crowd audio to lend a more normal feel to their telecasts to overcome the lack of genuine crowds in stadiums.

Rule changes

Throughout the season, matches were played for a shortened length of 16 minutes plus time on per quarter, instead of 20 minutes plus time on. This was originally done at the start of the season, in the hope that playing shorter games could facilitate more frequent games than weekly, maximising the games which could be played before the anticipated suspension of the season; but this did not eventuate, since the season was suspended after only one round. It was then retained after the resumption to lighten the load on players to take account for the compromised training schedule; and, to allow make-up games to be more easily scheduled between rounds when matches were postponed or refixtured. As a direct result of this, it was a very low-scoring season, and several records or long-standing marks in low scoring were set during the season.

Financials

When the season was suspended, the league and clubs were faced with an acute cash flow shortage, as the gate and broadcast revenues which had been budgeted for stopped immediately; clubs deriving revenues from gaming and other public venues also saw those revenues drop when public gatherings were restricted. The league and clubs all stood down or severely reduced hours for huge percentages of their staff during the suspension; and the AFL agreed with both the AFLPA and ALFUA to significant play cuts for the players and umpires for the season, amounting to 50% of their wage from the point of the suspension until the end of the season, and increasing to 70% for any period of suspension which extends beyond the end of May. The league successfully obtained a $500–600m line of credit with the National Australia Bank and ANZ Bank, leveraged against its ownership of Marvel Stadium, to cover its and its clubs' cash shortfalls during the suspension.
Resuming the season and playing the shortened 17-game season in full, even without crowds, was important to ensure the league still took in most of its television revenue. Prior to the resumption, the league renegotiated its $417m/yr broadcast deals with Network Seven and Foxtel, ultimately resulting in a total television revenue reduction of approximately $150m over 2020–2022.

Other effects

Among the other direct impacts of the pandemic were:

Marsh Community Series

The pre-season series of games returned as the 2020 Marsh Community Series, with teams playing two games each. The games were stand-alone, with no overall winner of the series. Each team played two games, many at suburban or regional venues, while all games were televised on Fox Footy.

State of Origin for Bushfire Relief Match

A one-off benefit match was played on 28 February 2020, as a fundraiser for the relief effort for the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season. The league donated $2.5 million to disaster relief funds in association with the match. Selection for the two teams was under state of origin rules, and it was the first interstate representative match featuring AFL-listed players since the AFL Hall of Fame Tribute Match held in 2008.

Premiership season

As the coronavirus situation developed, only the first round was played as originally drawn. The rest of the fixture was redrawn into a new seventeen-round season in which each team plays each other once. The new rescheduled fixture was released gradually through the season, often at short notice, to allow the fixture to respond to developments in the spread of the virus.

Round 1

Round 2

Round 3

Round 4

Round 5

Round 6

Round 7

Round 8

Round 9

Round 10

Round 11

Round 12

Round 13

Win/loss table

Bold – Home game

X – Bye

Opponent for round listed above margin
Team123456789101112131415161718F1F2F3GFLadder
Syd
3
PA
75
GC
53
BL
37
Frem
20
WCE
33
StK
23
Ess
3
NM
69
MelbCollWB18
Haw
28
Frem
12
WCE
30
Adel
37
PA
37
Geel
27
GWS
20
Melb
4
Ess
63
RichWBNM3
Rich
24
Melb
1
Geel
2
Ess
1
StK
18
WB
52
PA
3
NM
7
Haw
31
XWCEFrem8
WB
52
Rich
0
StK
44
GWS
2
Ess
15
Haw
32
Geel
22
WCE
66
Frem
12
SydAdelMelb5
Frem
6
Syd
6
MelbCarl
1
Coll
15
NM
14
WB
42
Adel
3
BL
63
GWSGCStK4
Ess
6
BL
12
PA
29
GC
13
Adel
20
StK
6
WCE
30
Geel
32
Coll
12
XHawCarl14
GWS
32
Haw
61
Carl
2
Melb
3
GC
37
BL
27
Coll
22
Frem
32
WCE
9
NMStKPA2
PA
47
WCE
44
Adel
53
Frem
13
Geel
37
Melb
17
Syd
32
WB
5
GWS
26
StKEssRich9
Geel
32
NM
20
WB
24
Coll
2
Haw
34
PA
17
BL
20
Rich
12
GC
26
EssXSyd10
BL
28
Geel
61
Rich
32
NM
4
GWS
34
Coll
32
Melb
43
Syd
7
Carl
31
XFremWCE13
WCE
27
Carl
1
EssGeel
3
Rich
27
GC
17
Haw
43
BL
4
PA
51
AdelNMColl15
StK
2
GWS
20
Syd
11
Haw
4
WB
49
Ess
14
Rich
54
Carl
7
Adel
69
GeelMelbBL16
GC
47
Adel
75
Frem
29
WCE
48
BL
37
GWS
17
Carl
3
StK
29
Melb
51
WBRichGeel1
Carl
24
Coll
0
Haw
32
StK
26
Melb
27
Syd
8
NM
54
GWS
12
WB
41
BLPAGC6
NM
2
WB
39
Coll
44
Rich
26
Carl
18
Frem
6
Adel
23
PA
29
Syd
53
GCGeelEss7
Adel
3
Ess
6
NM
11
WB
28
WCE
34
Rich
8
GC
32
Haw
7
StK
53
CollXGWS17
Melb
27
GC
44
BL
30
PA
48
Syd
34
Adel
33
Frem
30
Coll
66
Geel
9
XCarlHaw11
Coll
52
StK
39
GWS
24
Syd
28
NM
49
Carl
52
Ess
42
GC
5
Rich
41
PABLAdel12
Team123456789101112131415161718F1F2F3GFLadder

Ladder


Ladder progression

Coach changes

Awards

Coleman Medal