Brisbane Lions of old as 'The Gabbatior' returns

By Jono Baruch / Roar Guru

The Australian men’s cricket team have a formidable record in Brisbane. Not since 1988 against the powerful West Indies side has an Australian team been defeated at the Gabba.

The fast, bouncy track often proves the kryptonite for visiting sides, along with the steamy Queensland air just being too hot to handle. As the years have rolled on, only a six-month period when the pitches were rolled and the goalposts were removed did the Gabba attain the name “The Gabbatior”.

There was only one team that caused mayhem and it wasn’t the one with the Sherrin.

But there is now a team in town that ensures that the name The Gabbatior lasts a full 12 months of the year.

The Brisbane Lions are not just coming, they are here.

Brisbane Lions players Lincoln McCarthy and Charles Cameron (Jono Searle/AFL Photos/Getty Images)

They say a week is a long time in Football. A year is even longer. A decade without any form of success can feel like an eternity.

You have to go all the way back to 2010 to find when Brisbane started a season with three straight wins. It was a time where Jonathan Brown was at the peak of his powers, Brendan Fevola was up there playing second fiddle for a season and the likes of Simon Black, Luke Power and a young gun called Daniel Rich were ruling the roost in Queensland.

The football was great, the crowds were loud and the Gabba was pumping.

While this brief period of excitement in 2010 was brief and they ultimately missed the finals that year, it has been a long and barren trough of decent Australian rules football coming from Queensland. Until now.

While the word from within will be to keep a lid on it and it is only Round 3, it is hard to argue that the Brisbane Lions have been one of the most exciting teams in the competition to watch.

In the first three rounds of the season, they have not only fought to win all their games but they have run all over the top of the opposition.

Round 1 against the reigning premiers West Coast, 14 goals to two after quarter time. In Rounds 2 and 3 they were 10 points down with 15 minutes to go and proceeded to run over the top of the opposition by kicking the next seven scores – in both wins.

While coach Chris Fagan calls it the steady growth of his young cubs, the results and numbers are there to be seen that this is a team that’s on the up – and quickly. And the Gabba and the game as a whole and supporters in Queensland are going to be the biggest benefactors of all of this.

As such, “The Gabbatior” is about to live up to its name as a fortress once again.

The noise that the 20,000 people strong crowd made has been getting louder and louder as the games have worn on. Emerging key forward Eric Hipwood notes that like the rusted on AFL fans that ride every single bump that they are all along for the ride.

Chris Fagan of Lions (AAP Image/Julian Smith)

“But it’s not just that. It’s the spoils, it’s all the little acts, the defensive acts that the crowd gets involved in. It’s not all the goals, it’s the little things,” and for Fagan, who has been so intent on bringing fans back to the Gabba since he has come to the club might just have the perfect tonic. His team plays incredibly watchable Football which is conducive to the modern game.

They move the ball quickly and slickly from one end of the ground to another with little to no fear and they have the players who are capable of putting a big score on the board. It’s the type of game-plan and style that can not only turn the Gabba into a fortress again but make it a feared road trip for anyone in the competition.

With Aussie rules in Queensland on the rise at grassroots and the AFL teams performing well, with a blockbuster Thursday night Easter Thursday game coming up – the tickets are only going to get hotter and go quicker.

They boast one of the most exciting young lists in the competition, inclusive of one of the best players in the competition right now while also loaded with players who are destined to become household names.

As Florence and the Machine put it so beautifully in one of their favourite songs “the dog days are over”.

The people are coming back to the Gabba and like the folk of Brisbane have made it such a great environment for their Cricket teams to perform in recent years, the Brisbane Lions are about to get what appears to be an extended run of that same love and support.

The Crowd Says:

2019-04-11T09:17:14+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Ahhh so when Brisbane look to do well you bandwagon jump to feel a connection to something, have your Dyson hore Lacey Fitzroy story at ready and bobs your uncle sheesh

2019-04-11T08:20:06+00:00

IAP

Guest


Because Brisbane isn’t Victorian and my Mum is from Western Melbourne and always went for the doggies. The rest of the family barracked for the Lions and we made a collective decision to change. Some in my family still barrack for the Lions

2019-04-11T04:44:34+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


It is great to see the Gabba getting a bit of noise back again! Hopefully it’s packed to the rafters Easter Thursday and they can get the boys across the line

2019-04-11T04:05:05+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Then why western over Brisbane?

2019-04-11T01:36:54+00:00

Mick_Lions

Roar Pro


Already got my tickets to the Pies game! Really enjoyed booing the Power in the second quarter and watching them shank it. The Gabbatoir is dubbed such as it kills teams finals aspirations not poor animals.

2019-04-11T01:25:24+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


what can I say, I'm a pedant at heart where English is concerned

2019-04-11T01:18:13+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Fitzroy supporters are an exception. welcome aboard

2019-04-11T00:39:19+00:00

IAP

Guest


Paul, refer to my above comment...they're my second team, but I feel I have a right to do that - I was a Fitzroy supporter my whole life until they were sent packing.

AUTHOR

2019-04-10T23:15:47+00:00

Jono Baruch

Roar Guru


Cheers for the tip off Paul re spelling. Appreciate it.

2019-04-10T22:29:35+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Not so loud about the Gabbatoir references, you'll have animal rights types storming the place. The most enjoyable thing has been the style of football we are playing, although I'm not sure I'm in the mood for much faux sympathy and second-team syndrome from Victorians given they didn't give a stuff when we were dreadful through much of the 2010's But when you've been dying of thirst for so long, even a trickle feels like a flood. Only 3 games though. Let's see how we go against Essendon and Collingwood next two weeks. Also - eds, it's Gabbatoir, not Gabbatior, maybe correct this given it features multiple times in the article and byline.

2019-04-10T21:31:23+00:00

IAP

Guest


As a vegan, I find the term "Gabbatior" particularly offensive. To mock the plight of those poor defenceless animals who are inhumanely slaughtered is disgusting.

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