AFLW Player Courtney Hodder (2020-)

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Hope we can keep her?
Being a W.A. girl.

Signed her on a two year deal apparently, so she should be sticking around for another one at least.

 
AFLW Team of the Week, round three

FORWARDS
Sophie Conway (Brisbane), Courtney Hodder (Brisbane), Kate Hore (Melbourne), Keeley Skepper (Carlton), Aine Tighe (Fremantle)

The running and firepower of Conway (17 and three goals) could not be stopped, while teammate Hodder (three goals, six tackles) added her own goal of the year contender.
 
'It's not Mark of the Week?': Lions coach still stunned by Hodder grab

ALMOST a week after it happened, Craig Starcevich was still in disbelief at the courage shown by Courtney Hodder against Gold Coast, describing her mark as one of the great moments in AFLW's short history.

Brisbane's coach also half-jokingly suggested he would demand an explanation from AFL House after Hodder was beaten for the fan-voted Mark of the Week by Adelaide's Eloise Jones.

With the game inside the final 60 seconds against the Suns, Hodder hurled herself towards oncoming teammate Dakota Davidson and opponent Bess Keaney, leaving her feet to courageously grab a chest mark with eyes only for the ball.

Starcevich likened it to Jonathan Brown's Mark of the Year in 2002.

"That's almost the highlight of AFLW over eight years and it's not Mark of the Week?" Starcevich said on Friday morning.

"I know it's a fan vote, but at some point we have to acknowledge something that was exceptional in our competition, because it drags your audience in as well.

"If you were lucky to be at the MCG 20 years ago to see 'Browny' take his, I had a similar reaction on Saturday.

"There's been a couple of moments over eight years that I've jumped out of my seat in the coaches' box, and most of them involved Courtney Hodder.

"The courage involved to take one of those is phenomenal."

Brisbane's players took to social media on Thursday night to also voice their bemusement that the small forward had missed out on the gong.
 
Hodder Grabs MOTY Nomination

Courtney Hodder's spectacular back-with-the-flight mark against Gold Coast is firmly in the running for Toyota Mark of the Year, having been named one of three finalists.

Hodder's weekly nomination was beaten out by Eloise Jones for the round seven winner, much to the bemusement of coach Craig Starcevich.
 
Heart of a Lion: The art of tackling, dance and being a 'nana'

COURTNEY Hodder is best known for a goal, and a mark.

A Grand Final goal that was replayed on a loop after Brisbane's maiden AFLW premiership in 2021, and a QClash mark that harkened back to the days of the club's men's early-2000s threepeat.

She's known for big, flashy moments. But Courtney Hodder is much more than those acts of pure skill and courage.

Hodder is a friend, a standard-setter and a game changer.

Courtney the friend

"She's just one of my best mates," teenage Lion Charlie Mullins told AFL.com.au.

"She just has so much care for her family and friends, and just knows how to make everyone laugh. Just a good person to be around."

For Mullins, who's not a big talker, it was Hodder who made her feel comfortable around the club, providing her the best chance to thrive on the field. And it wasn't by accident.

"Charlie's not a person of many words," Hodder said.

"I always say, once you talk it's so much better. When I started, I don't think I spoke for half the year with the Lions. Then we did like a little party trick thing, and I can somehow pop my shoulder blades out and so once I did that I was like 'oh my goodness, these girls are laughing at me. OK I'm in, I'm so cool now'."

Hodder's journey of finding her own level of comfort within the playing group, still reserved but able to bust out a party trick or joke when needed, has helped the younger brigade of Lions coming through.

"My advice to all the young ones is just to come in and talk, you know. We're not going to bite; we love to see the confidence and the growth in them. If they're too quiet, we're not going to give them the ball," Hodder laughed.

The small forward holds rare air at the club, known for her affable personality, but also holding great respect among the playing group.

That respect has been earned not only for her stunning on-field feats, but for the person she is off the track.

"There's this level of respect that the group has for her, which probably goes unspoken even among the girls," Brisbane forwards coach Phil Lovett said of Hodder.

"You know, in team meetings she doesn't say a whole lot, but when she does it holds a lot of weight. And I think the same thing happens pre-game, she can be sort of quiet and not shy but reserved, but every now and again … she pops out and everybody gets a good laugh out of it and maybe puts people at ease.

"Because she has that respect in the group, almost anything she does gets a laugh or gets a reaction."

One of those pre-game things to set her teammates at ease is dancing in the rooms. Currently known among the group for her love for a particular Drake song, every time it's played Hodder is able to get them up and about.

"She's really good at dancing," Mullins said earnestly.

Hodder admits that she is a very relaxed person, never overly nervous before games, just waiting for that first siren to get going.

"Before games I take a nap, or I watch Netflix on the bus. I'm such a nana," Hodder said.

"I let the work be done when I'm out on the field. I don't worry too much while I'm off the field, having a little dance and a muck around, that's definitely my style."

Courtney the standard setter

According to Lovett, Hodder is the epitome of actions speaking louder than words. She lets her footy, and her personality, do the talking.

"Both on the training track and on the field, she doesn't need a lot of instruction, she doesn't need a lot of review," Lovett said.

"When you see someone like Courtney performing, you're almost forced to do it too, to try and stay up at that level. So, you buy into not just our gameplan, but what your teammates are doing."

Playing in such a way that teammates are inspired to come up to your level is one thing, but during the week Hodder is constantly working to ensure her fellow Lions have the toolkit to achieve that standard.

"We have a 'Court' tackle school. Every session I run a little tackling class," Hodder said.

"It's nice to be acknowledged in the sense that my tackling is really inspiring my teammates, and although I haven't kicked as many goals this year, I've definitely built my game on pressure."

Taking Mullins under her wing has also meant impromptu one-on-one skill sessions to help advance the teen's footy development.

"We're always doing our craft together, and she's giving me tips and tricks on things, she really helps my game," Mullins said.

"I want to play like her."

Courtney the game changer

That tackling craft is not only Hodder's signature, but with her addition to the side in 2021, it became Brisbane's brand.

Having laid a record 118 tackles inside 50 – 10 more than the second-placed Kate Hore, who has played 21 more games – Hodder came in, went about her business, and the rest of the side followed.

"Before and after she was here, there's been a massive change," Lovett said.

"That's not just adding her numbers, it's almost like she was the first domino to fall and once everyone started seeing what she does, they were forced to follow her. She changed how we play, and she's been that consistent presence down there ever since."

The Lions occupy three of the top four highest average tackle inside 50 counts with their last three seasons, including a new record average of 17 tackles inside 50 this year.

Hodder herself has contributed 3.3 each week in the attacking arc, part of her 7.5 tackles per game.

"It's not that she has no care when she's tackling. She sees the ball, she sees an opposition jumper and then she's in there … her tackling technique is almost flawless," Lovett said.

"When you've got such a sound technique like that, you're going into any situation, against a player who is big, tall or otherwise, and she just knows she can go in and tackle effectively."

Courtney the courageous

And that mark.

The mark taken soaring back with the flight of the ball into the path of teammate Dakota Davidson's lead.

"I just thought I had the full pocket to myself," Hodder said frankly of the stunner in the dying moments against Gold Coast that caught the footy world's attention.

"To be honest, I didn't think much of it. I came home to my parents and I'm like, 'everyone's talking about this mark, I don't even think it's that good'," she said.

"Then I watched it back and I'm like 'OK, maybe it was alright'. It's definitely blown up bigger than what I thought it would."

For Mullins, it was about checking on Hodder once she'd hit the deck to see if she was alright, but for Lovett, who knew the game was in the bag with 40 seconds left on the clock, it was a different feeling.

"Stupid initially, then second that's not your job, then third, yeah, holy hell," Lovett said.

"That was for all intents and purposes (Davidson's) mark … then we all just saw her out of the corner of our eye, and it was just like 'oh my god, what are you doing?' But the more you look at it, the more ridiculous it gets actually."

But putting her body on the line late, when the game was won, is emblematic of Courtney Hodder the player and the person.

"That goes to Courtney's character, doing what feels right to do, playing the game to the last minute," Lovett said.
 
Conway: She'll Do Everything She Can to Get Herself Right

Dynamic small forward Courtney Hodder re-iterated Conway's comments.

"It helps massively having a bigger body and bigger voice too," Hodder said.

"If she's not marking it, which she has been this year, it's definitely happy days for us small forwards and we can get to work.

"Fingers crossed, but if she's not there we've got other players that can come in, with confidence, that they will do great too."

Davidson has missed just one game this season, coincidentally the round four match against the Kangaroos after she copped a one-game suspension for a dangerous tackle.

On that blustery afternoon in Launceston, the Lions overcame a three-goal half-time deficit to win by two points against Darren Crocker's previously unbeaten team.

And just like Saturday night against the Cats, it was Shannon Campbell who proved hero with a goal late in the fourth quarter.
 

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Gravity-defying Lion, sharpshooting Tiger take home MOTY and GOTY

COURTNEY Hodder's stunning round seven mark has taken out the 2023 Toyota Mark of the Year award, while Caitlin Greiser's physics-defying round 10 goal has been awarded the Rebel Goal of the Year.

Hodder, whose screamer didn't initially win the round's fan vote, has become the first player in AFLW history to complete the set, after winning the best goal in 2021.

Late in that round seven game against cross-town rival Gold Coast, Hodder sprinted back toward the pocket, thinking she had clear space to gather the footy and run in to an easy goal, but instead had to leap over teammate Dakota Davidson and opponent Bess Keaney.

Since the feat, it has been compared to efforts from Jonathan Brown back in Brisbane's successful early-2000s era.

To snag the victory, Hodder beat out last season's winner in Geelong's Chloe Scheer, and young Bulldog Rylie Wilcox.
 

Most courageous leads Lions' tackling clinic​

Courtney Hodder might be better known by fans for her flashy, goal-kicking brilliance, but her peers know a ferocious competitor when they see one.

Hodder was voted most courageous by the AFLW playing cohort in 2023, and showed why with a staggering 18 tackles in the biggest game of the season.

Courtney Hodder of the Lions is pictured holding the 2023 AFLW Premiership cup with her Mum

Courtney Hodder (left) was voted most courageous by her AFLW peers. (AFL Photos via Getty Images: Dylan Burns)
She wasn't the only Lion to bring the tackling pressure, with captain and best on ground Bre Koenen laying 11 of her own, to go with former AFLW best and fairest Ally Anderson's 12 and Bella Dawes' 11.

At the conclusion of the game, Brisbane out-tackled North Melbourne 110-76, one of the few team stats they won.


 
From the footy field to fashion week, Hodder expresses her culture

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COURTNEY Hodder is no stranger to expressing her Indigenous culture through art, but the Brisbane forward took it to a new level at Australian Fashion Week.

The proud Noongar and Yamatji woman, who designed the Lions’ AFLW Indigenous Round guernsey in season seven, attended the David Jones Indigenous Fashion Projects show last week, where up-and-coming First Nations designers told stories of their culture and family in an unconventional medium - through fashion.

Though not a "fashion girlie", Hodder was inspired by the designers' ability to tell a story through their designs, and came away with the event with a newfound appreciation for fashion.

"I consider myself a pretty simple person but going to something like this and seeing Indigenous designers that I'd never heard of, it opened my eyes to what fashion can be and also the talent that's out there," Hodder told AFL.com.au.

"I felt so proud, they all had a story and were so bright and beautiful.

"It was definitely a big eye-opener. It was really amazing to go and get to see what Indigenous fashion is all about."

Getting dressed up for fashion week is a far cry from a footy guernsey, and Hodder was racing the clock to prepare, even putting together her own outfit on the morning of the event.

"I was at the shops, running around like a headless chook, I had training at 4pm, I hadn't booked make-up or nails," she laughed.

"I just went to Westfield when I got off the plane, quickly got ready, it was such a rush but it was worth it.

"I wouldn't say I'm a fashion girlie, but it feels good to dress up. The outfit I wore definitely isn't something I'd wear normally, but it got me in touch with that fashionable side.

"Seeing everyone else and what they wore has given me inspiration and self-confidence too to try new things and wear different things."

Hodder is no stranger to challenging herself, taking on the task of designing the AFLW Lions' Indigenous Round guernsey despite never having painted before.

"It just came naturally. I think if you have a story, you just get lost in it and just allow your hands and mind to flow,” she said.

"It was very calming for me, and so enjoyable to do that design."

Fittingly, Hodder was wearing that guernsey when she etched herself into football history in 2023.

Hodder's back-with-the-flight mark, which later won the Toyota Mark of the Year, garnered national attention for its sheer bravery and brilliance.

Launching at the footy, Hodder leapt over teammate Dakota Davidson and opponent Bess Keaney, plucking the ball out of midair and landing into a backwards roll on the turf.

"I saw no one, I had tunnel vision for that ball. I thought I had the whole 50m to myself. I was like 'this is sick, no one on my back'," she recalled.

"I was watching the ball and then I get hit and I was like 'woah what was that?!'.

"I'm actually glad I jumped at it because otherwise I would have been squashed like a sandwich.

'Daks [Davidson] was coming at the ball so hard, she said she was calling for it but I was like 'girl, I did not hear you’'. My eyes were glued on that ball."

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Hodder's mark caught the attention of an audience broader than just AFLW fans, drawing comparisons with AFL legend Jonathan Brown’s famous 2002 Mark of the Year, and was discussed on footy panels across the country.

"I think it was a huge step towards getting a broader audience," Hodder said of her mark's cultural impact.

"I had people messaging, I had Jonathan Brown commenting and reviewing my mark. It was an amazing feeling.

"I didn't think anything of it but it did blow up in the media that it was quite a big mark, and I'd say a bit of a historical mark for female athletes.

"I'm grateful and honoured to be that person and I think it just shows how much our competition is growing and how tough women actually are.

"So to represent my family and culture [wearing her Indigenous guernsey] and to win Mark of the Year was a really special moment."

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Growing up in Perth, Hodder's cultural journey kickstarted when she joined the Lions in 2021.

"My family don't really speak about culture too much," she said.

"Coming to Brisbane, there were lots of questions about what language group I was from, what my totem was. And I had no answers for them and I was quite embarrassed and ashamed that I was 20 and hadn't known any of that.

"It's not my fault because I wasn't taught, but also it wasn't spoken about so I didn't think to ask any questions.

"So before I was drafted I was on a mission to find out who I really am and where my family is from and what totem, stuff like that - it just took for me to ask to know the answers.

"It's been really good, and to see that women now celebrate Indigenous round it's nice for us girls to then express ourselves and make our family proud too."

While she isn't involved in this year's Sir Doug Nicholls Round, Hodder participated in the Long Walk along with fellow Indigenous teammates Ally Anderson and Dakota Davidson.

"It's always a nice walk and then we watch the boys," she said.
 
Hodder the Excitement Machine reaches 50 games

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Brisbane Lions livewire Courtney Hodder is set to play her 50th game in Lions colours when she runs out in Sunday’s Grand Final rematch against North Melbourne.

As a two-time premiership player, goal of the year winner, mark of the year winner, AFLPA 22under 22 team in 2021 and rising star nominee also in 2021, Hodder’s resume is among the best accrued in the AFLW’s short history.

Having not missed a match in her 50-game career, the highlights factory that is Courtney Hodder is also one of the most durable on the Lions list.

After crossing over from Rugby Union’s Super W prior to the 2021 AFLW season, Hodder went from strength to strength quickly, booting Goal of the Year and winning a Premiership in her first season.

With a lengthy highlights reel from her four years at the Lions, one unforgettable moment etched into memory of many Lions fans occurred against the Gold Coast in 2023.

Running back with the flight of the ball in the dying seconds of the Lions 36-point win over the SUNS, Hodder leapt into the air as Dakota Davidson and Elizabeth Keaney came tearing toward her.

Flicking her legs in the air to avoid contact with the oncoming traffic, Hodder took what was in the end deemed Mark of the Year for 2023 despite missing out being selected as Mark of the Week in Round 7.

Reflecting on her career so far, Hodder was immensely proud at her time at the Lions so far.

“Playing 50 games is a massive milestone for me and it’ll be a proud moment running out on the ground on Sunday,” Hodder said.

“To have won two premierships in four seasons of footy is something I’m really proud of and is such a huge achievement because they are so hard to win.

“One of the things I’m most proud of so far in my career is the way I’ve been able to celebrate my culture and the opportunities that have presented themselves to me like designing the indigenous jumper.

“This Club has been so amazing to be part of both on and off the field and I can’t wait to see what we can do going forward.”

Courtney Hodder will play her 50th AFLW game on Sunday against the North Melbourne at Brighton Homes Arena in a Grand Final rematch.
 
 

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AFLW Player Courtney Hodder (2020-)

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