| Situated in the south
east of Queensland the city
of Brisbane, as well as being the state capital, is the
fastest growing region in Australia.
Brisbane Airport is
conveniently situated just 13km north east of the city centre.
Named in the early 18 hundreds after the famous Governor
of New South Wales Sir Thomas Brisbane,
it grew into a thriving and vibrant city with exciting nightlife,
good accommodation
and a superb choice of restaurants.
With a comfortable sub-tropical climate, Brisbane enjoys
brilliant hot summers and clear mild winters with most days
being mild and very pleasant. The city is built along side
the Brisbane River and the eastern suburbs line the shores
of Moreton Bay.
The
city lies mainly on the low lying plain east of the Great
Dividing Range and it susceptible to severe flooding. Many
creeks also criss-cross the city increasing the risk. When
‘Cyclone Wanda’ hit the city during the weekend 26-27 January
1974 Brisbane was completely flooded.
During the Second World War Brisbane
played a prominent role in the defence of Australia. This
was mainly due to the city’s close proximity to the South
West Pacific Area. Thousands of both Australian and American
servicemen were based here and it became the base for General
Douglas MacArthur who was the chief of the Allied Pacific
forces.
In 1982 Brisbane was the host city
for the Commonwealth Games and in 1988 to the World’s Fair,
Expo 88. The former Expo site is now a lifestyle and entertainment
location. These two events promoted large scale public expenditure
on construction the likes of which had not been seen before
in Queensland. Since this time Brisbane has expanded rapidly
and has become a great cosmopolitan city with migration
both internally and from all continents.
As Queensland's capital, Brisbane,
as well as having a great choice of hotels
and accommodation, has it all. Spend sunny afternoons
drinking creamy cappuccinos and dozing by the river, or
if you’re the energetic type you may want to throw yourself
into any number of adventures like abseil the cliffs at
Kangaroo Point, climb the Story Bridge or participate in
some water sports of which there are many. If it’s shopping
you prefer there is simply no better plac e
in Queensland to indulge in some retail therapy with over
650 stores open seven days a week. Beginning in the Queen
Street Mall - almost a kilometre of shoppers' paradise.
Carry on along to Brisbane’s chic shopping strips and arcades
before heading to Boho precinct known as The Valley, you'll
find the very latest, jewellery and fashions imaginable.
South Bank's Little Stanley Street offers a little urban
sophistication right down by the river. Downtown's weekend
outdoor markets offer a great variation in both fashions
and prices so if you can't find what you're shopping for
in downtown Brisbane you’re not looking properly!
Sports in Brisbane
Brisbane is predominantly a Rugby League city the most supported
team being the Brisbane Broncos who play in the National
Rugby League Premiership. Brisbane developed it’s own rugby
club premiership over a period of 80 seasons starting in
1908 and was second only to Sydney as a top rugby competition.
Although much smaller than Sydney, Brisbane’s interest in
Rugby exceeded all expectations and it’s support based on
per capita was higher than that found in the New South Wales(NSW)
capital. Although there was a rule that club players should
play for clubs within their own state of origin Sydney clubs
still managed to pull local Brisbane talent their way as
they were generally more cash rich and the clubs playing
in the New South Wales Rugby League (NSWRL) was thought
to play the better standard of rugby. This issue though
was really down to ignorance and in 1987 the NSWRL announced
that a Brisbane club would enter a club into their league
along with one from Newcastle. This club was indeed the
Brisbane Broncos and they adopted the colours of maroon,
gold and white.
Many of the players from Queensland
who went to play in Sydney quickly made a move to the Broncos
and these included Gene Miles, Wally Lewis, Colin Scott,
Allan Langar and others. In their first match in the premiership
they were up against the best side from 1987, Manly, at
Lang Park and humiliated them by a margin of 44-10. Several
other wins followed but it was all false hope in the end
as they finished on the edge of the play-offs.
In season 1992/93 there was a dispute
with the Lang Park Trust which resulted in a move to the
QEII Stadium (ANZ Stadium) and they managed a fifth place
finish for the 1993 play offs and would have to do something
never done before to win it from there. Win it they did
though, as in the final they came from behind to defeat
the Bulldogs 26-23.
This win was the first of 5 premiership
title wins in less than 10 years by the Broncos and established
them as one of the greatest teams in the history of the
competition.
Australian Rules Football
On
October 6th 1986 The Brisbane Bears Football Club was formed
when, after a long-drawn-out battle, a licence for a Queensland-based
club in the then Victorian Football League was awarded to
a joint syndicate headed by businessman and actor Paul Cronin,
the inaugural chairman, and the QAFL. Christopher Skase
financed the club via his company Qintex, and was the inaugural
deputy chairman. Former QAFL general manager Ken Murphy
headed the full-time administration, and ex-Hawthorn champion
Peter Knights was the club's first coach. The off-field
football 'team' included Shane O'Sullivan (general manager
- football), Mark Maclure (assistant-coach) and Jim Sewell
(football manager).
Allmost ten years on and the Brisbane
Lions were formed on 4 July, 1996, as the AFL approved a
merger between the Brisbane Bears and the Fitzroy Lions.
The club was officially launched on 1 November 1996 and
joined the national competition in 1997.
It was the first time that a union
of two clubs had taken place in VFL/AFL history. It was
the perfect combination of a club who were becoming an emerging
force, full of youthful enthusiasm and energy, and a club
with a proud history and great tradition.
First, there was the Brisbane Bears,
an exciting newcomer to the national scene who were young
and ambitious, and were just starting to find their feet
in the ‘big time’ after a troubled 10-year infancy split
between the Gold Coast and Brisbane but without the financial
backing to mount a serious challenge.
Then there was Fitzroy, a traditional
club of more than 100 years’ standing. They had fought against
the odds more often than most and always pulled through
but as financial pressures threatened to condem them to
the annals of history forever, they accepted a merger with
the Brisbane Bears in preference to the extinction offered
by being taken over elsewhere.
Individually the Bears and the Lions were not particularly
financially strong and ultimately might both have struggled,
yet together they would grow to become a formidable force
within the toughest sporting competition in Australia; a
legitimate two-city team, with vibrant supporter bases in
Brisbane and Melbourne that would rejoice in unison when
the king of the jungle roared longest and loudest at the
MCG on that one day in September.
So,
the Brisbane Lions officially joined the AFL competition
in 1997. They played in the finals in their first year with
their new identity, had uphill battles on and off the field
in ’98, and finishing with the wooden spoon, but, with an
upturn in fortunes since 1999 have been very much to the
forefront of the competition, finishing 4th in ’99 and 5th
in 2000 before claiming an historic premiership in 2001.
It represented the first time the AFL premiership cup had
traveled north of the Murray, and was a major breakthrough
for the code in Queensland. The code and the club had squeezed
perhaps 20 years’ promotion and development into one afternoon
on 29 September, 2001, as the Lions beat defending premiers
Essendon 15.18 (108) to 12.10 (82).
Suddenly, Leigh Matthews, coach of the Lions, and Michael
Voss, the premiership captain, were household names. So
too were the other 21 teammates who were overnight celebrities
after a campaign which drew record focus onto AFL football
in Queensland. It was the making of the code in Queensland,
and a wonderful launching pad for the future.
Now AFL is accepted as a genuine code
in south-east Queensland, with crowds averaging more than
30,000 at the club’s Brisbane Cricket Ground (Gabba) home
and a club membership of over 25,000 across the two states
of Queensland and Victoria.
Cricket, Soccer and Australian rules football all have Brisbane
based national teams.
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for tourist information.
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