Adelaide Thunderbirds celebrate beating Melbourne Vixens in the Super Netball grand final to claim their record-breaking third premiership at John Cain Arena.
Thunderbirds 61-40 Vixens at sold-out John Cain Arena Victory caps dominant season as first club to claim three premierships Adelaide have claimed a record third Super Netball premiership, steamrolling the Melbourne Vixens in a 61-40 grand final triumph.
Suffering just one loss in a fairytale season, the Thunderbirds shattered the Vixens’ title defence to cement their status as the competition’s most successful team in front of 10,040 fans at John Cain Arena on Saturday night.
Adelaide are the first team to win three titles since the league’s inaugural 2017 season, ahead of two-time premiers Vixens, NSW Swifts and Sunshine Coast Lightning.
This year’s minor premiers were simply a class above the Vixens and fired off 21 goals to eight in a second-quarter blitz en route to victory.
The Thunderbirds won by the largest ever grand final margin, beating the 17-goal benchmark set by the Lightning (2017) and the Swifts (2019).
Adelaide Thunderbirds celebrate with the trophy after winning the Super Netball grand final against Melbourne Vixens.
With Thunderbirds captain and compatriot Shamera Sterling-Humphrey, Wilson nullified the Vixens’ attack of Diamonds mainstays Kiera Austin (15 goals from 20 attempts) and Sophie Garbin (16/18).
South African shooter Elmere van der Berg held up the other end for the Thunderbirds, scoring 51 goals from 52 attempts in her maiden grand final appearance after joining the league this season.
Commonwealth Games-bound Georgie Horjus was also outstanding in the midcourt, leading the game with 27 feeds and 20 centre pass receives, while also scoring from all six attempts.
Adelaide win their first grand final since going back-to-back in 2023 and 2024 – all three with coach Tania Obst at the helm.
The Vixens fell short in their bid to claim two straight titles for the first time in club history, having now lost two of their past three consecutive grand final appearances.
It was a case of deja vu for the Vixens, who also lost the 2024 grand final to the Thunderbirds.
Elmere van der Berg scored 51 goals for the Thunderbirds during the Super Netball grand final against the Vixens.
Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP Adelaide threatened to break away early when star New Zealand centre Kate Heffernan intercepted a pass from Vixens midcourter Kate Eddy to help build a hard-earned two-point lead in an evenly matched opening stanza.
The Vixens kept their cool to keep their nose ahead at the first break, leading 12-11 thanks to a two-point super shot from Austin. skip past newsletter promotion after newsletter promotion But a poor ball from Austin landed in the hands of star Thunderbirds defender Wilson and opened the door for a five-goal blitz to start the second quarter.
Vixens coach Di Honey turned to her bench to bring Emily Mannix on as goalkeeper for Rudi Ellis, but the seasoned campaigner couldn’t nullify van der Berg and Adelaide roared to a 32-20 lead.
In that second quarter alone, the Vixens gave away 19 penalties to the Thunderbirds’ eight, and converted just four goals from centre pass.
Adelaide kept their foot on the pedal after halftime, with a desperate Wilson putting her body on the line in a three-player collision with Vixens opponents Ellis and Hannah Mundy.
Ellis was crunched as Wilson collected the ball, but the Vixens goalkeeper was able to shake off the soreness.
The Vixens trailed 45-29 at the final break, and the deficit was too much to overcome against the Super Netball juggernauts.
The Vixens may have enjoyed home-court advantage after Netball Australia sold the rights for the title decider, but the Thunderbirds were well-backed by a boisterous travelling contingent.
Saturday night’s crowd was the highest-ever Super Netball audience at John Cain Arena.
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