Touchdown Photography

Touchdown Photography I volunteer my time doing sports photography for Gridiron Queensland.
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🏈 Female Gridiron Photographer
❤️Ambassador for Women in Sport
🇦🇺 From Aussie sidelines to NFL (US & London)
📸 Published | Super Bowl Winner
🔥 2023 Most Deserving NFL Fan
📩 Brand collabs welcome Feel free to share my posts, tag and save my photos but please keep the watermark on them and if you can give me a shoutout, that would be awesome!!

This week's LEGEND OF THE GAME🔥🏈🏈🏈Nicholas Antipas🏈🏈🏈Here is his story...💯"In the early 1980s, a friend mentioned he was...
29/03/2026

This week's LEGEND OF THE GAME🔥
🏈🏈🏈Nicholas Antipas🏈🏈🏈
Here is his story...💯

"In the early 1980s, a friend mentioned he was playing American football in Frankston and asked if I would like to join.
I was the son of a professional soccer player, my father, Fotios Antipas. That conversation marked the beginning of a 15-year playing career. We originally started with the Frankston team, which later split into two clubs: the Razorbacks and the Brighton Outlaws. I joined the Outlaws as a field goal and punt kicker, contributing to their first two bowl victories.
In 1985, I was selected to represent the All-Stars against New South Wales at VFL Park in Waverley, Victoria.
In that game, I scored the first points via a field goal, with George Makris as the holder. We went on to win the match, which served as the curtain-raiser to the BYU vs Wyoming college game. During that game, the special teams coach from BYU approached me about the possibility of playing in the United States. It was a great honour, and I was seriously tempted.
However, I was married with two young children and had a business that was performing well, which made the decision difficult.
Following this, I transferred to the Melbourne Hornets, which later became the Kew Colts. The Colts went on to win two premierships under Eric Mangini, who later became a defensive coach under Bill Belichick and eventually the head coach of the New York Jets. It’s remarkable to think that what began as a backyard-level team connected to the highest levels of the NFL.
During my playing career, I was selected eight times for the All-Star team. I held the record for the longest field goal at 57 yards and recorded a punt of 82 yards. I maintained an 89% field goal success rate and a 48-yard punt average.
Now, at 64 years of age, I sometimes reflect on the opportunities I had to go to the United States and wonder what might have been. However, I have no regrets. The friendships I built and the camaraderie we shared are what I value most.
I hope all players from that era remember that they were true pioneers of the game we love.
In the early years, we even played without pads."
Nicholas Antipas

Gridiron Victoria NFL American Football Australia Nicholas Antipas


Gridiron Down Under

This week's Legend in the WOMEN IN SPORT SPOTLIGHT SERIES 🔥❣️🏈JESS DAVY💯Here's her amazing story..."My sporting journey ...
22/03/2026

This week's Legend in the WOMEN IN SPORT SPOTLIGHT SERIES 🔥❣️🏈
JESS DAVY💯
Here's her amazing story...

"My sporting journey didn’t begin with AFL — it began on the soccer field. But when I made the switch in 2015 to Australian Rules Football, everything changed.
In my very first season at the Moreton Bay Lions, we claimed a premiership. My second year playing and I was honoured to win the League Best & Fairest award.
Fast forward a few years.

In 2019, I welcomed my first son into the world, followed quickly by my second in 2020. Motherhood shifted everything — but it didn’t end my football journey. I returned to AFL just three months postpartum, determined to prove that women can be both athletes and mums.
In 2022 we were back to a Grand final appearance where we lost by 2 points.
Another Grand final appearance in 2023, I had the privilege of captaining Moreton Bay to its second premiership. Leading the group through that season was incredibly special — and to again win the League Best & Fairest made it even more meaningful.Entering my 30s, I decided to challenge myself at the next level. In 2024, I travelled to join the Aspley Hornets in the QAFLW competition. It was a huge step, but one I embraced fully. That season, I was selected in the Queensland State Team, representing the state against Tasmania — an experience I’ll never forget.
In 2025, when Moreton Bay was promoted into the QAFLW, I returned home to captain the club’s first-ever state league women’s side. It was a year full of learning curves, leading a young and talented group into a higher level of competition. I was fortunate to once again earn selection in the Queensland representative team and travel to Tasmania to compete.
To cap off 2025, I was honoured to receive Goal of the Year and be named Vice Captain in the QAFLW Team of the Year — recognition that reflected not just individual moments, but the collective growth of our group.Now in 2026, I step into a new chapter as Player/Co-Coach of the Moreton Bay Lions.
Eleven years in the game.
Two premierships as a player.
Three League Division 1 Best & Fairest awards.
State representative honours.
Goal of the Year.
Team of the Year (Vice Captain).
Captaincy.
Motherhood.
And now leadership from both on and off the field.
But beyond the medals and milestones, football has given me something even greater — lifelong friendships. Teammates who have become family. People who have supported me through pregnancies, injuries, wins, losses and everything in between.
Even more special, my two boys have quite literally grown up on the sidelines of the football field. From babies in the pram at training to cheering from the boundary line on game day — footy has always been part of their world. Now they’re pulling on their own boots and participating in Auskick, beginning their own journey. That full-circle moment means more than any medal ever could.

My ideal advice to anyone❤️"

Moreton Bay Lions
AFL Queensland
AFL
AFL Women's

19/03/2026

Nominate an amazing woman in sport so I can share her story..
(Or nominate yourself)
🏈

Moreton Bay Lions 🦁 v Broadbeach Cats 🐾A great afternoon capturing the Women’s game at Moreton Bay, with both teams brin...
18/03/2026

Moreton Bay Lions 🦁 v Broadbeach Cats 🐾

A great afternoon capturing the Women’s game at Moreton Bay, with both teams bringing intensity and effort across a unique six-quarter match.

Plenty of strong contests, great ball movement, and moments that highlight exactly why women’s football continues to grow.

Always a privilege to be on the sideline and document the game. 📸

Feel free to tag yourself or teammates.

📍 Moreton Bay
📸 Touchdown Photography


Moreton Bay Lions

Moreton Bay Lions Women's Game Day Pics Coming Soon..🏈🥰  Moreton Bay Lions
14/03/2026

Moreton Bay Lions Women's Game Day Pics Coming Soon..🏈🥰



Moreton Bay Lions

AFLQ Accredited 🔥💯🏈📸Moreton Bay Lions
14/03/2026

AFLQ Accredited 🔥💯🏈📸

Moreton Bay Lions


🔥LEGENDS OF AUSSIE GRIDIRON🔥           "JUSTIN "Star80" Fernley"Back in 1982, a skinny kid with breathing problems was g...
13/03/2026

🔥LEGENDS OF AUSSIE GRIDIRON🔥
"JUSTIN "Star80" Fernley"

Back in 1982, a skinny kid with breathing problems was gifted a gridiron ball by his big brother. That ball was the featured element of many ‘touch’ gridiron games during school lunch breaks for the next couple of years. A passing interest in the game, and an admiration for the spectacle and athleticism of the NFL were the first sparks of a career that would culminate in the induction of Justin Fernley aka ‘Star80’ into the Gridiron Qld ‘Hall of Fame’ in 2017.
Fast forward to 1985 and 19 year old Justin and that big brother (Peter) turned up at a gathering of like-minded people to explore the possibility of developing a gridiron competition in SE Qld. Three teams were formed that day, but Justin and Peter felt the comp would be better served having four teams. So with very little coaching experience and their knowledge of gridiron gleaned from watching NFL games, they decided they could start their own team, and thus the ‘Centurions’ was born.
1986 was a year of decisions for Justin – continue playing Rugby League, the game he had grown up supporting but had only just started playing the year before, and that his father had played before polio ended his career (and was still fanatical about); or devote his time to the developing QGFL competition. As a lean fella with speed and a handy step, the prospect of not getting his head busted up by lazy arm swinging forwards, and Gridiron’s greatly reduced aerobic requirements (that suited a mouth breather with the lung capacity of an 80 year old), made the choice an easy one in the end.
After ‘fumbling and bumbling’ their way through four seasons; with Justin coaching the offensive and defensive backfields, collaborating with Peter on offensive and defensive plays and structures, taking care of team funds and registrations, managing & at times making equipment, looking after game day management, videoing other games, officiating other games, and doing and learning a lot about people management and coaching; these 2 Aussie guys guided the Centurions to their first and only Sunbowl win in 1988. Justin was the MVP of that game and the recipient of many ‘player of the round’ awards over the course of the season.
Justin was also looking after League registrations that year and continued to be very involved with numerous fund raising and promotional activities with the QGFL. After coming close to pulling off a massive upset in the 1990 Sunbowl, the 1991 season brought a shortage of players for the Centurions, and the competition’s best running back and a fixture in the Qld team took a year off playing to officiate and assist with administration of the league.

Justin returned to the gridiron with the Centurions in 1992 and continued his playing & administrative work with the team until it folded following the 1996 season. After what was to be the first ‘fun and responsibility free season’ with the Gold Coast Stingrays in 1997, his working career saw him move to the Bundaberg region, and what he thought would be his retirement from Gridiron at age 31.
After spending the next 13 years dabbling in the local Rugby Union and Rugby League comps, but never really getting the buzz that Gridiron provided; he decided that although he wouldn’t be able to attend team training sessions, a couple more low-key seasons of turning up on a saturday and playing might be doable. So, in 2010 a return to the Stingrays transpired and after dipping his toes back in that season, he found that he still had the ability to compete at a level that he aspired to. The next season saw him at the Sunshine Coast Spartans, playing anywhere in the offensive and defensive backfields, and ultimately being awarded the team MVP for the season.
2013 saw Justin re-unite with his Centurions’ team-mate Phil Crick, who was now coaching at the Bears. It was the end of a tough unplanned 2014 season with the Bruins that Justin’s 48 year old body decided it had had enough, so his third retirement from playing was to be a definite. His work with the Gridiron Qld ‘Ghosts of Gridiron’, that he was instrumental in establishing in 2011, continues to maintain Justin’s contribution to American Football Queensland.


American Football QLD
American Football Australia
Centurions Gridiron
NFL Justin Fernley

10/03/2026

Anyone know when and where the state tackle games will be held?
American Football QLD

LEGENDS OF AUSSIE GRIDIRON 🏈This incredible photo comes from the first Gridiron NSW Grand Final in 1984 between Sydney U...
09/03/2026

LEGENDS OF AUSSIE GRIDIRON 🏈

This incredible photo comes from the first Gridiron NSW Grand Final in 1984 between Sydney University and the Canterbury Cougars.

In the trenches wearing #7 for Sydney Uni is Andrew Ogborne.

These were the early days of American Football in Australia — players building the game from the ground up.

But here’s the question…

Who else can you recognise in this photo?

Tag your teammates, opponents, and anyone who was part of the early days of Aussie Gridiron. Let’s preserve the history of the game together.

Thank you for this incredible photo Andrew Ogborne 🔥🏈📸💯


Gridiron NSW

Brian Taylor - My childhood hero during his Collingwood days back in the 80s🔥When I was about 10 years old, one of my fo...
08/03/2026

Brian Taylor - My childhood hero during his Collingwood days back in the 80s🔥

When I was about 10 years old, one of my football heroes came to speak at my primary school.
I grew up a huge Collingwood supporter. My dad used to take me to games and I’d make big banners with my favourite player’s name on them. That player was Brian Taylor.
So when he came to our school I was beside myself with excitement. I wore all my Collingwood gear and couldn’t wait to meet him and hopefully get a photo.
But the moment never happened. I was the little chubby Italian kid standing there hoping to be noticed, and I went home that day feeling pretty invisible.
It’s funny the things that stick with you from childhood.
Now years later I work around sport and athletes through my photography, and it’s reminded me how much a simple moment — a hello, a photo, a few seconds of kindness can mean to a kid who looks up to you.
Athletes probably meet thousands of people and moments blur together, but for kids those moments can stay with them forever.
So this post isn’t about calling anyone out. It’s just a reminder of how powerful those small interactions can be.
And maybe a little part of the 10-year-old me is still hoping for that photo one day. 🏈📸🖤

Collingwood Football Club
AFL
Triple M Melbourne 105.1

Happy International Women's Day Queens!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️American Football QLD
08/03/2026

Happy International Women's Day Queens!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
American Football QLD

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