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AFL FAQs - The AFL
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The Australian Football League is a national
competition comprising 16 teams - 10 from Victoria,
two each from Western Australia and South Australia
and one each from New South Wales and Queensland.
Until 1982 the League, then known as the
Victorian Football League, had 12 clubs, all based in
Victoria - 11 of them in Melbourne and the 12th 75 kilometres
away in the provincial city of Geelong.
The national spread started with the relocation
of the South Melbourne Football Club to Sydney in 1982.
The club, now the Sydney Football Club, plays its home
games at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
This move and the addition of four new
clubs between 1987 and 1995 were the first major club
moves since 1925 when North Melbourne, Hawthorn and
Footscray entered the competition.
The competition grew to 14 in 1987 when
the League spread its wings to Western Australia and
Queensland. This saw the birth of West Coast in Perth
(WA) and Brisbane in Carrara, on Queensland's Gold Coast.
In 1993, Brisbane moved into headquarters in Brisbane
and made a permanent base at the famous Gabba.
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In 1991,
another club was born - the Adelaide Football Club - with
its home at Football Park in South Australia. The number
of clubs swelled to 16 in 1995 with the admittance of
Fremantle, which plays at Subiaco - the same venue used
by West Coast.
In 1997, a second South Australian team,
Port Adelaide, joined the League and foundation club
Fitzroy merged with Brisbane to keep the number of teams
at 16.
Television has played a major role and
the national competition has seen it take an even stronger
hand with games being beamed across Australia each weekend,
on public holidays and on some Friday and Monday nights.
With the expanded competition, the League
had to make adjustments to the system of playing the
finals. From 1931 to 1971 four clubs made up the finals
each year, but in 1972 the final five was introduced.
It remained that way until Adelaide joined in 1991 -
thus creating a final six. In 1994, a system was introduced
whereby the top eight teams played off for the premiership.
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| 1. |
To manage the National Competition to ensure it
is the most successful national elite sports competition
for the benefit of our key stakeholders - our AFL
clubs, players and the public. |
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| 2. |
To promote high levels of player participation,
in well managed programs, down to the grass roots
level. |
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| 3. |
To promote public interest in the game by building
the strongest consumer brand position in Australian
Sport. |
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| 4. |
To attract and develop the most talented
athletes and sports administrators. |
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| 5. |
To foster good citizenship, both on
and off the playing field. |
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Twenty-two
players make up a senior team with 18 on the ground at
any one time. They are each given positions and the public
know who are the goalkickers, the play-makers and the
players who defend the goals.
The clubs announce their teams in positions
before each game. After a designated deadline, the teams'
personnel cannot be changed, but players can be moved
as the coach sees fit.
This is one of the great strategies of
Australian Football - the art of trying to outfox the
opposite coach with swift positional moves of players.
Clubs can interchange their players at
any time provided there are only 18 from each team on
the field at one time. An interchange steward checks
the movements of players in this area.
Player numbers and positions are published
each week in the AFL Record, the AFL's official publication.
Each game consists of four quarters of
20 minutes each, plus time on. At the direction of the
field umpires, who use special signals, timekeepers
add extra time to make up for lost play, usually after
a goal or if the ball goes out of bounds. Most quarters
run for between 26 and 30 minutes.
There is a five-minute break at the end
of the first quarter and a six-minute break at the end
of the third quarter. During this time players stay
on the field and are addressed by their respective coaches.
At half-time the players leave the field for 20 minutes.
Each game is controlled by seven umpires
- three field umpires, two boundary umpires and two
goal umpires. There is also an emergency umpire.
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Only the field umpires can award free
kicks, but all umpires can report players they believe
have committed an offence. The charges are heard by
an independent AFL Tribunal.
A player found guilty of striking - the
most common offence - is usually suspended for between
two and four matches.
When the field umpire bounces the ball
in the middle of the ground the game is on in earnest.
The coaches' messages during play are conveyed to the
players via runners. If a player has erred, is being
out-played or is injured, the coach will tell a runner
to remove the player from the ground and replace him
with an interchange player.
Each side changes ends after each quarter
and the side with the biggest score at the final siren
is the winner.
The clubs play for premiership points
- four points for a win, two for a draw, none for a
loss. At the end of each round a ladder ranks the teams
in points order and percentage. Percentage is calculated
by dividing total points for by total points against
and multiplying that figure by 100, and charts each
club's progress from week to week. At the end of the
home-and-away season the eight top clubs play in the
finals. The last match of the AFL season is the Grand
Final.
Below is the final ladder of the 2000
season, following the completion of the home-and-away
season (and before the start of the finals). Essendon
finished on top of the ladder and were declared minor
premiers. The team that finished last, St. Kilda, received
the wooden spoon.
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Team
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Played |
Won |
Lost |
Draw |
For |
Against |
Percentage |
Points |
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| Essendon |
22
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21
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1
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0
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2816
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1770
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159.10
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84
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| Carlton |
22
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16
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6
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0
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2667
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1979
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134.77
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64
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| Melbourne |
22
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14
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8
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0
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2557
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2159
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118.43
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56
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| Kangaroos |
22
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14
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8
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0
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2447
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2304
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106.21
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56
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| Geelong |
22
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12
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9
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1
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2234
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2306
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96.88
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50
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| Brisbane |
22
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12
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10
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0
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2602
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2222
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117.10
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48
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| Bulldogs |
22
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12
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10
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0
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2321
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2241
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103.57
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48
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| Hawthorn |
22
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12
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10
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0
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2198
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2251
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97.65
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48
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| Richmond |
22
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11
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11
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0
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2068
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2221
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93.11
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44
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| Sydney |
22
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10
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12
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0
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2254
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2219
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101.58
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40
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| Adelaide |
22
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9
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13
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0
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2255
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2347
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96.08
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36
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| Fremantle |
22
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8
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14
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0
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1886
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2618
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72.04
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32
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| West Coast |
22
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7
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14
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1
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2216
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2399
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92.37
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30
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| Port Adelaide |
22
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7
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14
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1
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1928
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2295
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84.01
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30
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| Collingwood |
22
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7
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15
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0
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2089
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2431
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85.93
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28
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| St Kilda |
22
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2
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19
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1
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1855
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2631
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70.51
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10
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In
2001, each AFL club will play 22 home-and-away matches.
Because only eight clubs play in the finals, clubs with
the same number of points often have to be separated by
percentage, which is calculated according to the total
points for and total points against a team.
The finals are conducted over four weekends
and in 2000 attracted many spectators.
With 16 premierships apiece, Carlton and
Essendon lead the the list of flag-winners. The new
clubs Brisbane and Fremantle are still waiting to win
a flag, but Adelaide stole the show in 1997 to take
home its first premiership. Sydney is also without a
premiership but South Melbourne, the club it superseded,
won three.
A record number of spectators watched
home-and-away games in 2000. Football on television
also reached record levels, outlining the strength and
popularity of the game in a climate that has seen several
others sports slide from prominence.
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The AFL also conducts a summer competition
which usually finishes a week before the major premiership
season. Most matches are played at night. The 2000 Ansett
Australia Cup Grand Final was won by Essendon.
The major individual medals in the AFL
are: the Brownlow Medal, awarded to the player judged
by the field umpires as the fairest and best player
in the home-and-away season; the Norm Smith Medal, awarded
to the best player in the grand final (judged by a special
panel), and the John Coleman Medal, awarded to the leading
goalkicker in the home-and-away season.
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Each
November, the AFL draw for the following season is constructed.
This is no mean feat, as 16 teams are drawn to compete
in a season that lasts 22 rounds.
Obviously it is not possible for each
team to play another twice: thus the draw is 'weighted'.
Each team plays eight others once and seven others twice.
The teams playing twice are more likely to come from
the opposite end of the finishing order from the previous
season; thus if a team finished 11th last season, it
is likely that team will be drawn to play teams 1-8
twice in the current season.
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Every effort is made to even out the number
of times each club plays every other club, so all fixtures
from the previous six seasons are taken into account.
There's more: Melbourne clubs are guaranteed nine home
games, interstate clubs 11 home games.
The draw is never easy and requires dedicated
computer time by mathematics experts each year to get
it right. Even then, it takes half a dozen drafts to
get it close to satisfying the clubs and their fans.
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Since
1994, eight clubs have contested the AFL finals. The number
has doubled since the early 1970s when only 12 clubs made
up the competition.
In the early days of the League there
were varying ways of finding the premier club, but from
1931 until 1971, the four top clubs played in a finals
series consisting of four games a first semi-final,
second semi-final, preliminary final and grand final.
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In 1972, the final five came into being
and 1991 saw the birth of the final six when Adelaide
entered the competition. At this point there were 15
clubs in the League. In 1994 - the season before the
entry of Fremantle took the number of clubs to 16 -
the final eight came into being.
The final eight allows for nine games
played over four weekends.
There are four qualifying finals,
two semi-finals, two preliminary finals and the grand
final.
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The
grand final is the highlight of the season. The game that
decides the premier team is played at the Melbourne Cricket
Ground in late September or early October.
The match is always a sell-out, with crowds
usually in the region of 95,000. Many seats are pre-booked
and some areas of the ground are set aside for AFL members
and Melbourne Cricket Club members.
Grand finals receive blanket coverage
from the media. They are tense battles even if the scores
are not close. Before the game and at half-time spectators
are treated to spectacular entertainment.
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If the scores are level at the final siren,
the competing clubs return the following week for a
replay. The most recent replay was in 1977.
The first 100,000-plus crowd at a grand
final was in 1956 when 115,802 fans saw Melbourne play
Collingwood. A record crowd of 121,696 attended the
clash between Carlton and Collingwood in 1970, when
the MCG held more spectators than it does today.
The strategy has been to improve
the comfort of patrons by adding several thousand more
individual seats and corporate boxes. A crowd of 100,000
cannot be achieved again at the MCG with the ground
in its present form.
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Until
2002 the Seven Network has exclusive TV rights to AFL
matches. Seven broadcasts matches played interstate live
to most Australian cities - other than the city of origin.
Seven has onsold Pay-TV rights to Optus Vision, which
is broadcasting every AFL match on a 24-hour exclusive
football channel, Sports AFL. The ABC provides radio broadcasts
of AFL matches in all capitals. Other radio stations broadcast
games in Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide and Sydney. |
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In
March 1998, the AFL, the Seven Network Limited and News
Limited launched www.afl.com.au
- the official AFL website. It is not only the most visited
sports site in Australia but won the best sports site
at the Telstra-Financial Review internet awards in 1999. |
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AFL website carries information on all players, and clubs.
It also provides real time scores during the football
season and Channel 7 coverage. |
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The
AFL logo is a great sales tool for all sorts of merchandisers.
During the last decade it has become a powerful marketing
tool for manufacturers of footwear, knitwear, collectors
cards, CD-ROM, watches, games, posters, magazines, and
more. There are officially sanctioned AFL drinks, airline
and foods. |
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