Sport in the Australian Capital Territory refers to the varioussports played in theAustralian Capital Territory. Teams represent the ACT in the national leagues of several sports, although therugby league andrugby union teams receive far more local coverage than any of the other teams and are considered the main sports of the territory. TheAustralian Institute of Sport was set up in 1981, where many Olympic and other athletes are trained.
Rugby Union is a popular sport in the ACT with Canberra boasting a professional team, theACT Brumbies.
TheBrumbies, founded in 1996 and based atCanberra Stadium, are the localSuper Rugby team. They are Australia's most successful Super Rugby franchise having won the competition three times, and reaching the playoffs on several occasions. The Brumbies hold the current crowd record at Canberra Stadium of 28,753 for thegrand final match on 22 May 2004 against theCrusaders which the Brumbies won 47–38.
| Result | Years |
|---|---|
| Champions | 2001, 2004, 2020 |
| Runners-up | 1997, 2000, 2002, 2013 |
| Losing Semi-finalist | 2003, 2014, 2015, 2019 |
Rugby Union is played by several clubs at all levels and numerous schools at junior levels. TheJohn Dent Cup is the premier local Rugby Union tournament while the ACTJRU is the local Rugby Union tournament for juniors. Both tournaments and other senior grades are administered by theACT and Southern NSW Rugby Union, the local governing body for Rugby Union.
| Professional Clubs | Other Rugby Clubs | Major Rugby Schools |
|---|---|---|
The Canberra Cosmos represented Canberra between 1995 and 2001 in the National Soccer League. There are official plans to have a team in the A-League Men at the moment. Canberra United FC competes in the A-League Women (formerly known as the W-League), and have won a championship (2011–12) and two premierships (2011–12 and 2013–14). As an addition to the 2009 sporting calendar an international Asian Cup qualifier was scheduled between Australia and Kuwait at Canberra Stadium. It is the first international football game in Canberra in many years.
Rugby League is one of the main sports in the A.C.T in terms of attendances and media coverage. The Canberra Raiders are Canberra's National Rugby League team and play the most matches in the capital out of any single sport, having been admitted to the competition in 1982. They are Canberra's most successful sports team and have won the premiership on three occasions - in 1989, 1990 and 1994. The team's current home ground is Canberra Stadium.
At a local level teams play for the Canberra Raiders Cup, covering the sports program of tens of thousands of local juniors. Players developed through the system are then eligible to play for the Country Origin team and the New South Wales Blues at representative level.
Australian Football League clubs have played matches atManuka Oval since 2001 although there is still no official Canberra-based AFL team. From 2012 onwards the newGreater Western Sydney Giants AFL team has played three regular season matches a year and one pre-season match in Canberra at Manuka Oval.[1] There is the localAFL Canberra competition and the newNorth East Australian Football League (NEAFL) competition in which both theSydney Swans andGreater Western Sydney Giants reserves teams compete against clubs from Canberra, Sydney and South East Queensland. TheBarassi International Australian Football Youth Tournament is also held in Canberra.
The earliest record of basketball in Canberra was March 1942 when the Turner Drill Hall became the venue for physical fitness classes including basketball and for which two moveable backboards were installed. The first recorded game was between Army and YMCA in April 1942 and 6 teams formed a competition in May 1942.
The ACT Men's Amateur Basketball Association was formed on the initiative of Kel McGrath, the first Life member, the then director-general of the Australian Forestry School in the early 1950s with RMC Duntroon, the YMCA and the Australian Forestry School forming the nucleus of the embryo competition. The Ladies International Rules Basketball Association was formed in 1960 with both organisation coming together to form the ACT Amateur Basketball Association in 1961, the predecessor of today's Basketball ACT (BACT) which conducts it operation across some 10 courts with a registered senior & junior, male and female membership exceeding 6,500, it is one of the most integrated sports in the ACT.
At the National Level, Canberra competed in Australian Championships as a State from 1965 until the changing face of the sport led to the development of more favoured club championships, conferences and leagues.
The first interstate league in which Canberra (ACT) participated was the South Eastern Conference formed in 1967 until 1972. Its succession continues as theSouth East Australian Basketball League (SEABL) in which the premier men's basketball team in Canberra, theCanberra Gunners, currently participate. 1979 saw the creation of theCanberra Cannons was aNational Basketball League team, one of the 10 founding clubs it competed between 1979 and 2002 when recurrent financial and management woes finally saw the teams demise, to be later resurrected as the Hunter Pirates and later still as the Singapore Slingers before finally disappearing from sight. Their brief but proud history records their fortunes as League runners-up in 1979 and 1989 and as League Champions three times in 1983, 84 and 88.
TheCanberra Capitals are the Canberra-basedWomen's National Basketball League team. Founded in 1984 and previously the Canberra Nationals, they play at theAIS Arena. The Capitals gained entry to the WNBL in 1985, the year in which they won the NSW Club Championship and the Australian Women's Basketball Conference premiership defeating Dandenong 61–59. Ownership of the BACT flagship Canberra Capitals program was transferred under controversial circumstances to the University of Canberra in 2014. BACT retains the Canberra Capitals Academy, its elite female basketball team, which competes in theSouth East Australian Basketball League (SEABL).
From 2000 to 2002,V8 Supercars raced in Canberra on a temporary street circuit inside theParliamentary Triangle, theCanberra Street Circuit. The event was held on theQueen's Birthday long weekend each June.
| Bruce | McKellar | Bruce | Manuka | Narrabundah | Wanniassa | Deakin | Phillip | Phillip | Gungahlin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AIS Arena | McKellar Park | Canberra Stadium | Manuka Oval | Narrabundah Ballpark | Viking Park | Deakin Stadium | Phillip Ice Skating Centre | Woden Park | Gungahlin Enclosed Oval |
| Capacity:5,200 | Capacity:3,500 | Capacity:25,011 | Capacity:15,000 | Capacity:1,500 | Capacity:8,000 | Capacity:1,500 | Capacity:1,000 | Capacity:1,000 | Capacity:1,150 |
| Basketball | Football | Rugby league,Rugby union | Cricket,Australian rules football | Baseball | Rugby union | Football | Ice hockey | Football,Athletics | Football,Rugby union |
Several Canberra sporting teams have won national championships and leagues. These teams include:
| Canberra Cavalry | 2012/13 |
| Canberra Capitals (Women) | 1999/00, 2001/02, 2002/03, 2005/06 2006/07, 2008/09, 2009/10; |
| Canberra Cannons (Men - last season 2002/03) | 1983, 1984, 1988 |
| Canberra United (Women) | 2011/12, 2013/14, 2014/15, 2016/17 |
| CBR Brave | 2018, 2022 |
| Canberra Knights | 1998 |
| Canberra Raiders | 1989, 1990, 1994 |
| Brumbies | 2001, 2004 |
| John Reid Shield (Men) | 1989, 1990, 1993, 1996 2001, 2003, 2006 2007 2008, 2009, 2011 2012 2013 |
| Gilleys Shield (Women) | 1978, 1979, 1863 |
| Canberra Heat (Men) | 2011, 2015 |
ACTSPORT establishedACT Sports Star of the Year Awards in 1984. in 2015, these were renamed theCanberra Sport Awards when taken over byACT Government after ACTSPORT ceased operations. In 1985, ACTSPORT established theACT Sport Hall of Fame.