Early history The Tasmanian Football Association was established on 12 June 1879, giving it some claim to the title of the
third-oldest club football league in the world. Delegates at the inaugural meeting represented the City, Cricketers, Richmond, Railway, New Town, High School and Hutchins School clubs, and voted by majority to adopt a modified variation of the
Victorian rules, with the notable exception at the time that the goalposts included a cross-bar above which a goal was required to be kicked. The standard Australian rules were adopted through the intercolonial conferences in the 1880s. The league underwent name changes to the South Tasmanian Football Association in 1887, and then the Tasmanian Football League in 1906. The same year, with the establishment of the
Australasian Football Council, the TFL was formally established as the governing administrative body for football across the whole of Tasmania. However, the onfield premiership run by the TFL remained limited to the local clubs around Hobart, with other leagues such as the
Northern Tasmanian Football Association in Launceston or
North West Football Union on the
north-west coast running their own premierships locally. The TFL remained a small league, typically only three or four clubs competing. The collection of teams changed frequently through the first few decades, but became stable by 1908, when the core clubs were
North Hobart,
Lefroy and
Cananore.
New Town was later admitted as a fourth club in 1921, and that quartet contested the next two decades.
District era The league went into recess between 1942 and 1944 due to World War II. In 1944, the league's directors met to discuss restructuring of the league under a district scheme with players
zoned to clubs based upon which district they resided in. District clubs were established along the west of the Derwent for the 1945 season at
Hobart,
Sandy Bay,
North Hobart and
New Town. Two further country districts were set up as part of the scheme:
Clarence, to the east of the Derwent; and
New Norfolk, fifteen miles north-west of the city. The Clarence and New Norfolk clubs were admitted to the league for the
1947 season under a two-year probationary periods, during which they were competing but excluded from shared league financial dividends; they were retained for at least a further two seasons with increased financial support in
1949; and they were made full, permanent and equal members of the league in August 1950. From 1948, the
Glenorchy Football Club – positioned in Hobart's growing industrial northern suburbs, but also in New Town's district, sought admission to the league, with its long-term home
KGV Oval built in 1950. Glenorchy's admission as a seventh club, and its impact on the district boundaries, was discussed and rejected repeatedly over the next decade, and further country expansion with an eighth club in either Kingborough or Huon to avoid requiring a weekly bye was discussed in the same context. Finally, ahead of the
1957 season, Glenorchy entered the league via an amalgamation with New Town: the merged club moved to KGV Oval, adopted the Glenorchy name and retained the New Town black and white colours. This set of six clubs contested the league unchanged for almost the next three decades. ===
Statewide Football era: 1986-2000 ===
Disbandment The league disbanded due to a dwindling of clubs able to financially cope and fell under the umbrella of Football Tasmania (which was soon renamed
AFL Tasmania). Three regional leagues absorbed the clubs from the Statewide League. This was represented by the 2 main north–south leagues and subsidiary regional leagues which underpinned the
Tasmanian Devils VFL team, created in 2001 which was owned and funded by the
Australian Football League and administered by
AFL Tasmania.
Tasmanian State League After a hiatus of eight years, AFL Tasmania announced plans for a return of the statewide league in 2009. The concept attracted widespread public and media debate on the return of a statewide competition, with many in the football world hesitant over such a move due to the perilous financial position most of the participating clubs were left in after the previous competition was disbanded in 2000. Many believed the push for a return of the league was a direct result of the media and the Tasmanian State Government's strong campaign in getting a Tasmanian team admitted into the
AFL. Under the AFL Tasmania plan, ten (10) clubs were invited to join the competition.
Clarence,
Glenorchy,
Hobart and
North Hobart along with former Southern amateur club
Lauderdale in the South.
North Launceston,
South Launceston and
Launceston from the North and
Devonport and
Burnie Dockers from the North-West Coast. The response from many clubs was initially lukewarm at best with many concerned at the lack of detail in the
AFL Tasmania plan and the rushed decision-making process of the move.
Ulverstone from the North West Coast bowed to pressure from its playing list and some factional groups within the club to put in a submission to join the competition in 2009. Despite a membership vote narrowly ending in favour of joining, the Robins had missed the AFL Tasmania enforced deadline and were initially to be included in the 2010 roster, however the remaining clubs (most notably its closest and most bitter rival Devonport) exerted considerable pressure upon the League not to alter the current makeup of teams for a period of ten years, therefore
Ulverstone were excluded from joining.
SFL Premier League club
Kingborough also lobbied AFL Tasmania to be included in the competition, but their case for inclusion was dismissed by the game's governing body due to their inadequate facilities and poor standard Kingston Beach Oval headquarters. Former TFL club
New Norfolk (1947–1999) was also not invited to join the league because of their poor financial position. Also, as a result of the new competition getting off the ground, the
Tasmania Devils VFL team was disbanded. On 4 April 2009, the opening match of the reformed competition took place at
King George V Park between the reigning premiers of the
SFL Premier League,
Glenorchy and reigning
NTFL premier
Launceston and resulted in a 21-point triumph to the Blues. The inaugural Grand Final was held at
Bellerive Oval on 19 September between old rivals
Glenorchy and
Clarence resulting in a thrilling 6-point victory to the Roos in front of 7,534 fans. The 2010 season started brightly with over 12,000 attending the first round of matches but soon after there was a great deal of off-field controversy with former Tasmanian Premier Paul Lennon originally accepting an unpaid role acting as a mediator between the clubs and AFL Tasmania as the relationship between the clubs and the governing body had become further strained. However, after only two weeks of the season, three clubs (Clarence, North Launceston and North Hobart) had decided to do their own bidding and Lennon walked away from the position. There were further controversies, namely AFL Tasmania's decision to withdraw support for the Reserve grade competition after the
Burnie Dockers announced only days before the start of the season that they would not be fielding a reserve grade side. Two other clubs (Hobart and Launceston) also struggled to field a reserves team throughout the season, and as a result the competition was run by the clubs themselves for the remainder of the season. It would be axed at season's end. A finals set-up that included an extra week was roundly criticised by football pundits across the State and it failed to garner great enthusiasm amongst the footballing public as small crowds attended, with AFL Tasmania later admitting that they would be looking at returning to the more tradition Final Five set-up in 2011. During the 2013 season,
South Launceston decided that it would not pursue a new TSL licence at the end of the season, and arranged to move into the newest
Northern Tasmanian Football Association in 2014; despite this, the club went on to win the 2013 premiership, meaning that there was no defending premier in 2014. The club was replaced by the Prospect State Football Club, which competes under the formal club name of
Western Storm Football Club. At the same time, the
North Hobart Football Club was forced to disband as a team by AFL Tasmania in favour of the newly established
Hobart City Football Club, whilst the
Hobart Tigers left for the
Southern Football League. These movements were forced upon the league to make space for a new AFL Tasmania backed TSL club, the
Kingborough Tigers Football Club. Prior to 2016, the Western Storm was rebranded as the
Prospect Hawks; but it was unable to field a senior team in 2016, managing only to field an uncompetitive team in the reserves, before being expelled from the league at the end of the 2016 season. Prior to 2018, both north-western clubs – Burnie and Devonport – found themselves unable to viably field teams in the competition, with withdrew, reducing the size of the competition to seven teams. On 9 October 2017 the paying members of the Hobart City Demons voted 371–118 in favour of returning the playing name of the club to the North Hobart identity for season 2018 and beyond. In May 2023,
AFL Tasmania announced that the Tasmanian State League would disband at the end of the
2024 season, with organisers stating that the best model for Tasmanian football going forward was by fielding a team in the
Victorian Football League,
VFL Women's and
Talent League competitions, as part of the
Tasmania Football Club's accession into the
Australian Football League in 2028. Teams located around in and around Hobart transferred to the
Southern Football League while northern-based teams moved to the
Northern Tasmanian Football Association. The final state league premiership was won by
North Launceston, who defeated
Lauderdale by 17 points in the grand final. ==Clubs==