Jamboree Heights State School Students Selected for Northern Eagles Squads Ahead of Met West Trials

Students from Jamboree Heights State School have earned selection in Northern Eagles District squads for the 2026 Met West regional trials, with Year 6 student Jackson selected in the Under 12 Boys AFL squad and four girls selected in Northern Eagles Netball squads.



Jackson earned his AFL selection following district trials and will represent the Northern Eagles District at the 10–12 Years Boys AFL Met West regional trial, scheduled for Tuesday 10 March 2026 at Kenmore Bears JAFL — Akuna Oval, Hepworth Street, Kenmore. No regional trial levy applies to students attending in 2026.

The 10–12 Years Girls AFL Met West regional trial was held on Tuesday 3 March 2026 at the same venue.

Four Jamboree Heights State School girls also earned Northern Eagles selection for Met West Netball trials: Jessica and Felicity in the 10–12 Years category, and Edie and Abby in the 10–11 Years category.

About the AFL Met West Trials

Metropolitan West School Sport runs the AFL Met West regional trials across three age groups each year, giving students from affiliated Queensland state and independent schools the opportunity to compete for selection in regional representative squads. The trials cover 10–12 years, 13–14 years and 15–17 years age groups across both girls and boys competitions.

All 2026 AFL Met West trials are held at Kenmore Bears JAFL — Akuna Oval, Hepworth Street, Kenmore. The full 2026 schedule runs as follows: 13–14 Years Girls on Wednesday 4 March, 13–14 Years Boys on Thursday 5 March, 15–17 Years Boys on Tuesday 17 March and 15–17 Years Girls on Thursday 19 March. Students selected from the regional trials progress toward the Queensland Representative School Sport State Championships, with the 10–12 Years State Championships scheduled for 4–7 June 2026 in Cairns, the 13–14 Years championships for 14–17 May 2026 in Townsville and the 15–17 Years championships for 18–21 June 2026 in Brendale.

The 10–12 Years Boys squad will be managed by Ethan Harder from Browns Plains State High School, coached by Matthew Cripps from Faith Lutheran College and trained by Dean Newbery from Park Ridge State High School. The 10–12 Years Girls squad will be managed by Matthew Robins from Camira State School, coached by Emily Dunn from Park Ridge State High School and trained by Tasha Ridley from Jamboree Heights State School — a direct local connection to the Centenary and Jamboree Heights community.

Why This Benefits the Centenary and Jamboree Heights Community

Representative school sport pathways like the AFL Met West trials deliver benefits that extend beyond the individual students selected. They provide local young athletes with structured competition at a higher level than club sport, exposure to quality coaching from experienced school sport officials, and experience of representing their district in a team environment. For families in the Centenary and Jamboree Heights area, these programmes offer a clear and accessible pathway from local school participation through to state-level competition — at no trial levy cost to families in 2026.

The Jamboree Heights State School connection to the 10–12 Years Girls squad through trainer Tasha Ridley also means the community has direct local representation in the management of these programmes, strengthening the link between the suburb’s schools and the broader Met West network.

Students wishing to participate in future Met West school sport trials must be nominated by their school sports coordinator to the relevant district, with nominations then progressing to the regional level. Further information on the AFL Met West programme and all 2026 trial dates is available here.



Published 6-March-2026.

Life on the River Shapes Riverhills Rowing Community

On the banks of the Brisbane River in Riverhills, a rowing shed stands as a familiar sight for locals who have watched generations of young people arrive before sunrise, carrying oars, laughing nervously and learning how to balance on the water for the first time.



Centenary Rowing Club is one of Queensland’s largest rowing clubs and is run entirely by volunteers. It supports school students, adults and families from across Brisbane’s western suburbs, relying on community effort rather than paid staff to keep programs running.

The club was formed in 2001 as part of the Centenary Canoe and Rowing Club, operating with little more than borrowed spaces and a single rowing boat stored under plastic. In those early years, rowing was a small part of a club better known for canoe building and canoe polo. Meetings were held in libraries and living rooms, and rowing outings were mostly social.

A turning point on the river

That began to change in 2003, when a youth rowing program was introduced to give local students a pathway into the sport. Coaches and volunteers rebuilt old, unused boats so more teenagers could train, often working late into the evening to prepare equipment for the next session.

By 2006, rowing had grown enough to become its own club, allowing Centenary Rowing Club to focus on coaching, competition and junior development while maintaining close ties with the canoe club. The impact was soon visible. Within a few years, rowers trained at Riverhills were competing at the state and national levels, earning medals and representing their schools with confidence.

Training became a regular part of life at the shed, with sessions before and after school, on weekdays and weekends. For many families, rowing became more than a sport. It became routine, friendship and responsibility, shaped by volunteers who showed up week after week. 

When the river took over

In January 2011, the Brisbane River rose high enough to overwhelm the Riverhills facilities. Floodwater filled the shed with mud and silt, damaged boats and destroyed the pontoon and surrounding grounds. Access to the river was lost, and the club’s future was uncertain.

What followed was a steady, physical effort to recover. Volunteers, supporters and people with no direct connection to the club arrived with machinery, tools and time. Slowly, the mud was cleared, the grounds reshaped and the boats returned to the shed. Rowing resumed cautiously once water quality and access allowed.

More than a decade later, flooding returned in March 2022, bringing familiar damage and another clean-up.

Even then, the club managed to send its largest-ever team to the Australian National Rowing Championships just weeks later, adapting to a last-minute venue change caused by flooding elsewhere.

Grants have supported repairs to the shed and pontoon, enabling the club to continue operating safely.

Powered by volunteers

Centenary Rowing Club remains entirely volunteer-run. Coaches, parents, past members and supporters fill roles across training, regattas and daily maintenance. New volunteers are trained and mentored, including those with no previous rowing or coaching experience, and all volunteers hold a Blue Card.

Rowing programs begin with a Learn to Row course, followed by term-based training for school-aged rowers and flexible Masters programs for adults. Competition requirements are managed through Rowing Queensland.

For a club shaped by the river’s highs and lows, progress at Centenary Rowing Club has never been about speed. It has been about showing up, helping out, and taking the next stroke together.



Published 9-Jan-2026