Amalgamation with the NEAFL The
North East Australian Football League had served as the top state-level league in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory, Queensland (and previously for the Northern Territory) since 2011. Throughout its existence, the NEAFL had accommodated the reserves teams of the states' four AFL clubs – , , and – and several stand-alone senior clubs from the regions. The NEAFL's utility as a development league and talent pathway had long suffered as a result of the substantial gap in standard between its weakest teams and players, its strongest teams and players, and AFL level – gaps which had been far more pronounced than in the VFL. The AFL clubs had long been keen for a higher quality league for their reserves teams to contest, and the AFL had been keen to improve the senior development pathways. The high costs of running the NEAFL also became acutely problematic due to the massive financial losses suffered by the football industry during the
COVID-19 pandemic. As was the case for the VFL, the
2020 NEAFL season was cancelled due to the pandemic. In August 2020, it was announced that the NEAFL would amalgamate into the VFL, with all of its clubs afforded the opportunity to join the VFL, over a transitional period in 2021 and 2022. This was expected to provide both the AFL clubs and the northeastern pathway clubs with a higher standard of competition, improving player development and senior pathways in the north east. Six of the NEAFL's nine teams joined the new competition: the
Sydney reserves,
Greater Western Sydney reserves,
Brisbane reserves and
Gold Coast reserves, and two stand-alone senior clubs from Queensland: Gold Coast based
Southport Sharks and Brisbane based
Aspley Hornets. Sydney based
Sydney University was offered a licence The
Canberra Demons and Brisbane based
Redland both declined to join the merged competition before licenses were offered. The competition was referred to by the working title "
VFL/East Coast second-tier competition" in official correspondence during part of the offseason, before the "Victorian Football League" name was ultimately retained unchanged.
Changes to Victorian clubs The financial pressures of the pandemic resulted in many AFL clubs seeking lower-cost reserves affiliation options. A new, lowest-cost option was made available to the AFL clubs, under which reserves players would be dispersed throughout the various VFL clubs rather than being affiliated to a single club, but no club took up the option. Ultimately, the only change for 2021 was that the affiliation between and the
Northern Blues was terminated after eighteen seasons – this had been announced in March 2020, prior to the cancellation of the 2020 season. This affiliation had been high cost for Carlton due to the large amount of money it had been investing in the club as a development pathway in the region. Carlton fielded its
reserves team in the league for the first time since the 2002 season. Furthermore, the administration of the Northern Blues – which had initially announced that it would have to fold without Carlton's financial backing and was not included in the aborted plans for a shortened 2020 season – worked successfully through the year to find a means to remain viable as a stand-alone senior club, and returned to the league under its former Northern Bullants name, and in its traditional red and white colours.
Other notes No Tasmanian team was introduced to the league in 2021 as part of the expansion interstate; although
AFL Tasmania had gained a provisional licence in 2018 to re-establish a Tasmanian team in the VFL from 2021, plans for this were deferred during the pandemic. Under-age players were allocated to clubs on a
zoning basis, with each
NAB League club and academy system allocated to a specific VFL club or clubs, thus allowing for greater interchange and continuity. Annual grants from the AFL to the stand-alone VFL clubs, which had been introduced in
2000 when the
AFL reserves first amalgamated with the VFL, were abandoned due to the financial pressures of the pandemic. The salary cap for the competition was also significantly reduced, from $380k to $200k, or $100k for AFL reserves teams or those with reserves affiliations. The season saw a trial of positional restriction rules, under which each team was required to have two players inside each 50-metre arc at each boundary throw-in stoppage. The rule was intended to reduce around-the-ground congestion. When the trial was originally announced, the rules went further, requiring three players inside each 50-metre arc – including one in each goal square – at every kick-in and boundary throw-in; but this was relaxed after several pre-season practice matches and before the home and away season, after several AFL coaches remarked that the rules made it too difficult for players seeking to transition to AFL from the second-tier competition. Following its trial in the 2021 VFL season it was assessed for potential inclusion in the national Laws of the Game, but ultimately rejected. Broadcast coverage of the VFL was expanded, with three matches per round available on sports streaming service
Kayo Sports, in addition to the ongoing one match per round broadcast on Seven Network and one Thursday night match broadcast on
Fox Footy, where no Thursday night fixture in the AFL was scheduled. ==Clubs==