Australian rules football (left) and
Kane Cornes (right) about to engage in a marking contest in a
Showdown. Australian rules football is the most popular spectator sport in South Australia with an attendance level (of at least one match per year) of 31% of the population, compared with a national average of 16%. Both clubs also have a women's team in the
AFL Women's league, with Adelaide joining for the inaugural season in 2017 and Port Adelaide joining for the seventh season in late 2022. South Australia also has a ten-team competition called the
South Australian National Football League (SANFL), which was established in 1877 and is the oldest statue league in the country, having formed one week earlier than the
Victorian Football Association. Prior to the Adelaide Crows joining the AFL in 1991, the SANFL was the highest level of competition in the state. Both AFL teams have reserves teams which play in the SANFL. The SANFL also runs an eight-team women's competition called the SANFLW. Beyond the AFL and SANFL, the state also has 30 community leagues in both metro and regional areas. As of 2018, more than 200,000 South Australians play Australian rules football, including more than 50,000 registered players in club competitions, making Australian rules football the number one club participant sport in the state.
Cricket match held at the newly re-developed
Adelaide Oval Cricket is a popular summer sport in South Australia, with over 100,000 people in the state participating. The sport is overseen by the
South Australian Cricket Association (SACA), which administers the state's three professional teams: the
South Australian Redbacks (a men's team competing in the
Sheffield Shield and the
Australian domestic limited-overs cricket tournament), the
South Australian Scorpions (a women's team competing in the
Women's National Cricket League), and the
Adelaide Strikers (with both men's and women's teams playing in the
Big Bash League and
Women's Big Bash League respectively). South Australia hosts international cricket matches, mostly at
Adelaide Oval, which hosted its first
Test match between
Australia and
England in 1884. Adelaide Oval also hosted the first ever day-night Test match, played between Australia and
New Zealand from 27 to 29 November, 2015. South Australia has produced numerous international cricketers, including brothers
Ian Chappell and
Greg Chappell, who both
captained Australia in international cricket.
Soccer playing association football at
Hindmarsh Stadium South Australia's sole representative in the national
A-League competition is
Adelaide United FC. They won the
2016 A-League Grand Final and have won two
pre-season cups and have made the finals every year except for 2009 and 2012 since the
A-league started in 2005. Adelaide United have been one of the most successful teams in the
A-league, despite failing to win an A-league Grand Final in their first two attempts. They have qualified for the
AFC Champions League 4 times, making them the most represented club in Australia. Of these appearances they made the round of 16 in 2010, were runners up in 2008, and have made the round of 16 in the ongoing
2012 AFC Champions League. Their home ground is
Hindmarsh Stadium, which has a capacity of 16,500. Hindmarsh was one of four non-
Sydney venues chosen to host matches as part of the
Men's Football tournament during the
2000 Summer Olympic Games.
Adelaide City remains South Australia's most successful club, having won three
National Soccer League titles and three
NSL Cups. City was the first side from South Australia to ever win a continental title when it won the
1987 Oceania Club Championship and it has also won a record 17
South Australian championships and 17
Federation Cups. Adelaide City contests the
Adelaide derby against its crosstown rival
West Adelaide, also a former national champion having been the first South Australian club to win the national league in
1978. SASi Pirates were National Champions in 1997 and 98 in the
Women's National Soccer League. Adelaide United 'Lady Reds' compete in the current national competition, the
W-League. The state has produced Australian representatives such as
Sharon Black and
Dianne Alagich who have contributed to the international success of the
Matlidas.
Netball Netball is a significant sport in South Australia with a wide range of participation opportunities across metropolitan, regional and rural locations within the state. The
Adelaide Thunderbirds have participated in the premier netball league in Australasia, winning premierships in 1998, 1999 in the CBT, and 2010 in the ANZ Championship. Many South Australian players have represented Australia, including World Championship player and Australian captain
Natalie von Bertouch,
Rebecca Sanders and
Kathryn Harby-Williams. South Australia also participates in the
Australian Netball League. In 2012
Southern Force took the title. Netball continues to have a strong metro, regional and intrastate competition throughout South Australia with around 70,000 women and men participating across the state. The game traces its roots in the state back to the 1940s, when the Port Adelaide
rugby union team split in four, and defected to
rugby league. South Australia's only professional rugby league team, the
Adelaide Rams, had a short but eventful existence. Originally the
Australian Rugby League planned to relocate a Sydney team to Adelaide but the
Super League war and the
SARL's decision to align themselves with the News Ltd
Super League in 1995 shut that idea down. Later in 1995, with Super League still only consisting of nine teams and Melbourne still aligned with the
ARL, a decision was made to give Adelaide the 10th Super League license. Brought into existence for the
1997 Super League season, the team had instant success. In
1998 they were selected to join the 20-team
National Rugby League; however, rumours abounded that they were to be axed from the 1999 season as part of a rationalisation of teams (from 20 to 14) in the competition. At present however, the
South Australian Rugby League still operates a local semi-professional competition consisting of both junior and adult teams from across Adelaide.
Adelaide Oval hosted
State of Origin series games in both
2020 and
2023, with the latter drawing a state record rugby league attendance of 48,613. ==Minor sports==