Cub Sport
Cub Sport is an Australian alt-pop band formed in Brisbane, Queensland, in 2010, initially under the name Tim Nelson & the Cub Scouts.[1] The current lineup consists of Tim Nelson on lead vocals and guitar, Sam Netterfield on keyboards and vocals, Zoe Davis on guitar, bass, and vocals, and Dan Puusaari on drums.[2][3] The band rebranded to Cub Sport in 2016 following a name dispute and the public coming out of Nelson and Netterfield—childhood friends and now spouses—as a same-sex couple, an event that profoundly shaped their songwriting and thematic focus on personal vulnerability, love, and queer identity.[4][1] Operating independently and self-managed, Cub Sport has evolved from indie pop roots to a synth-driven alt-pop sound, emphasizing emotional introspection in their lyrics.[5] Cub Sport's discography includes albums such as Bats (2017), the self-titled Cub Sport (2019), Like Nirvana (2020, which peaked at number two on the ARIA Albums Chart), and Jesus at the Gay Bar (2023, their first number-one album on the ARIA Chart).[5][6] Their music has garnered critical attention for its raw emotional depth, with Jesus at the Gay Bar shortlisted for Album of the Year at the 2024 Queensland Music Awards.[7] The band's live performances and thematic authenticity have built a dedicated following, particularly within queer communities, while achieving sustained chart presence in Australia.[2]History
Formation and early years (2010–2013)
Cub Sport originated in Brisbane, Australia, when Tim Nelson assembled the group in early 2010 under the name Tim Nelson & the Cub Scouts to perform his solo compositions.[8] Founding members included Nelson on lead vocals and keyboards, alongside Zoe Davis on keyboards, bass, and guitar, with additional collaborators joining for initial sessions.[1] The band soon shortened its name to Cub Scouts and released a self-titled EP that year, establishing a presence in Brisbane's indie music community through grassroots efforts.[9] In 2011, the group issued their debut single "Evie," which gained airplay on Australian national broadcaster triple j, marking an early step toward broader recognition without major label backing.[8] This was followed by the 2012 single "Do You Hear," another triple j high-rotation track that highlighted their evolving indie pop sound rooted in Nelson's songwriting.[9] Later that October, they released the six-track EP Told You So, featuring the title track that became a college radio staple internationally and underscored their unsigned, DIY trajectory in local venues and the Brisbane scene.[8] By mid-2013, legal pressure from Scouts Australia compelled the band to rebrand as Cub Sport after two years using the Cub Scouts moniker, a change that preserved their momentum amid ongoing independent performances and fan cultivation in Queensland's indie circuit.[10] This period solidified the core lineup's chemistry, with Nelson, Davis, and emerging contributors like drummer Dan Puusaari and keyboardist Sam Netterfield focusing on organic growth through regional gigs rather than commercial deals.[11]Rise with vice and experimentation (2014–2018)
In 2014, Cub Sport, having rebranded from Cub Scouts following a legal dispute with Scouts Australia, began incorporating more electronic and pop influences into their indie rock foundations, signaling a shift toward broader sonic experimentation.[12] This evolution culminated in the release of their debut studio album, This Is Our Vice, on 4 March 2016 via Nettwerk Records.[13] The album explored themes of self-doubt and emotional turmoil through tracks like "Come On Mess Me Up" and "Vice," achieving moderate chart success in Australia and earning airplay on national stations such as Triple J.[14] Its production marked the band's initial foray into polished, synth-driven arrangements, departing from their earlier rawer sound while stabilizing their lineup around core members Tim Nelson, Sam Netterfield, Zoe Davis, and Dan Puusaari. The period following This Is Our Vice saw Cub Sport gain national traction through extensive touring, including support slots for acts like Ball Park Music and The 1975's Australian sideshows, which exposed them to larger audiences and facilitated a transition from local Brisbane scenes to broader recognition.[15] Internationally, the album received early attention via U.S. college radio play for singles like "Told You So," hinting at potential overseas appeal amid their growing experimentation with atmospheric production.[1] Lyrically, subtle queer undertones emerged, reflecting frontman Tim Nelson's internal struggles with identity, though explicit personal disclosures, including his relationship with bandmate Netterfield, would solidify post-release in 2016.[16] Cub Sport's sophomore album, Bats, released on 22 September 2017, deepened these explorations of personal and emotional struggles, recorded primarily at Nelson's home studio in Brisbane.[17] Featuring singles such as "O Lord" and "Hawaiian Party," the record adopted a brooding, introspective tone with intensified electronic elements and falsetto-driven vocals, peaking at number 67 on the ARIA Albums Chart.[18] It built on This Is Our Vice's foundation by emphasizing vulnerability and relational tension, aligning with the band's evolving queer identity narratives without overt political framing. In support, they embarked on a 2018 national headline tour across six Australian cities, including all-ages shows, further cementing their domestic fanbase while experimenting with live arrangements that previewed future genre fluidity.[19]Self-titled era and pandemic adaptations (2019–2021)
Cub Sport released their third studio album, a self-titled effort, on January 18, 2019, via their independent imprint Cub Sport Records.[20] The record featured introspective tracks such as "Unwinding Myself," "Sometimes," and "Limousine," reflecting the band's personal experiences with identity and relationships following frontman Tim Nelson's public acknowledgment of his romance with bassist Sam Puusaari.[21] This era marked a shift toward greater vulnerability in their output, with the album's themes centered on post-coming-out liberation rather than the act itself.[21] In early 2020, amid preparations for their fourth album Like Nirvana, Nelson publicly identified as gender free via social media, sharing the lead single "Confessions" on March 3 and elaborating on his fluid sense of self beyond binary norms.[22] This disclosure, tied to explorations of mental health and relational dynamics in tracks like the title song, resonated with fans through raw online narratives that built community around shared struggles.[23] The band transitioned fully to self-managed releases under Cub Sport Records distributed by Believe, enabling direct fan engagement via platforms like Instagram and YouTube.[24] The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted Like Nirvana's rollout, delaying its release from May 8 to July 24, 2020, while forcing the cancellation of an April national tour and subsequent shows.[25] [26] In response, the group adapted by recording a full live performance of the album in Brisbane, releasing LIKE NIRVANA (Live in Brisbane) on August 23, 2020, to simulate concert experiences remotely.[27] Additional virtual efforts included unplugged sessions, such as a tunnel-recorded rendition of "Drive" on May 5, 2020, fostering continued connection despite halted physical tours into 2021.[25]Jesus at the Gay Bar and commercial peak (2022–present)
Cub Sport released their fifth studio album, Jesus at the Gay Bar, on April 7, 2023, coinciding with Good Friday.[28][29] The album, named after a poem by Jay Hulme, developed from the band's exploration of personal tensions between queer identity and religious upbringing, particularly drawing on vocalist Tim Nelson's experiences in reconciling his sexuality with Christian influences from his youth.[30][2] It debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart, marking the band's first chart-topping release and signifying a commercial milestone after years of building a dedicated fanbase.[6][31] Following the album's success, Cub Sport embarked on extensive touring, including Australian headline shows and select international performances to promote the record.[32] In February 2024, the band delivered a cover of cassö, RAYE, and D-Block Europe's "Prada" for triple j's Like a Version series, featuring bass-heavy production and Nelson's layered vocals that amplified the track's dancefloor energy.[33] The album earned Cub Sport the Album of the Year award at the 2024 Queensland Music Awards, alongside nominations in pop and electronic categories, underscoring regional recognition for their evolving sound.[34][35] In late 2024, the band announced a vinyl reissue of their 2017 album Bats via Impressed Recordings, pressed as a limited-edition sky blue and black splatter LP with a bonus 7-inch featuring three previously unreleased tracks, limited to 500 copies worldwide.[36] No new full-length albums followed Jesus at the Gay Bar through 2025, with efforts shifting toward reissues, fan-engaged events, and catalog promotion amid ongoing live commitments.[37] A setback occurred on June 20, 2025, when a fire destroyed merchandise stock for Cub Sport and other Australian acts in a shared warehouse, impacting physical sales and tour logistics.[38]Artistry
Musical style and evolution
Cub Sport's initial sound on their 2016 debut album This Is Our Vice drew from indie-pop and dream pop conventions, featuring warm, atmospheric textures with subtle R&B influences.[39][40] The release marked an initial departure from more traditional indie structures, incorporating chill-pop elements that emphasized emotional introspection through melodic builds.[41] The 2017 album BATS represented a significant pivot, shifting toward keyboard-heavy synth-pop with groovy, danceable rhythms and tighter electronic production, establishing core hallmarks of the band's evolving identity.[42][43] This transition amplified synthetic layers over earlier organic tones, fostering propulsive beats suited for live energy while retaining indie-pop roots in chord progressions.[39] Subsequent works, such as the 2019 self-titled album and 2020's Like Nirvana, deepened synth-driven aesthetics with mid-tempo R&B-infused grooves and alt-pop experimentation, blending digital processing for heightened atmospheric tension.[21][44] By 2023's Jesus at the Gay Bar, the sound had progressed to club-ready electronic pop, prioritizing dance-oriented propulsion and crystalline synth elements as the band's most energetic iteration.[45][46] Throughout their discography, production hallmarks include extensive vocal layering to evoke choral depth and emotional crescendos, often merging live guitars and keys with digital effects for hybrid textures that build from intimacy to release.[47][48] This technique underscores a consistent emphasis on sonic immersion, evolving from restrained indie sparsity to layered, euphoric expanses without abandoning instrumental authenticity.[46]Lyrical themes and influences
Cub Sport's lyrics frequently explore themes of vulnerability and self-discovery, often framed through the lens of reconciling queer identity with a conservative religious heritage. Frontman Tim Nelson, raised in a strict Pentecostal Christian environment that emphasized daily indoctrination through church services, youth groups, and education, has described how this upbringing instilled profound guilt and internalized homophobia, influencing early songwriting that subtly hinted at personal turmoil without explicit revelation.[49][50] These motifs appear in works like the 2020 album Like Nirvana, where Nelson reckons with the emotional weight of religious expectations, portraying a path toward liberation through raw introspection rather than outright rejection.[51] A central tension in the band's oeuvre is the interplay between faith and sexuality, depicted not as abstract philosophy but as lived conflict drawn from autobiographical experiences. Songs often delve into redemption and love as counterpoints to shame, with Nelson articulating how Pentecostal teachings complicated his queer self-acceptance until his public coming out in October 2017.[50] Post-coming out, lyrics shifted toward more overt queer narratives, as seen in tracks from BATS (2017) onward, where pre-out hints of longing evolved into direct expressions of relational intimacy and healing, such as in "O Lord," which evokes gospel undertones amid depictions of same-sex affection.[52] This evolution balances personal specificity—rooted in Nelson's relationship with bandmate Sam Netterfield, also from a Pentecostal background—with universal appeals to resilience and joy, avoiding didactic critiques of religion in favor of experiential realism.[4][51] Influences on these themes stem primarily from the members' intimate diaries of emotional processing and relational dynamics, rather than external literary or musical precedents, yielding lyrics that prioritize causal authenticity over stylized metaphor. The 2023 album Jesus at the Gay Bar, inspired by transgender poet Jay Hulme's work, integrates spirituality with queer exuberance, framing divine presence in spaces of marginalized joy without proselytizing or resolving faith's ambiguities.[53] Nelson has noted this approach reclaims religious imagery from a history of personal oppression, emphasizing self-forgiveness and communal love as antidotes to doctrinal harm, grounded in the band's collective navigation of identity post-upbringing.[54][51]Band members
Current members
Tim Nelson serves as Cub Sport's lead vocalist, guitarist, and primary songwriter, having co-founded the band in 2010 and driving its creative direction through introspective lyrics and melodic structures.[55][24] Sam Netterfield contributes on keyboards, providing atmospheric synth layers essential to the band's evolving indie pop sound, and has been a core member since the group's inception in Brisbane.[55][2] Zoe Davis handles bass, backing vocals, and occasional guitar, enhancing live dynamics with her versatile instrumentation and harmonic support, maintaining involvement from the band's formation.[55][2] Dan Puusaari rounds out the rhythm section on drums, delivering propulsive beats that underpin the quartet's energetic performances, with tenure dating back to 2010.[55][56] This unchanged lineup since the band's early years underscores Cub Sport's collaborative stability, enabling consistent touring and self-managed production as of 2025.[57][47]Former members
Bek Stoodley served as backing vocalist for Cub Sport's original incarnation as Tim Nelson & the Cub Scouts from 2010 to 2011, contributing to the band's debut self-titled EP released that year.[58] Her departure occurred early in the group's development, allowing focus on a streamlined lineup amid initial experimentation with indie pop sounds.[1] Andrew Williams joined as lead guitarist in 2010 and remained through the name change to Cub Scouts in 2011 and Cub Sport in 2013 due to legal challenges from Scouts Australia.[58] [10] He featured on early singles such as "Evie" (2011) and "Paradise" (2013), helping shape the band's formative guitar-driven arrangements before exiting in 2014 as the quartet solidified.[3] [58] These amicable separations from the initial six-piece reflected natural evolution toward a core group, minimizing turnover and enabling consistent output from the remaining members since 2014, which has been cited as a factor in the band's enduring cohesion.[1]Discography
Studio albums
Cub Sport's debut studio album, This Is Our Vice, was released on 4 March 2016 through Nettwerk Records.[59] The follow-up, Bats, arrived on 22 September 2017.[60]| Title | Release date | Label | Peak ARIA position |
|---|---|---|---|
| This Is Our Vice | 4 March 2016 | Nettwerk Records | — |
| Bats | 22 September 2017 | Cub Sport Records | — |
| Cub Sport | 18 January 2019 | Cub Sport Records | — |
| Like Nirvana | 24 July 2020 | Cub Sport Records | 2 |
| Jesus at the Gay Bar | 7 April 2023 | Cub Sport Records / Believe | 1 |
Extended plays
Cub Sport, operating initially as Cub Scouts, issued two extended plays in their formative years that established core elements of their indie pop aesthetic, including emotive vocals, synth-driven arrangements, and introspective themes, prior to their major-label debut album in 2016.[9][8] The band's self-titled debut EP appeared in 2010, functioning as an outlet for frontman Tim Nelson's early compositions and featuring the nascent lineup centered around Nelson's solo-oriented project.[8] This unsigned release captured raw, unpolished demos that foreshadowed the group's shift toward polished electronic pop structures.[62] Told You So, their follow-up EP, followed on October 12, 2012, comprising six tracks produced and mixed by John Castle.[63][64] The anthemic title track propelled the EP's visibility, charting in the top 20 on the CMJ college radio survey and securing rotation on Australia's Triple J youth network, which helped cultivate an initial audience amid their unsigned status.[62] These efforts refined the band's collaborative songcraft and electronic influences, bridging amateur origins to professional output without commercial backing.[9]Singles as lead artist
Cub Sport's singles as lead artist include both promotional tracks from their albums and occasional standalone releases, with several achieving ARIA certifications based on sales and streaming thresholds. "Come On Mess Me Up", released on 15 June 2016 as the third single from their debut album This Is Our Vice, became one of their breakthrough tracks, later certified Platinum by ARIA for exceeding 70,000 units in Australia.[65][66] The song's radio airplay contributed to its commercial momentum, peaking within the ARIA Singles Chart top 100 and gaining traction on platforms like triple j.[67] In 2022, the band issued standalone singles amid a transitional period following their 2020 album Like Nirvana. "Always Got The Love", released on 14 June 2022, marked their return after nearly two years without new material and was positioned as a dance-oriented track independent of an immediate album cycle.[68] This euphoric, disco-influenced single emphasized themes of queer joy and resilience, receiving playlist placements on Spotify and radio support from stations like triple j, though it did not chart highly.[68] "Replay", issued on 11 November 2022, followed as another pre-album single leading into Jesus at the Gay Bar (2023), described by vocalist Tim Nelson as a reflection on forward momentum amid complex emotions.[69][70] It maintained the club's energetic vibe of "Always Got The Love", with Ibiza-inspired production, and saw modest streaming success but no formal ARIA certification reported.[70] These releases highlighted Cub Sport's shift toward more liberated, party-centric sounds in their promotional strategy up to 2023.[71] Other notable lead singles include "Chasin'" (2017, Gold-certified from Bats) and "Sometimes" (2018, Gold-certified from the self-titled album), which underscored their growing domestic profile through radio impact and Hottest 100 placements, though these were tied to album promotion rather than standalone efforts.[66]Live performances and tours
Key tours
Cub Sport's early touring efforts centered on Australian headline shows, building a domestic fanbase following their formation in Brisbane. In August 2016, after a three-year absence from national headline dates, the band scheduled performances in Brisbane on August 19 at The Foundry, Adelaide on August 20 at Jive, Melbourne on August 25 at Collingwood Warehouse, and Sydney on August 27 at Oxford Art Factory.[72] These outings supported growing visibility from releases like their 2014 EP This Is Our Vice, with additional national runs in October and November that year emphasizing surreal live presentations.[73] The COVID-19 pandemic halted momentum, canceling planned April 2020 headline dates such as Sydney's Oxford Art Factory on April 4 and Brisbane's The Zoo on April 11, amid broader industry shutdowns that postponed international aspirations.[74] Resumption occurred in 2023 with the Jesus at the Gay Bar promotional cycle, marking the band's most expansive efforts to date. The North American leg, announced in March 2023, featured 22 U.S. headline shows starting in late May, including Los Angeles at The Echo on May 31, San Diego at The Casbah on June 1, and a festival appearance at Outloud on June 3 alongside Carly Rae Jepsen, before wrapping in Austin.[75][76] This international push extended geographic reach beyond Australia, contrasting earlier domestic focus. Domestically, the 2023 Australian headline tour—billed as the band's largest—spanned six major cities from August 18 in Adelaide at Hindley Street Music Hall, to Perth at Astor Theatre on August 19, Melbourne at Palais Theatre on August 24, Sydney at Enmore Theatre on August 26, Brisbane at Fortitude Music Hall on September 1, and concluding in additional east coast dates through December.[77][78] These post-pandemic adaptations prioritized larger venues and broader routing, reflecting sustained demand after enforced pauses.Notable live releases and events
Cub Sport released their debut live album, LIKE NIRVANA (Live in Brisbane), on December 24, 2020, capturing a 13-track performance recorded earlier that year in their hometown, including renditions of "Confessions," "My Dear," and a cover of Nirvana's "About a Girl."[79][80] The release highlighted the band's intimate, high-energy stage presence amid pandemic restrictions, with tracks emphasizing emotional vulnerability and dynamic instrumentation.[81] The band has made several appearances on triple j's Like A Version series, delivering stripped-back covers and original performances that showcase their vocal harmonies and atmospheric production. In March 2019, they covered Billie Eilish's "when the party's over," transforming it into a haunting, layered rendition.[82] This was followed by a 2024 cover of "Prada" by cassö, RAYE, and D-Block Europe, featuring pulsating bass and Tim Nelson's emotive vocals, which aired on February 29.[83] Earlier sessions included live takes on originals like "Come On Mess Me Up" in 2016 and "Party Pill."[84] Notable festival performances include slots at events like the Falls Festival in Byron Bay in 2019, where the band delivered sets noted for their raw, immersive energy drawing on indie pop and electronic elements.[32] Additional live events, such as an unplugged rendition of "Sometimes" in a tunnel in December 2018, underscored their adaptability in unconventional venues.[85] These appearances reinforced Cub Sport's reputation for conveying lyrical intimacy through live dynamics.Reception
Critical response
Cub Sport's music has received generally positive critical acclaim, with reviewers frequently highlighting the band's emotional vulnerability and introspective lyricism as core strengths. For instance, the self-titled 2019 album was lauded for its sense of comfort and thankfulness amid personal challenges, creating an unmistakable emotional resonance.[86] Similarly, the 2020 album Like Nirvana was described as one of the band's most exciting and accomplished works, blending fierce honesty on themes of fluid sexuality, gender, and anxiety with pop hooks and nuanced arrangements.[87] Critics have noted an evolution in Cub Sport's sound from raw indie beginnings to more polished synthpop and dance elements, often praising this shift for enhancing authenticity. The 2023 album Jesus at the Gay Bar earned a 4/5 rating from NME, which commended its tender sonic world of intimate dance music infused with deep house and disco influences, transcending genres while evoking warmth and catharsis.[46] The Guardian characterized Like Nirvana as a landmark in Australian pop, employing biblical mythology and soaring vulnerability to reclaim a formative religious upbringing, thereby establishing a daring, universal narrative of healing and self-empowerment.[49] While aggregates emphasize achievements in raw emotional depth, some reviews point to occasional limitations, such as reduced lyrical drive in later works or a sense of stasis echoing prior sentimentality. NME observed that Jesus at the Gay Bar, though bold in its provocative title and queer-spiritual themes, features mundane fantasies in tracks like "Zoom" and marks a departure from word-heavy introspection toward more ambient, less narrative-driven expression.[46] This balance underscores Cub Sport's success in authentic queer storytelling against critiques of formulaic elements in their pop evolution.Commercial performance
Cub Sport's breakthrough commercial milestone came with their fifth studio album, Jesus at the Gay Bar, which debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart on April 17, 2023, marking the band's first chart-topping release and achieved through independent distribution via Believe.[6][88] Prior albums had progressively stronger domestic performance: Like Nirvana (2020) peaked at number two, Cub Sport (2019) at number twelve, Bats (2017) at number fourteen, and debut This Is Our Vice (2014) did not enter the top fifty.[5][89]| Album | Peak Position (ARIA) | Release Year |
|---|---|---|
| This Is Our Vice | Did not chart top 50 | 2014 |
| Bats | 14 | 2017 |
| Cub Sport | 12 | 2019 |
| Like Nirvana | 2 | 2020 |
| Jesus at the Gay Bar | 1 | 2023 |
Controversies
Religious and cultural backlash
The release of Cub Sport's fifth studio album, Jesus at the Gay Bar, on Good Friday, April 7, 2023, drew criticism from religious conservatives who condemned the title—drawn from a poem by transgender poet Jay Hulme—as blasphemous for juxtaposing Jesus Christ with a homosexual venue, interpreting it as deliberate mockery of sacred Christian imagery.[93][94] The choice of release date, coinciding with the Christian observance of Jesus's crucifixion, amplified accusations of provocation, with detractors arguing it disrespected core tenets of the faith by prioritizing queer themes over reverence for holy symbols.[93] Band members Tim Nelson and Sam Netterfield, both raised in strict Pentecostal Christian households marked by daily indoctrination and internalized homophobia, contextualized the album as a reclamation of spirituality for queer individuals alienated by such environments.[49][4][50] Nelson acknowledged the provocative potential but emphasized personal catharsis over intent to offend, stating the timing aimed to highlight queer joy amid religious exclusion.[93] Backlash manifested primarily online, with the band reporting "seriously scary" homophobic and violent threats following the title's January 2023 announcement, including calls for harm that underscored tensions between artistic freedom and perceived sacrilege.[95] Religious critics, often from evangelical backgrounds, privileged the offense to Christian doctrine—viewing the work as inverting scriptural narratives of redemption into endorsement of homosexuality—over defenses of expressive liberty rooted in the band's autobiographical experiences.[96] In contrast, reception within queer communities emphasized supportive themes of resilience and hope for LGBTQ+ individuals navigating faith conflicts, evidenced by the album's debut at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart despite the controversy.[97]Interpersonal and industry disputes
In July 2024, Cub Sport lead singer Tim Nelson publicly accused British musician James Blake of copying visual elements from the band's 2016 music video for "Come On, Mess Me Up" in Blake's video for "Red Carpet," released earlier that month as part of his album Bad Cameo.[98][99] The similarities highlighted included black-and-white cinematography, the performer staring directly into the camera, and sequences of wiping the face with comparable paint or marking styles, which Nelson described as akin in "concept [and] performance."[99] Prompted by fans who messaged the band about the parallels, Nelson posted a comparative reel on Instagram, stating, "A bunch of people yesterday were sending me this new James Blake music video ‘cause it looks pretty similar to the Cub Sport Come On Mess Me Up music video," and questioning, "This is pretty crazy… do you think this is a coincidence or is this plagiarism?"[98][99] James Blake rebutted the claim on social media, asserting independent creation and tracing the concept to an earlier source: "I didn’t come up with the idea, but I asked the guys who did, and they referred me to their reference, Peter Campus’ short film ‘Three Transitions’ from 1973.. predates both of us by 50 years 😂."[98][99] He criticized the band's approach, adding, "Coulda just dmed me rather than making a TikTok about it and trying to spread a narrative that I steal ideas."[98] Such public disputes over visual ideas in music videos reflect occasional tensions in the industry, where artists may draw from shared influences or archival works without direct imitation, though proving originality remains challenging absent legal claims.[98] No lawsuits or formal resolutions have emerged as of October 2025, leaving the exchange as a point of unresolved public contention between the parties.[98][99]Awards and nominations
ARIA Music Awards
Cub Sport earned two nominations at the 2023 ARIA Music Awards for the album Jesus at the Gay Bar: Album of the Year and Best Group.[100][101] The album did not secure a win in either category, with Troye Sivan's Something to Give Each Other taking Album of the Year and DMA's prevailing in Best Group.[102][103] No prior albums or singles by the band received ARIA Music Awards nominations in album or song categories.[104]| Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Album of the Year | Jesus at the Gay Bar | Nominated |
| 2023 | Best Group | Jesus at the Gay Bar | Nominated |