Early history The concept of holding a one-day tournament of shortened Australian rules football matches dates as early as the 19th century. During a weekend's break in the
1896 VFA premiership season, a
Charity Cup event was held in which four clubs – , , and
Port Melbourne – contested a knock-out tournament of shortened matches; as is the case in modern lightning premierships, new rules were trialled during the event.
World War II Lightning premierships saw an increase in frequency around World War II, when many such events were staged as wartime fundraisers. The first occurred during 1940, the first football season following the outbreak of World War II. On 13 July 1940, the SANFL staged its "Lightning Football Carnival" at the
Adelaide Oval, attracting a crowd of almost 17,500 people, with
Sturt victorious; the carnival was an eight-team knock-out tournament, with each match played over two periods of 14 minutes each. The
Victorian Football League then staged its version, known as the
"Patriotic Premiership", on 3 August 1940, at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground, attracting more than 30,000 people, and won by ; this was a twelve-team knock-out tournament, with each match lasting a single period of 20 minutes. Both tournaments were considered great successes, and both leagues held further wartime Lightning Premierships in 1941 and 1943. In addition to the sport's two biggest leagues, the
Tasmanian Australian National Football League (TANFL) held two wartime Lightning Premierships, both in 1941, and many smaller leagues also held events. Most notably, the
Broken Hill Football League, staged a "Patriotic Premiership" on 6 July 1940, one week before the inaugural SANFL event, which consisted of a four-team knock-out tournament, with matches played at just under half-length (two periods of twenty minutes without time-on).
Post World War II In the ten years following World War II, most of the major Australian rules football leagues sporadically held lightning premierships. Although there was no longer a war to fund, the events were still held as charity fundraisers. The SANFL was the most active proponent of lightning football, staging four post-war carnivals between 1946 and 1950; the VFL staged lightning premierships on public holidays in
1951 (Jubilee Day),
1952 (Empire Day) and
1953 (Coronation Day); and post-war lightning premierships were also staged by the
Victorian Football Association (1946), the
North Western Football Union (1951) and the TANFL (1953). Since the 1950s, lightning football has been seen only occasionally at the top levels of the sport. Specific events have included: •
1971: the Rothmans Channel 7 Cup, an eight-team knockout tournament of half-length games played over one weekend in October 1971. The tournament was staged in Perth as a testimonial to
Polly Farmer, and featured four
West Australian Football League teams and two teams each from the SANFL and VFL. • 1972–1979: the VFA staged a post-season lightning premiership among teams from both divisions that failed to reach the finals. The shortened matches were played as curtain-raisers to the finals, rather than as a condensed tournament. •
1996: the AFL staged a pre-season lightning premiership over a weekend in February 1996 to celebrate the league's
Centenary Season. Matches were played over two halves of 17.5 minutes duration, and this was the first Lightning Premiership to trial some of the more experimental rules currently associated with the lightning format. •
2011 to
2013: the AFL staged lightning matches in the first round of the annual
pre-season competition. The league's eighteen teams competed in six separate
rounds robin of three teams each, with each set of three matches played consecutively at one venue. In 2011, the lightning round was used to eliminate ten of the eighteen teams from the competition; in 2012, the lightning matches counted as two of each team's four scheduled pre-season competition matches. • 2011: at the
2011 Australian Football International Cup, a round of lightning matches (in the form of six rounds robin of three teams each) was staged at the start of the tournament, and the results were used to separate the twelve stronger countries and the six weaker countries into separate divisions for the remainder of the tournament.
Lightning football at lower levels Among the more notable senior lightning football events around Australia are: • The Ngurratjuta Lightning Carnival, has been held every year since the 1980s over the Easter long weekend in
Alice Springs. The Ngurratjuta Lightning Carnival attracts teams from all over the Northern Territory, including from remote indigenous communities, and is the biggest football event in the
Red Centre. • The Boag's Draught Pre-season Invitational, which is a pre-season lightning premiership played among the previous year's premiers from each of Greater Melbourne's eight metropolitan football leagues (the
EFL,
EDFL,
GFL,
NFL,
RDFL,
SFL,
VAFA and
WRFL). First staged in 2011. Annual lightning carnivals have become common in many junior leagues and school competitions. This is not limited to Australian rules football, with many other sports contested under a lightning premiership format. ==Top level lightning premiership winners==