AFL FAQs - International

 

 

 

 
         
 
International Footy
 
         
 

The International Australian Football Council was formed in 1995 to promote and develop Australian football internationally.

The concept of Australian football being an international sport is one that many people greet with scepticism. However, few are aware just how widely the game is now known and played.

Since Australian football began in Australia there had been sporadic attempts to introduce the game to other countries. For example, there was a strong 17 team competition based around the docklands of Glasgow in Scotland before World War I. There is also evidence of the game being played in South Africa at this time.

Aussie Rules quickly spread to New Zealand, with over 100 clubs forming by the turn of the century. Indeed, the Kiwis competed in the Jubilee Australasian Football Carnival in Melbourne in 1908, defeating New South Wales and Queensland to finish fourth out of the seven competing teams. And in the 1930's and 1950's the game was introduced to the Pacific nations of Nauru and Papua New Guinea respectively.

Apart from a kick in the park by a few ex-pats, however, no other countries played Australian football.

This all changed in the late 1980's/early 1990's when a number of countries such as Canada, Denmark, Japan and Great Britain formed organised competitions. The advent of the tremendous advantages afforded by the Internet, such as the promotion of these international competitions via web sites and the cost effective nature of e-mail, meant that these far flung outposts were soon in regular contact with each other and organising international matches.

Such has been the tremendous growth of Australian rules football that the greatest game of all has now established a presence in the following countries:

Argentina, Brunei, Canada, China, Denmark, El Salvador, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Nauru, New Zealand, Norway, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, Samoa, Senegal, Singapore, South Africa, Sweden, Thailand, United Kingdom, USA and Vietnam.

This list will no doubt swell as more and more people overseas are made aware of the greatest spectator sport in the world.

 

In some countries Australian football is little more than a recreational pursuit for ex-patriot Australians. However, more and more football leagues are developing with non-Australians playing the sport. For example, Japan, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Nauru, Canada, the United States, Great Britain and Denmark are all capable of fielding teams without Australian players.

The British league comprises nine clubs; the Danish league seven clubs (including one from Sweden). A fierce rivalry has developed between New Zealand and Papua New Guinea through their encounters at the Arafura Games, with both teams playing at a very high standard.

Four years ago in the United States the game was played in two cities. Today it is played in over thirty cities. In Chicago, over twenty schools include Australian football in their Physical Education Curriculum.

A further exciting development is that as a result of the Arafura Games, the South African government is keen to adopt Australian football as 'the new sport for South Africa'. As soccer has been the sport of black South Africans, and Rugby Union the sport of white South Africans, they have been searching for a new game that will have widespread appeal and combine the skills of both codes. Concrete developments have already taken place to further this objective, including a visit by the Australian Defence Force, coaching clinics by the Adelaide Crows and an AFL Ansett Cup match in Cape Town in 1998.

Also in 1998, the Jim Stynes Cup, the first ever junior (Under 16) international tournament, was held in Canberra. The teams involved were South Africa, Western Australia, Northern Territory and the ACT. In 2000 the USA, Denmark and Samoa all attended the event.

In 1999 Papua New Guinea won its third successive gold medal at the Arafura Games in Darwin, with New Zealand and Samoa taking home the silver and bronze medals respectively. The next International Australian Football Championship will again be held in Darwin in May 2001.

The first International Cup will be held in Melbourne in August 2002. The competing teams will be the USA, Canada, South Africa, Japan, Ireland, England, Denmark, Sweden, Papua New Guinea, Nauru, New Zealand and Samoa.

 

 

 

 
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