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AAP
Joanna Guelas

'How does Sydney do it?': Swans flex with AFLW opener

Chloe Molloy (5) is proud of what the Swans have achieved on and off the field in two AFLW seasons. (Dave Hunt/AAP PHOTOS)

Hosting the season opener after only two campaigns in the AFLW is a massive flex on rivals, Sydney captain Chloe Molloy says.

On the back of a historic season, the Swans will kickstart the AFLW season by hosting inaugural side Collingwood at North Sydney Oval on Friday evening.

It is the first time the women's competition will begin outside Victoria, with Daisy Pearce's West Coast hosting Richmond on the same night in back-to-back fixtures.

Expansion side Sydney were handed the season opener after attracting the highest crowds in their second-ever campaign.

Hosting games at North Sydney Oval and inner-west venue Henson Park, the Swans averaged crowds of 4637 fans - nearly double the league's average of 2606.

With expansion to 14 rounds dependent on achieving an average attendance of 6000 fans and average broadcast viewers of 100,000, the Swans are expected to play a crucial role in the league's growth.

There were 234,525 fans across 90 regular-season AFLW games last season while the regular-season average viewership was 54,969, according to the AFL's annual report.

The 18-team competition is due to expand to 12 regular-season rounds by 2025, after growing from 10 to 11 plus finals this year.

"We've earned it as a club," Molloy said on Wednesday.

"We were able to have a really historical season last year but then I think it goes beyond the on-field success that we had.

"To have the highest home crowd attendance in our second season is a big flex. We earned that and I'm stoked.

"I don't think you would have ever thought an expansion side in their third season would be given the opening round.

"I've had other teammates and other captains ask, 'How does Sydney do it?'"

Sydney underwent an incredible transformation in their second season, reaching finals after going winless in their debut campaign.

Their fairytale season came to an end after competition heavyweights Adelaide handed them a 67-point semi-final thrashing.

"We keep pushing that bar higher and then you do become a victim of your own high standards," Molloy said on Wednesday.

"There genuinely is so much depth in this side, and it is a side full of players that have been overlooked and always had to continually prove that they were worthy enough.

"That's what this club drives, is continuing pushing that bar.

"Three-quarters of our list have under 20 games of experience in the AFLW.

"To have games now under our belts, we're seeing footballers come into themselves and figure themselves out."

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