This is a list of AFL shows which have aired on Australian television, as of 2011.
AFL Game Day
Channel: Seven Network
Years: 2008–2020
Airs: Sunday @ 10:00am
Duration: 60 minutes
Current Cast
AFL Game Day: Primetime
Seven Network
Hosted by Hamish McLachlan, with Tom Harley, Matthew Richardson, Ben Cousins and Jason Akermanis
AFL Lovematch
Fox Footy Channel
AFL Squadron
Seven Network
Hosted by Garry Lyon
AFL Teams
Fox Sports Australia
AFL Today
Seven Network , early 1990s
Hosted by Bruce McAvaney, with Scott Palmer
Any Given Sunday
Channel: Nine Network
Years: 2005–2006
Aired: Sunday @ 1:00pm
Duration: 60 minutes
Season 1 Cast
Season 2 Cast
Before the Bounce
(Fox Sports Australia )
Before the Game
Originally named After the Game in 2003
Channel: Network Ten
Years: 2003–2013
Airs: Thursday @ 8:30pm (Originally Saturday @ 6.30pm and 11:30pm)
Duration: 60 minutes / 30 minutes
Current Cast
Current Segments
Tool of the Week
Player of the Day
Newspaper Headlines
Inside 60
Diary of a Footballer
Jumping in Hot Water
"Strauchanie"
Lehmo's Footy Clinic
Make a Wish Foundation
Beyond the Boundary
(Network Ten )
Hosted by Christi Malthouse
The Big League
Hosted by Peter Landy
The Bounce
(Seven Network )
The Business End
Herald Sun web series
Years: 2011–present
Airs: Saturday @ 7:00pm
Duration: 21 minutes (3 × 7 minutes)
Current Cast
Sam Edmund (Host, 2011—present)
Paul Roos (Panellist, 2011—present)
Mike Sheahan (Panellist, 2011–present)
Mark Robinson (Panellist, 2011—present)
Classic Quarters
(Fox Footy Channel )
The Club
(Seven Network , 2001)
Hosted by Craig Hutchison, with David Rhys-Jones (as the coach)
The Collectors
(Fox Footy Channel )
Cometti Live
Nine Network , 2002
Hosted by Dennis Cometti, with Ben Allan and Brad Hardie
The Crows Show
Seven Network
Featuring James Brayshaw and Nikki Visser
The Fifth Quarter
Network Ten , 2004–2011
The Final Siren
Channel: One
Years: 2011
Airs: Sunday @ 6:00pm
Duration: 60 minutes / 30 minutes
Cast
Segments
Cross to Herald Sun office (With Jon Ralph)
Top Ten Plays of the Week
Performer of the Round (Presented by Chris Grant )
Round Rewound
The Final Story
Channel: Nine Network
Format: Documentary
Years: 2011 (4 episodes)
Aired: Sunday @ 12:00pm
Duration: 60 minutes
List of Episodes
Fox Footy Channel
[ {Channel7} Sandy Roberts after AFL gameDay finished in 2015]
Seven Network , ?–1974
Hosted by Mike Williamson, with Reg Hickey
Channel: Nine Network
Years: 2007–present
Airs: Monday @ 10:30pm
Duration: 60 minutes
Cast
Fill-in Cast
James Brayshaw (Occasional guest host)
Damian Barrett (Occasional guest panellist)
Current Segments
Power Analyser
Good Call? Bad Call?
Caro's Arrow
The Burning Question
Tomorrow's Headlines
Seven Network , 1997–2002
Hosted by Bruce Abernethy, with James Brayshaw and Nikki Visser
Parts of this article (those related to dates) need to be updated . Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (October 2023 )
Channel: Nine Network
Years: 1994–2019
Airs: Thursday, 8:30pm
Duration: 90 minutes
Regular Cast
Semi-regular Cast
Current Segments
Fyfe's Footy Flicks (Cartoonist Andrew Fyfe 's satiric animations)
Bill's Wheel (Billy Brownless travelled to local footy clubs for a competition)
House of Bulger (Parody of daytime soap operas starring Shane Crawford )
Bulger, MD (The sequel to House of Bulger)
Hatchet Jobs (Chopped footage from coach interviews, 2006)
Marstermind (Based on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire , presented by Eddie McGuire )
Pillow Talk (James Brayshaw or Garry Lyon interview partners of AFL footballers)
Under the pump (A member of the panel is questions by the cast)
Four Quarters
Seven Network , 1995
Hosted by Sandy Roberts
Fox Footy Channel
Fox Footy Channel
Fox League Teams
Fox Footy Channel
Fox Footy Channel
The Game
Seven Network
The Game Plan (AFL)
One
The Gospel
Fox Footy Channel
Grumpy Old Men
Fox Footy Channel
With Bob Davis, Kevin Bartlett and Tony Shaw / Doug Hawkins
The Hey Jimmy! AFL Variety Hour
Channel: SBS
Years: 2002 (4 episodes)
Aired: Wednesday, 10:30pm
Duration: 60 minutes
Cast
Jim Stynes (Host, 2002)
Anthony Eales (co-host, 2002)
Chris Hawthorne (co-host, 2002)
Jim Krakouer (Panellist, 2002)
Bianca Peters (Panellist, 2002)
Segments
Jimmy on a Mission
Scoreboard Pressure
A Week's a Long Time in Football
Auskick Future Star
Hey Jimmy! Sitcom Sketch
The Lesser Man
High View in the Stands
Seven Network , 1997
Hosted by Wayne Carey, with Wayne Campbell, Aussie Jones and Anthony Hudson
Kellogg's Junior Supporters' Club
Hosted by Kevin Bartlett
League Teams
Seven Network , early 1960s–1986
Hosted by Bob Davis, with Jack Dyer and Lou Richards
Live and Kicking
Seven Network , 1998–1999 Hosted by Jason Dunstall, with Doug Hawkins and James Hird
Fox Footy Channel
Fox Footy Channel
One Week at a Time
Channel: One
Years: 2009–2011
Airs: Monday 9:30pm
Duration: 60 minutes
Current Cast
Current Segments
Top 10 Plays of the Week
Mark of the Year
Goal of the Year
Hard Questions
Hero of the Week
Villain of the Week
Seven Network
Saturday Central
Fox Footy Channel
Seven's Match of the Round
Seven Network , 2002
Hosted by Rex Hunt
Nine Network Hosted by James Brayshaw, with Shane Crawford, Nathan Brown, Damian Barrett, Billy Brownless and Dr. Peter Larkins
Network Ten , 2002
Seven Network , 1995–2002
Hosted by Bruce McAvaney (1990s) and Tim Lane, with Mike Sheahan, Malcolm Blight, Leigh Matthews, David Parkin, Terry Wallace, Gary Ayres, Robert Walls and Caroline Wilson
Seven Network , 2014–2019
Hosted by Luke Darcy with Tim Watson , Wayne Carey and Sam McClure .
White Line Fever
Fox Footy Channel
The Winners
ABC , 1978–1987 Hosted by Drew Morphett
The Winners (Fox Show)
Fox Footy Channel , 2002–2006 Hosted by Clinton Grybas
NITV , 2020–present
Hosted by Tony Armstrong , Bianca Hunt (2020) and Megan Waters (2021-present), with rotating panellists, former AFL players Darryl White , Andrew Krakouer and Gilbert McAdam .
Much like its predecessor, The Marngrook Footy Show, it focuses on indigenous players and issues.
See also
References
External links
Clubs
Seasons Grand finals Venues Other awards Major recurring events Second-tier and junior competitions
Related articles Known as the Victorian Football League from 1897–1989; no grand finals were held in 1897 and 1924