“Take no prisoners" is the state-against-state tradition the players have vowed to continue in Saturday night's NAB AFL Women's State of Origin game at Etihad Stadium.

Club friendships will be temporarily put aside as Victoria attempts to establish its dominance and the Allies strive to upset the Big V.

This includes Fremantle’s five representatives with Allies Dana Hooker, Ebony Antonio, Kirby Bentley and Hayley Miller going up against their Freo captain Kara Donnellan, who will represent Victoria.

Fremantle senior coach Michelle Cowan will also be on hand as an assistant to Allies head coach Bec Goddard.

Victorian captain and coach Daisy Pearce and Debbie Lee and their Allies counterparts Chelsea Randall and Goddard were at Etihad Stadium on Thursday morning to discuss the upcoming match.

"Once you're out there I don't think [club mateships] come into it. It's just, 'Try and win the contest, try and win the ball'," Victorian captain Daisy Pearce said. 

"But we're on the eve of our [VFL] finals, so hopefully I don't end up in the firing line of any of my teammates and vice-versa. You would hate for anyone to get injured, but it's not something you can afford to think about when you run out for a contest like this.

"I'm playing VFLW [for the Darebin Falcons] with Eb Marinoff who won the [NAB AFLW] Rising Star award and won the premiership with the Crows. She's a gun to play with and now we're against her. There are good match-ups everywhere you look.

"The Allies have a strong forward line with Katie Brennan, Sabrina Frederick-Traub and Tayla Harris, but if the midfield is good enough, we shouldn't have to worry about it."

In the lead up to the clash, Channel 7’s Ryan Daniels caught up with Hooker, whose appearance in the Origin clash caps off an incredible 12 months.

Since giving birth to her daughter, Alice, Hooker made her football return within five weeks for the Coastal Titans, was drafted to Fremantle, won Freo’s inaugural Fairest and Best Award and was named in the initial AFLW All Australian squad.

“I went into labour and she came a week earlier than I expected and I thought, you beauty I’ve brought myself an extra week to prepare myself for the draft,” said Hooker on Thursday’s edition of Channel 7 news. 

“I was in the gym every day and I’d time it when Alice was asleep. When someone could come and help out I was training in between looking after her. I played my first game back and built from there.

“I felt quite refreshed after having a baby funnily enough and I was good to go.”