Australian Gridiron League kicks off with a bang

By Slater Jackson / Roar Pro

The Australian Gridiron League kicked off this weekend with the Queensland Sundevils dominating the ACT Monarchs in a 54-0 win in Brisbane.

In what turned out to be a scorching hot day in Brisbane, the Sundevils lived up to their name as they embraced the conditions and lit up the scoreboard in a lop sided affair.

The Sundevil offense run by starting quarterback Jared Stegman took some time to feel out the Monarch defence before flipping the switch and letting the onslaught begin. A combination of a power running game and well-picked passing plays helped the Sundevils move the chains as they marched downfield.

Running back Darius Holliday-Miller was a hammer in the backfield as he ran the rock through and around the Monarch linebackers. His effort on the ground was invaluable to the team’s overall offensive success as his presence saw the Monarch defence fill the box.

The ACT defence was no match for the aerial attack of the Sundevils, who boast some of Australia’s best receivers in Mitch Besse, Luke Edwards, Kyle Bowpitt, Josh Kent and Klentsky De’Shawn Haembo.

With speed on the outside they made quick work of the Monarch defenders as they took routine catches and turned them into big plays. Stegman spread the ball around hitting all of these receivers on short, intermediate and deep routes.

Moving the chains consistently was Kyle Bowpitt whose slick routes found him open underneath more often than not.

Once it was clear that the Monarch corners could not run with the Sundevil receivers, Stegman let the ball fly hitting deep balls at will. Josh Kent and Mitch Besse were recipients of some of these long bombs that resulted in touchdowns.

The highlight catch of the day however was made by Luke Edwards who with a man draped over him managed to get vertical and take an incredible catch for a touchdown on a 40-yard bomb.

Sundevil tight ends Brendan Stanley and Chris Ravlich were a dominant presence in the middle of the field. Both are blessed with incredible athleticism and the size that strikes fear into defensive backs.

Making plays early, it was not long before the Monarch defence took notice of these two phenoms.

Drawing both linebacker and safety coverage, their efforts in the passing game gave the receivers on the outside more one on one looks which Stegman exploited.

Their ability to get to the second level as blockers in the running game and also make big plays downfield in the passing game make these two tight ends a dangerous weapon for the Sundevils in the tournament.

While the ACT Monarchs offense had some glimmers of potency, they were for the most part stifled by a dominant Sundevils defence. The defensive line for Queensland were unrelenting in their pursuit of Monarchs quarterback Stephen Finlay.

Bringing down the veteran signal caller on multiple occasions, defensive ends Jason Leeon and Vinny Tupi were unstoppable. This relentless pass rush was only matched by their secondary who shut down the Monarch receivers.

Safety’s Andrew Young and Damien Molloy patrolled the skies with absolute dominance, breaking up passes and punishing receivers that managed to acquire an elusive monarch reception.

The Sundevils showed in their opening match of the AGL that they are a force to be reckoned with. Turning their attention to the reigning champs, the Sundevils fly to Perth for game two against Western Australia.

What looks to be a clash of the titans is a must win for Queensland, but if they can replicate this sort of dominance then they may find themselves punching their ticket to the Championship game.

The Crowd Says:

2014-04-20T13:29:46+00:00

Melissa

Guest


Where do the Sundevils play out of? I've just returned from the US, Arizona after two years and loved watching the college teams, wildcats and Sundevils play, would be interested to see Australian teams play?

2014-03-31T04:27:06+00:00

Jared

Roar Pro


Nice article, good to see local sports making it onto the roar as well. Australian Gridiron posted some great photos from the game on their facebook page. There is a 3 quick succession photos of Luke Edwards catch which make it look even more ridiculous.

2014-03-31T01:15:16+00:00

Dread

Guest


Great report Slater. It was a fantastic game, for us Queensland supporters, with some brilliant execution and showed the Qld are here to play this year. Offense was simply superb with Steggars absolutely nailing every throw and how about that catch by Luke Edwards?? Best reception I have ever seen, without too much exaggeration at all. The SunDevils D was absolutely brutal as well, holding the Monarchs to 0 and at no stage looked threatening to put points on the board. It was going to always be a tough ask for the Monarchs. Getting up at 4am to jump on a plane to land in Brisbane on one of the muggiest days in years where even us locals were sweating our backsides off complaining about how hot it was. Why the AGL wanted a 12pm kickoff in Brisbane at this time of year is beyond me. And having a smaller squad with plenty going both ways was a recipe for disaster - and thats what happened. The SunDevils have had an indepth preparation over our off season with many people behind the scenes getting the boys in prime shape to be real contenders this year.

2014-03-31T01:06:59+00:00

Dread

Guest


Travel does hurt amatuer competition a tad, but the bigger states ie Qld, Victoria, NSW usually take full squads around the country. If we can raise the profile of the sport and gain a great sponsor or two that could change. The standard of football is getting better and better each year and we do have a terrific product just waiting for someone to swoop in and take advantage. One day....

AUTHOR

2014-03-30T22:48:46+00:00

Slater Jackson

Roar Pro


From what it looked like on the sideline there was a big difference in the squad sizes, with QLD having a plethora of players and ACT were looking little lean. I am not sure whether this was due to having to travel though.

2014-03-30T21:46:30+00:00

mushi

Guest


Just a question does the home team normally kill it? I remember from my days that it was hard to get a 15 to 16 guys to show up to the weekend games when it was a car ride so i can imagine that travel would be a pretty big hurdle for teams in this (that and ACT teams used to be pretty bloody good given the smattering of "imports" from the embassy)

2014-03-30T07:54:53+00:00

JJ

Guest


Anyone know how decent the punters are? I'm an Aussie returning home shortly with semi-pro football exp in the USA. Cheers.

2014-03-29T23:34:23+00:00

Cameron Mee

Roar Guru


Great to see that Australia has a league up and running, it can definitely develop into something akin to the NBL, a fringe sport but still played semi-professionally, if it gains enough exposure.

AUTHOR

2014-03-29T21:07:21+00:00

Slater Jackson

Roar Pro


Moving the chains refers to achieving a first down, the measurement markers are held together by a chain so when you make a first down they move the markers to set up for the next down and distance

2014-03-29T21:04:09+00:00

Milz

Guest


What does moving the chain mean?

2014-03-29T19:57:48+00:00

Frankie321

Guest


Thanks for this article. I did not know there was an Australian Gridiron League. Now I at least know it exists. I will try to get to a game, or watch it live streaming (see the AGL website for the live game streaming URL).

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