Australian Football League Explained

Australian Football League
Current Season:2024 AFL season
Pixels:250px
Formerly:Victorian Football League (VFL)
(1897–1990)
Sport:Australian rules football
Inaugural:1897
Teams:18
Champion:
(16th premiership)
Most Champs:


(16 premierships)
Headquarters:Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Region: Australia
Website:afl.com.au
Ceo:Andrew Dillon
Tv:Australia:
Seven Network
Fox Footy
New Zealand:
Sky Sport
International:
List of International broadcast partners
Streaming:Kayo Sports (Australia)
WatchAFL (Overseas)
Sponsor:Toyota
Confed Cup:Australian Football International Cup

The Australian Football League (AFL) is the pre-eminent professional competition of Australian rules football. It was originally named the Victorian Football League (VFL) and was founded in 1896 as a breakaway competition from the Victorian Football Association (VFA), with its inaugural season in 1897. It changed its name to Australian Football League in 1990 after expanding its competition to other Australian states in the 1980s. The AFL publishes its Laws of Australian football, which are used, with variations, by other Australian rules football organisations.

The AFL competition currently consists of 18 teams spread over Australia's five mainland states, with to join the league as its 19th team in 2028.[1] AFL premiership season matches have been played in all states and mainland territories, as well as in New Zealand and China to expand its audience.

The AFL premiership season currently consists of a 23-match regular (or home-and-away) season, which runs from March to September. The team with the best record at the end of the home-and-away season is awarded the minor premiership; the top eight teams then play off in a four-round finals series, culminating in the AFL Grand Final, which is normally held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground each year. The grand final winners are termed the premiers, the most important team prizes for which are the premiership cup and flag., and are the joint-most successful clubs in the competition, having each won 16 premierships. Collingwood is the reigning premier, having won the 2023 AFL Grand Final.

History

See main article: History of the Australian Football League.

VFL era (1897–1989)

Background and founding

Several of the AFL's current member clubs date back to the origins of Australian football and were instrumental in establishing the sport's popularity and the AFL. The oldest club is Melbourne Football Club, which wrote the first laws of the code, and Geelong, which date back to 1858 and 1859 respectively, while Melbourne University, also founded in 1859, is also one of the oldest clubs to have later participated in the competition.

The Victorian Football Association (VFA) was established in 1877 and quickly went on to become Victoria's football competition. During the 1890s, an off-field power struggle occurred between the VFA's stronger and weaker clubs, the former seeking greater administrative control commensurate with their relative financial contribution to the game. This came to a head in 1896 when it was proposed that gate profits, which were always lower in matches involving the weaker clubs, be shared equally amongst all teams in the VFA. After it was intimated that the proposal would be put to a vote, six of the strongest clubs—,,, Geelong, Melbourne and —seceded from the VFA and later invited and to join them in founding a new competition, the Victorian Football League (VFL). The remaining VFA clubs—Footscray, North Melbourne, Port Melbourne, Richmond and Williamstown—were given the opportunity to compete as junior sides at a level beneath the VFL but rejected the offer and remained for the 1897 VFA season.[2]

1897–1900s: Inaugural VFL season and early years

The VFL's inaugural season occurred in 1897. It made several innovations early on to entice the public's interest, including an annual finals tournament, rather than awarding the premiership to the team with the best record through the season; and, the formal establishment of the modern scoring system, in which six points are awarded for a goal and one point for a behind.

Although the VFL and the VFA continued to compete for spectator interest for many years, the VFL quickly established itself as the premier competition in Victoria. In 1908, the league expanded to ten teams, with Richmond crossing from the VFA and University Football Club from the Metropolitan Junior Football Association. Professionalism began from the 1911 season, with clubs permitted to pay players beyond the reimbursement of expenses for the first time.[3] University, after three promising seasons, finished last each year from 1911 until 1914, including losing 51 matches in a row, in part caused by its players' focus on their studies rather than football and in part because it had chosen to remain amateur; as a result, the club withdrew from the VFL at the end of 1914.[4] [5]

The VFL premier and the premier of the South Australian Football League met in a playoff matches for the Championship of Australia beginning in 1888 with a 3 game playoff between South Melbourne from the VFL and the Norwood the most successful club in the SAFA. Matches where then held sporadically during the 1890s as single game playoffs and then annually from 1907 until 1914 (except 1912). South Australian clubs won 8 of the 11 Titles of which was the most successful winning four titles in 1890, 1910, 1913 and 1914. The majority of the matches were held in South Australia at Adelaide Oval. Following the outbreak of World War 1 the Championship playoff ceased and wasn't revived until 1968.

1915–1945: Three VFA clubs join the VFL

See main article: The VFL during the World Wars.

In 1916, district football was introduced, meaning new players from metropolitan Melbourne were allocated to clubs based on residential address.[6] In 1925, the VFL expanded from nine teams to twelve, with Footscray, Hawthorn and North Melbourne each crossing from the VFA. North Melbourne and Hawthorn remained very weak in the VFL for a very long period. Although North Melbourne would become the first of the 1925 expansion sides to reach a grand final in 1950, initially it was Footscray that adapted to the VFL with the most ease of the three clubs and by 1928 were well off the bottom of the ladder.

Between the years of 1927 and 1930, Collingwood became the first and only VFL team, to win four successive premierships.

1946–1975: Post-war golden years

In 1952, the VFL hosted a national day, when all six matches were played outside Melbourne. Matches were played at the Sydney Cricket Ground, Brisbane Exhibition Ground, North Hobart Oval, Albury Sports Ground and Victorian country towns Yallourn and Euroa.

Footscray became the first of the 1925 expansion teams to win the premiership in 1954.

Melbourne became a powerhouse during the 1950s and early 1960s under coach Norm Smith and star player Ron Barassi. The club contested seven consecutive grand finals from 1954 to 1960, winning five premierships, including three in a row from 1955 to 1957.

Television coverage commenced in 1957 with direct telecasts of the final quarter permitted. At first, several channels competed through broadcasting different games. When the VFL found that television reduced crowds it decided no coverage was to be allowed for 1960. In 1961 television replays in Melbourne were introduced although direct telecasts were rarely permitted. The rest of Australia enjoyed live telecasts every Saturday afternoon.

In 1959, the VFL planned the first purpose-built mega-stadium, VFL Park (later known as Waverley Park), to give it some independence from the Melbourne Cricket Club, which managed the Melbourne Cricket Ground. VFL Park was planned to hold 155,000 spectators, which would have made it one of the largest stadiums in the world – although it would ultimately be built with a capacity of 78,000. Land for the stadium was purchased at Mulgrave, then farmland but predicted to be near the demographic centre of Melbourne's population.

The VFL premiership trophy was first awarded in addition to a pennant flag in 1959; essentially the same trophy design has been in use since.In the 1960s, television began to have a huge impact. Spectators hurried home from games to watch replays and many former players took up positions as commentators on pre-game preview programs and post-game review programs. There were also several attempts at variety programs featuring VFL players, who generally succeeded in demonstrating that their skills were limited to the football ground.

The VFL played the first of a series of exhibition matches in 1962 in an effort to lift the international profile of the league. In 1967, district football was expanded throughout all of Victoria, clubs now allocated a country zone in addition to their metropolitan districts.[7]

The 1970 season saw the opening of VFL Park, with the inaugural match being played between Geelong and Fitzroy, on 18 April 1970. Construction work was carried out at the stadium as the 1970s progressed, culminating in the building of the now heritage listed Sir Kenneth Luke Stand. Queen Elizabeth II, was a guest at the game and formally opened the stadium to the public. The 1970 grand final between traditional rivals Carlton and Collingwood, arguably the league's most famous game, saw Carlton recover from a 44-point deficit at half-time to win the game by 10 points, featured a famous spectacular mark by Alex Jesaulenko and was witnessed by a record crowd of 121,696.

1976–1981: VFL leaves Australian National Football Council

See also: Championship of Australia, 1976 NFL Championship Series (Australia) and Australian Football Championships Night Series.

In 1976, the National Football League, which was the peak national administrative body of Australian rules football at the time, established the NFL Night Series to succeed the Championship of Australia. The Night Series was played concurrently with the premiership season and was contested among twelve clubs from the VFL, SANFL and WAFL, invited based on their finishing positions from the previous year. The event was mostly played on Tuesday nights, with night games at Norwood Oval in Adelaide and all games were televised live in colour on Channel 9, which opened up unprecedented revenue streams from television rights and sponsorship opportunities for the sport.[8] The NFL began plans to expand its Night Series to incorporate more teams from the VFL, SANFL and WAFL, as well as state representative teams from other states.

In November 1976, the VFL announced that it was withdrawing from the NFL's competition, having arranged more substantial television and sponsorship deals for its own, rival night competition for 1977 to be based in Melbourne and feature only the VFL clubs. Light towers were erected at VFL Park specifically for the event.[9] [10] The VFL established a proprietary limited company called Australian Football Championships Pty Ltd in 1978 to run its night competition and offered shareholdings to the other state leagues in an attempt to lure other states into the competition.[11]

For the three years from 1977 until 1979, the NFL and VFL night competitions were run separately as rival night competitions. In 1978, the Tasmanian representative team competed in both the NFL and VFL night competitions but all SANFL and WAFL clubs and the minor states teams remained in the NFL Night Series. In 1979, the WAFL clubs and the New South Wales and A.C.T. representative teams defected from the NFL Night Series and joined the VFL's night competition, leaving the NFL Night Series mostly composed of SANFL teams. The NFL Night Series was not revived in 1980 and the SANFL clubs joined the VFL's night competition.[12] Although the NFL itself continued to exist as an administrative body into the early 1990s, the power gained by the VFL as a result of its take-over of night competition was one of the first significant steps in the VFL's spread interstate and ultimately its take-over and control of Australian football across Australia.In 1980 and 1981, the first years after the NFL Night Series ended, the VFL night competition was at its largest, with all VFL, WAFL and SANFL clubs plus the four minor states teams (selected under residential qualification rather than state of origin qualification) competing for a total of 34 teams. In 1982, the size of the competition was reduced and, thereafter, only the top two or three teams from the SANFL and WAFL and the winner of the minor states' annual carnival were invited.

In 1987, the night competition reverted to include only the VFL teams. The competition was pushed earlier into the year, with the final played on 28 April.[13] The following season, the competition did not overlap with the day premiership season at all and became entirely a pre-season competition. The night competition is generally considered to be of equivalent importance as the pre-season competition and the VFL Night Series (1956–1971) and records relating to the three competitions are often combined.

With the number of players recruited from country leagues increasing, the wealthier VFL clubs were gaining an advantage that metropolitan zoning and the Coulter law (salary cap) restricting player payments had prevented in the past. Country zoning was introduced in the late 1960s and while it pushed Essendon and Geelong from the top of the ladder, it created severe inequality during the 1970s and 1980s. Between 1972 and 1987, only six of the league's twelve clubs – Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon, Hawthorn, North Melbourne and Richmond – played in grand finals.

1982–1989: Professionalism, club bankruptcy and expansion

See also: Proposed VFL/AFL clubs.

Evolution of competition
YearStatesSalary capAverage salaryTV rights per yearDraftZoning
1980· Victorianone$11,100[14] $601,000[15] no[16] yes
1991· Victoria
· South Australia
· West Australia
· New South Wales
· Queensland
$1,600,000$46,430$7,000,000yes

The 1980s was a period of significant structural change in Australian football around the country. The VFL was dominant among the Australian football leagues around the country in terms of overall attendance, interest and money and began to look towards expanding its influence directly into other states. The VFL and its top clubs were asserting their financial power to recruit top players from interstate. The resulting rising cost pressures drove the VFL's weaker clubs into dire financial situations. The South Melbourne Swans became the first VFL team to relocate interstate. The South Melbourne Football Club was deeply indebted, including to the VFL which took over the club's Swans team and moved the team's home games to Sydney in 1982 and renamed the team the Sydney Swans the following year. Under the private ownership of Dr Geoffrey Edelsten during the mid-1980s, the Sydney Swans became successful on-field. Moving the Swans team to Sydney effectively shifted the debts of a Melbourne club onto Australian football in Sydney and re-directed support and finance to the Swans team to the detriment of existing Australian Football clubs and league competitions in Sydney. However, the Swans team attracted new prominence and supporters for the sport. Despite becoming successful on the field, a succession of owners and transfer to its supporter "members", the Sydney Swans remain indebted to the AFL[17] and subject to its veto control and reversion rights[18] in what became a model for the AFL control of teams.

Throughout the 1980s, approaches were made by SANFL and WAFL clubs to enter the VFL. Of particular note were approaches by the East Perth Royals in 1980,[19] the Norwood Redlegs in 1986[20] and 1988,[21] and an EastSouth Fremantle merger proposal in 1987.[22] None of these attempts were successful despite Norwood trying again in 1990 and 1994.

In 1986, the West Australian Football League and Queensland Australian Football League were awarded licences to field expansion teams in the VFL, leading to the establishment of the West Coast Eagles and Brisbane Bears, who both joined the league in 1987. These expansion team licences were awarded on payment of multimillion-dollar fees which were not required of the existing VFL clubs. In 1989 financial troubles nearly forced Footscray and Fitzroy to merge but fees paid by the West Coast Eagles and Brisbane Bears, propped up the struggling VFL sides.

The 1980s first saw new regular timeslots for VFL matches. VFL matches had previously been played on Saturday afternoons but Sydney began playing its home matches on Sunday afternoons and North Melbourne pioneered playing matches on Friday night. These have since become regular timeslots for all teams.

The first national draft was introduced in 1986 and a salary cap was introduced in 1987. District football within Victoria was discontinued around the same time.

AFL era (1990–present)

The league was renamed the Australian Football League in 1990 to reflect its national composition.[23]

1990–2010: A professional national competition

In 1990 the AFLPA, the players union, signed its first Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) with the league which outlined wages and conditions in what was becoming a sole source of income for players who had previously had part-time or full-time jobs outside of football.[24] Functionally, the AFL gave up control over its Victorian-based minor grades at the end of 1991 – clubs continued to field reserves teams in a competition run by the new Victorian State Football League and the under-19s competition and zone-based recruiting were abolished and replaced with an independent system.

Midway through 1990, the SANFL's most successful club, Port Adelaide, made a bid for an AFL licence. In response, the SANFL gained an injunction via Glenelg and Norwood against Port Adelaide, allowing it time to establish a composite South Australian team called the Adelaide Crows, which was awarded the licence and joined the league in 1991 as the fourth non-Victorian club. The same year saw the West Coast Eagles become the first non-Victorian club to reach the grand final, which was won by Hawthorn. The Eagles would then win the premiership in 1992 and 1994. In 1994, Fremantle obtained an AFL licence and joined the AFL in 1995, becoming the fifth non-Victorian club, and the second from Western Australia.[25]

The VFA took over the Victorian Football League name in 1996. In 1996 several Victorian clubs were in severe financial difficulties, most notably Fitzroy and Hawthorn. Hawthorn proposed to merge with Melbourne to form the Melbourne Hawks but the merger ultimately fell through and both teams continued as separate entities. Fitzroy, however, was too weak to continue by itself. The club nearly merged with North Melbourne to form the Fitzroy-North Melbourne Kangaroos but the other clubs voted against it. In 1994 Port Adelaide was awarded an AFL licence but could not enter until a Victorian team had folded or merged. At the end of 1996 Fitzroy played its last match and merged with Brisbane to form the Brisbane Lions.[26] This allowed Port Adelaide to enter the AFL for the 1997 season as the sixth and only pre-existing non Victorian club.

Through the 1990s there was a significant trend of Melbourne based teams abandoning the use of their small (20,000–30,000 capacity) suburban venues for home matches in favour of the MCG and VFL Park, which have and had larger seating capacities. The 1990s saw the last matches played at Windy Hill (Essendon), Moorabbin Oval (St Kilda), Western Oval (Footscray) and Victoria Park (Collingwood) and saw Princes Park abandoned by its long-term co-tenant, Hawthorn. The transition to the use of only two venues in Melbourne was ultimately completed in 2005 when Carlton abandoned the use of Princes Park. In 1999, the league sold VFL Park and used the funds in a joint venture to begin construction of a brand-new stadium situated at Melbourne's Docklands. Representative state football came to an end, with the last State of Origin match held in 1999.

2011–present: 18-team era

In the late 2000s, the AFL looked to establish a permanent presence on the Gold Coast in the state of Queensland, which was fast-developing as a major population centre. North Melbourne, which was in financial difficulty and had played a few home games on the Gold Coast in previous years, was offered significant subsidies to relocate to the Gold Coast but declined. The AFL then began work to establish a club on the Gold Coast as a new expansion team.

Early in 2008, a meeting held by the AFL discussed having two new teams enter the AFL competition.[27] In March 2008, the AFL won the support of the league's 16 club presidents to establish sides on the Gold Coast and in Western Sydney. The Gold Coast Suns were established and joined the AFL in 2011 as the 17th team.[28] The Greater Western Sydney Giants, representing both Western Sydney and Canberra, were then established and entered the league as the 18th team in 2012.

On 25 April 2013 the Westpac Stadium in Wellington, New Zealand hosted the first ever Australian Football League game played for premiership points outside Australia. The night game between and was played in front of a crowd of 22,183 on Anzac Day to honour the Anzac bond between the two countries.[29] [30]

A national women's league comprising a subset of AFL clubs began in 2017. Thirteen AFL clubs placed bids to participate in the women's competition. Eight clubs –,,,,,, and the – were granted licences to participate in the inaugural season.[31] Six clubs joined the league in the coming years; and entered the competition in 2019, while,, and made their debut in 2020.[32] The remaining four clubs—,, and — entered AFL Women's in the seventh season in 2022.[33]

On 14 May 2017, and the played the first-ever AFL match for premiership points in Shanghai, China, attracting a crowd of 10,114 at Jiangwan Stadium. Port Adelaide won the game by 72 points.

In 2020, the AFL season was severely disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The first round of matches was played in front of no crowds due to the pandemic, before the season was suspended on 22 March due to health concerns and strict government regulations on non-essential travel. After nearly two months of planning with the assistance of state governments and health officials, the season resumed on 11 June, with the length of the season reduced from 22 matches per team to 17 matches. The grand final was played in October at The Gabba in Brisbane, the first time it was held outside of Victoria since the creation of the league due to the spiking cases in that state. The pandemic caused the league to lose out on up to $400 million in anticipated revenue and also precipitated a 20% cut in industry jobs.[34]

The 2021 grand final was played in September at Perth Stadium in Perth because an ongoing COVID-19 lockdown prevented the match from being played with spectators at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne, Victoria. It was the first grand final played in Perth and the second consecutive grand final to be played outside Victoria. The event set a new attendance record for Australian rules football in Western Australia, eclipsing the previous record set in 2018 despite not featuring any WA-based teams and being played during the COVID pandemic.

Clubs

The AFL operates on a single table system, with no divisions and conferences, nor promotion and relegation from other leagues.

The league was founded as the Victorian Football League (VFL) in 1897, comprising eight teams only based in the state of Victoria. Over the next century, a series of expansions, a relocation, a merger and a club withdrawal saw the league's teams expand to the 18 teams there are today.

In 1990, the national nature of the competition resulted in the name change to the Australian Football League (AFL). The current 18 teams are based across five states of Australia; the majority (ten) still remain in Victoria, nine of which are located in the Melbourne metropolitan area. The states of New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia have two teams each, while Tasmania will have a team enter the league in 2028. The Australian Capital Territory and Northern Territory are the only mainland territories not to have AFL clubs, although the Greater Western Sydney Giants have a contract to play at least three home games in the former until 2032, while at least two games per year is played in the latter.

Current clubs

ClubColoursMoniker State2023
members[35]
Former leagueVFL/AFL seasonsVFL/AFL premierships
Firstdata-sort-type=number Totaldata-sort-type=number TotalMost recent
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Crows align=left align=left 68,536 1990 34 2 1998
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Lions align=left align=left 54,676 1996 28 3 2003
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Blues align=left align=left 95,277 1864 VFA 1897+ 128 16 1995
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Magpies align=left align=left 106,470 1892 VFA 1897+ 128 16 2023
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Bombers align=left align=left 86,274 1872 VFA 1897+ 126 16 2000
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Dockers align=left align=left 62,064 1994 30 0
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Cats align=left align=left 82,155 1859 VFA 1897+ 125 10 2022
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Suns align=left align=left 23,359 2009 VFL 14 0
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Giants align=left align=left 33,036 2010 NEAFL 13 0
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Hawks align=left align=left 80,698 1902 VFA 100 13 2015
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Demons align=left align=left 70,785 1858 VFA 1897+ 125 13 2021
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Kangaroos align=left align=left 51,084 1869 VFA 100 4 1999
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Power align=left align=left 64,041 1870 SANFL 28 1 2004
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Tigers align=left align=left 101,349 1885 VFA 117 13 2020
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Saints align=left align=left 60,239 1873 VFA 1897+ 126 1 1966
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Swans align=left New South Wales^ align=left 65,332 1874 VFA 1897+ 127 5 2012
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Eagles align=left align=left 103,275 1986 38 4 2018
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Bulldogs align=left align=left 56,302 1877 VFA 100 2 2016
^ denotes that the club relocated from a different state at some point in its existence
+ denotes that the club was a founding member of the VFL
denotes that the club did not participate in one or more seasons due to one or both of the World Wars

Former clubs

Since the league commenced in 1897 as the VFL, only one club,, has withdrawn from the competition. It last competed in 1914 and withdrew because, as an amateur club, it was unable to remain competitive in a time when player payments were becoming common;[36] [37] the club still competes to this day in the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA).[38] Two other clubs, and the, merged in 1996 to form the ; however, after coming out of financial administration in 1998, Fitzroy resumed its playing operations in 2009 and competes in the VAFA.[39]

ClubColoursMonikerStateFormer leagueVFL/AFL seasonsVFL/AFL premierships
FirstLastdata-sort-type=number Totaldata-sort-type=number TotalLast
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Bears align=left align=left 1986 10 0
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Lions align=left align=left 1883 VFA 1897+ 100 8 1944
scope=row style=text-align:left align=left Students align=left align=left 1859 7 0
+ denotes that the club was a founding member of the VFL

Timeline of clubs

DateFormat = yyyyImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20Period = from:1858 till:2040TimeAxis = orientation:horizontalPlotArea = right:20 left:0 bottom:50 top:5 #> to display a count on left side of graph, use "left:20" to suppress the count, use "left:20"<#Colors = id:barcolor id:line value:pink id:bg value:white id:AFL value:rgb(0.4,0.80,0.1) # Use this color to denote a team that is a current league member id:VFA value:rgb(0.6,0.8,1) # Use this color to denote a team that is a former league member id:VFL value:rgb(0.35,0.55,1) id:SANFL value:rgb(0.996,0.4,0.4) # Use this color to denote when team that has moved in from a different league was active in the prior league(s) id:Interclub value:RGB(0.7,0.7,0.7) id:Marker value:rgb(0,0,0)

PlotData = width:15 textcolor:black shift:(5,-5) anchor:from fontsize:s bar:1 color:Marker from:1896 till:1897 text: VFL formed (1897) bar:1 color:Marker from:1989 till:1990 text: VFL renamed AFL (1990) bar:2 color:Interclub from:1858 till:1876 text:Melbourne (1858) bar:2 color:VFA from:1877 till:1896 text: bar:2 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:2 color:AFL from:1990 till:2024 text: bar:3 color:Interclub from:1859 till:1876 text:Geelong (1859) bar:3 color:VFA from:1877 till:1896 text: bar:3 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:3 color:AFL from:1990 till:2024 text: bar:4 color:Interclub from:1864 till:1876 text:Carlton (1864) bar:4 color:VFA from:1877 till:1896 text: bar:4 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:4 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:5 color:Interclub from:1871 till:1877 text:Essendon (1871) bar:5 color:VFA from:1878 till:1896 text: bar:5 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:5 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:6 color:Interclub from:1873 till:1876 text:St Kilda (1873) bar:6 color:VFA from:1877 till:1879 text: bar:6 color:Interclub from:1880 till:1880 text: bar:6 color:VFA from:1881 till:1882 text: bar:6 color:Interclub from:1883 till:1885 text: bar:6 color:VFA from:1886 till:1896 text: bar:6 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:6 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:7 color:Interclub from:1874 till:1878 text:South Melbourne (1874) bar:7 color:VFA from:1879 till:1896 text: bar:7 color:VFL from:1897 till:1981 text: bar:7 color:VFL from:1981 till:1981 text: Relocated to Sydney, Sydney Swans (1982) bar:7 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:7 color:VFL from:1982 till:1990 text: bar:7 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:8 color:VFA from:1883 till:1896 text: Fitzroy (1883) bar:8 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:8 color:AFL from:1990 till:1996 text: bar:8 color:AFL from:1996 till:1996 text: Merged with Brisbane Bears bar:9 color:VFA from:1892 till:1896 text: Collingwood (1892) bar:9 color:VFL from:1897 till:1990 text: bar:9 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:10 color:Interclub from:1859 till:1884 text: University (1859) bar:10 color:VFA from:1885 till:1888 text: bar:10 color:Interclub from:1889 till:1907 text: bar:10 color:VFL from:1908 till:1915 text: bar:11 color:VFA from:1885 till:1907 text: Richmond (1885) bar:11 color:VFL from:1908 till:1990 text: bar:11 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:12 color:Interclub from:1869 till:1876 text:North Melbourne (1869) bar:12 color:VFA from:1877 till:1924 text: bar:12 color:VFL from:1925 till:1990 text: bar:12 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:13 color:Interclub from:1877 till:1885 text: Footscray (1877) bar:13 color:VFA from:1886 till:1924 text: bar:13 color:VFL from:1925 till:1990 text: bar:13 color:AFL from:1990 till:1996 text: bar:13 color:AFL from:1996 till: 2024 text: Renamed Western Bulldogs (1996) bar:14 color:Interclub from:1902 till:1913 text: Hawthorn (1902) bar:14 color:VFA from:1914 till:1924 text: bar:14 color:VFL from:1925 till:1990 text: bar:14 color:AFl from:1990 till:2024 text: bar:16 color:VFL from:1987 till:1990 text: Brisbane Bears (1987) Merged with Fitzroy bar:16 color:AFL from:1990 till:1996 text: bar:17 color:VFL from:1987 till:1990 text:West Coast (1987) bar:17 color:AFL from:1990 till: 2024 text: bar:18 color:AFL from:1991 till: 2024 text:Adelaide (1991) bar:19 color:AFL from:1995 till: 2024 text:Fremantle (1995) bar:20 color:AFL from:1997 till: 2024 text: Brisbane Lions (1997) bar:21 color:Interclub from:1870 till:1876 text: Port Adelaide (1870) bar:21 color:SANFL from:1877 till:1996 text: bar:21 color:AFL from:1997 till: 2024 text: bar:22 color:AFL from:2011 till: 2024 text:Gold Coast (2011) bar:23 color:AFL from:2012 till: 2024 text:Greater Western Sydney (2012) bar:24 color:AFL from:2028 till: 2030 text:Tasmania Devils (2028)

ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:10 start:1860TextData = fontsize:L textcolor:black pos:(0,30) tabs:(400-center) text:





† Not all teams shown. These competitions are current.

Venues

See main article: List of Australian Football League grounds.

Throughout the history of the VFL/AFL to 2023, there have been 50 grounds used.[40] The largest-capacity ground in use is the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), which has a capacity of over 100,000 people and hosts the grand final each year (see AFL Grand Final location debate).[41] The MCG is shared by six teams as a home ground, while the other grounds used as home venues by multiple teams are Docklands Stadium in Melbourne (five teams), Adelaide Oval in Adelaide (two teams) and Perth Stadium in Perth (two teams). The AFL has had exclusive ownership of Docklands Stadium (commercially known as Marvel Stadium) since late 2016.[42]

Prior to the expansion of the competition, most grounds were located in suburban Melbourne, with Princes Park, Victoria Park, the Junction Oval, Waverley Park and the Lake Oval each having hosted over 700 games.[40] However, since the introduction of a national competition, each state and territory of Australia has hosted AFL games.[43] On 25 April 2013 (Anzac Day), a match took place between St Kilda and Sydney at Wellington Regional Stadium in Wellington, New Zealand, being the first AFL match played outside Australia for premiership points.[44]

Current venues

Below are the venues that are hosting AFL matches during the 2024 season.

Melbourne Cricket GroundOptus StadiumMarvel StadiumAdelaide Oval
Melbourne, VictoriaPerth, Western AustraliaMelbourne, VictoriaAdelaide, South Australia
Capacity: 100,024Capacity: 61,266Capacity: 56,347Capacity: 53,500
Sydney Cricket GroundGMHBA StadiumThe GabbaEngie Stadium
Sydney, New South WalesGeelong, VictoriaBrisbane, QueenslandSydney, New South Wales
Capacity: 48,000Capacity: 40,000Capacity: 37,000 Capacity: 23,500
People First StadiumBlundstone ArenaUniversity of Tasmania StadiumManuka Oval
Gold Coast, QueenslandHobart, TasmaniaLaunceston, TasmaniaCanberra, Australian Capital Territory
Capacity: 22,500 Capacity: 19,500Capacity: 19,000Capacity: 15,000
TIO StadiumMars StadiumNorwood OvalTIO Traeger Park
Darwin, Northern TerritoryBallarat, VictoriaAdelaide, South Australia
Capacity: 12,500Capacity: 11,000Capacity: 10,000Capacity: 7,200
Capacity: 5,000

Players

See also: List of current AFL team squads. AFL players are drawn from a number of sources; however, most players enter the league through the AFL draft, held at the end of each season. A small number of players have converted from other sports, or been recruited internationally. Prior to the nationalisation of the competition, a zoning system was in place. At the end of the season, the best 22 players and coach from across the competition are selected in the All-Australian team.

The AFL has tight controls over the player lists of each club. Currently, apart from the recently added expansion clubs who have some additional players, each team can have a senior list of 38 to 40 players plus 4 to 6 rookie players, to a total of 44 players[45] (following a reduction by two of the number of rookies in 2012) and up to three development rookies (international, alternative talent or New South Wales scholarship players).[46] Changes to playing lists are permitted only in the off-season: clubs can trade players during a trade period which follows each season and recruit new players through the three AFL drafts, the national draft, the pre-season draft and the rookie draft, which take place after the trade period. A mid-year draft was conducted between 1990 and 1993.[47] The national draft is the primary method of recruiting new players and has been used since 1986. The draft order is based on reverse-finishing position from the previous year but selections can be traded. Free agency player movements have only been permitted since the 2012/13 offseason,[48] previously having been rejected by the AFL.[49]

Salary cap

See main article: AFL salary cap. A salary cap (known as the Total Player Payments or TPP) is also in place as part of the league's equalisation policy; this was $9,130,000 for the 2013 season with a salary floor of $8,673,500 except for the Gold Coast, whose salary cap was $9,630,000 with a salary floor of $9,171,500 and Greater Western Sydney, whose salary cap was $9,987,000 with a floor of $9,530,500. As part of the AFL's enhanced equalisation policies, in 2014 the league announced an increase of the TPP for the 2015 and 2016 seasons. TPP increased an additional $150,000 per club in 2015 above previously contracted amounts, increasing from $9.92m to $10.07m in 2015 and $10.22m to $10.37m in 2016.[50]

The salary cap was set at $1.25 million for 1987–1989 as per VFL agreement, with the salary floor set at 90% of the cap or $1.125 million; the salary floor was increased to 92.5% of the cap in 2001 and 95% of the cap for 2013 due to increased revenues. Both the salary cap and salary floor has increased substantially since the competition was rebranded as the AFL in 1990.

Salaries of draft selections are fixed for two years. Salaries for senior players are not normally released to the public, though the average AFL player salary at the conclusion of the 2012 season was $251,559[51] and the top few players can expect to earn up to and above $1,000,000 a year.[52] Upon successfully trading to the Sydney Swans in 2013, marquee player Lance Franklin signed a 9-year contract with the club, reportedly worth over $10 million and resulting in subsequent payments of $1.8 million annually in consecutive seasons.[53] The Total Player Earnings (TPE) – or total amount of revenue spent on reimbursement of AFL listed players – at the conclusion of the 2012 season was $173.7 million, up by 13 per cent from $153.7 million in 2011.

In June 2017, the AFL and AFL Players Association agreed to a new CBA deal which resulted in a 20% increase in players' salaries. The six-year deal, which began in 2017 and ends in 2022 means that the average player wage rises from $309,000 to $371,000 and the player salary cap from $10.37m to $12.45m. In 2022, the final year of the agreement, the average player wage will be $389,000 with a salary cap of $13.54m.[54]

The breaches of the salary cap and salary floor regulations outlined by the AFL are: exceeding the TPP; falling below the salary floor; not informing the AFL of payments; late or incorrect lodgement or loss of documents; or engaging in draft tampering. Penalties include fines of up to triple the amount involved ($10,000 for each document late or incorrect lodged or lost), forfeiture of draft picks and/or deduction of premiership points. The most significant breach of the salary cap was that of the Carlton Football Club in the early 2000s.

Demographics

See main article: List of VFL/AFL players born outside Australia, VFL/AFL players with international backgrounds and List of Indigenous Australian VFL/AFL and AFL Women's players. There were 801 players on AFL club senior, veteran, rookie and international lists in 2011, including players from every state and mainland territory of Australia.[55] As of 2014, there were 68 Indigenous Australian players on AFL club lists, comprising approximately 9% of the overall playing population.[56]

There were 12 players recruited from outside Australia on AFL lists in 2011, including 10 from Ireland, all converts from Gaelic football drafted as part of the Irish Experiment and one each from the United States and Canada. There were also another five overseas-born players who emigrated to Australia at an early age on AFL lists.[57]

An international rookie list and international scholarship list were introduced in 2006. The international rookie list includes up to two players between the ages of 15 and 23 who are not Australian citizens. These players may remain on this list for up to three years before they must be transferred to the senior or rookie list. For the first year, payments made to international-rookie-listed players fell outside the salary cap. The international scholarship list gives AFL clubs the option of recruiting up to eight players from outside Australia (other than Ireland). Irish players are required to either be placed on clubs' senior or rookie lists.[58] At the beginning of 2011, there were 14 international scholarship players.[59]

Of the 121 multicultural players, more than half have one parent from Anglophone countries, mainly the United Kingdom, Ireland and New Zealand.[60]

Season structure

Pre-season

See main article: Australian Football League pre-season competition. From 1988 until 2013, the AFL ran a pre-season competition that finished prior to the commencement of the premiership season, which served as both warm-up matches for the season and as a stand-alone competition.

It was mostly contested as a four-week knock out tournament but the format changed after the expansion of the league beyond sixteen clubs in 2011 and has frequently been used to trial rule changes.

In 2014, the competition format was abandoned and practice matches are now played under the sponsored name Marsh Community Series. This consists of all 18 clubs playing two matches each, which are played on some weekdays and weekends, throughout February and early March.

Premiership season

See also: 2023 AFL season. The AFL home-and-away season at present lasts for 24 rounds, starting in mid-March and ending in late August. As of the 2023 AFL season, each team plays 23 matches, consisting of 11 home games, 11 away games, 1 neutral game, and one bye. Teams receive four premiership points for a win and two premiership points for a draw. Ladder finishing positions are based on the number of premiership points won. "Percentage", calculated as the ratio of points scored to points conceded throughout the season, is used as a tie-breaker when teams finish with equal premiership points. Further tie-breakers, if required, are the premiership points accumulated in head-to-head matches between the tied teams and then the percentage earned in such matches, with a final tie-breaker being a random drawing of lots.[61]

Themed rounds and special matches

Several teams also play against each other at set times each year, with the most prominent of these being when Collingwood play Essendon in the annual Anzac Day clash at the MCG.[62] Other prominent matches include the King's Birthday match between Collingwood and Melbourne and the Easter Monday clash between Geelong and Hawthorn.[63] [64]

the men's league had no plans to introduce a Pride Round in the men's game, although the AFLW had established their pride round in 2021.

There are separate trophies for matches between several clubs.

Sir Doug Nicholls Round

Perhaps the most well-known of the themed rounds is the Indigenous Round. In 2007, following the success of the Dreamtime at the 'G matches in 2005 and 2006, the AFL nominated a specific Indigenous Round (round 9), which has become an annual event in which the Dreamtime at the 'G match takes centre stage on a Saturday night. The success of the annual match, which now usually features crowds in excess of 80,000, led to the two clubs agreeing to cement the match arrangement for an additional decade in May 2016.[65]

In 2016, the round was named after Sir Doug Nicholls, the only VFL player to have been knighted and who served as a state governor (of South Australia). The round is now officially named the Sir Doug Nicholls Round.[66] [67] Each year, each player in all 18 clubs wears a specially commissioned artwork by an Indigenous artist on their guernsey,[68] and some clubs rebrand with Indigenous club names in place of their regular names for the duration.

Finals series

See also: List of Australian Football League premiers.

The top eight teams at the end of the AFL Premiership season compete in a four-week finals series throughout September, culminating in a grand final to determine the premiers. The finals series is played under the AFL final eight system, and the grand final is traditionally played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on the afternoon of the last Saturday in September.

The winning team receives a silver premiership cup, a navy blue premiership flag – a new one of each is manufactured each year – and is recorded on the perpetual E. L. Wilson Shield. The flag has been presented since the league began and is traditionally unfurled at the team's first home game of the following season. The Wilson Shield, named after Edwin Lionel Wilson, was first awarded after the 1929 premiership.[69] The premiership cup was first introduced in 1959 and is manufactured annually by Cash's International at their metalworks in Frankston, Victoria.[70] Additionally, each player in the grand final–winning team receives a premiership medallion.

Awards

The following major individual awards and accolades are presented each season:

Other independent best and fairest awards are presented by different football and media organisations.

Team of the Century

To celebrate the 100th season of the VFL/AFL, the "AFL Team of the Century" was named in 1996.

Jack Elder was declared the Umpire of the Century to coincide with the Team of the Century. Since the naming of this side, most AFL clubs have nominated their own teams of the century. An Indigenous Team of the Century was also selected in 2005, featuring the best Aboriginal players of the previous 100 years from both the VFL/AFL and other state leagues.

Representative football

State football

See main article: article and Interstate matches in Australian rules football. State representation football in the AFL initially ended in 1999. The concept has been revived twice since then in 2008 and 2020 when a Victorian state team took on all stars teams (in 2008 against The Dream Team and in 2020 against the All Stars).[71] [72]

History of the VFL/AFL's involvement

VFL players first represented the Victoria representative team in 1897 regardless of their state of origin.

Being the dominant league drawing many of the country's best players, the Victoria Australian rules football team (nicknamed the "Big V" and composed mostly of VFL players) dominated interstate matches until the introduction of State of Origin selection criteria by the Australian Football Council in 1977, after which Victoria's results with the other main Australian football states became more even.

The AFL assumed control of interstate football in 1993 and coordinated an annual State of Origin series typically held during a mid-season bye round.

However, after the 1999 series, the AFL declared the concept of interstate football "on hold", citing club unwillingness to release star players and a lack of public interest. Indeed, the 1999 series, where Victoria defeated South Australia by 54 points, was played in wet conditions in front of a crowd of 26,063, whereas 10 years earlier, the same match-up with a plethora of star players attracted a crowd of 91,960.

The AFL shifted its focus of representative football to the International Rules Series, where at the time in the late 1990s, drew a greater television revenue. A once-off representative match, known as the AFL Hall of Fame Tribute Match, was played in 2008 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the sport between a team of players of Victorian origin and a team of players of interstate origin (the "Dream Team"), which was won by Victoria.

In 2020, the AFL hosted a special one-off State of Origin match, with the money raised from the event going towards affected bushfire communities. On 28 February, the game took place at Marvel Stadium, with Victoria defeating an All-Stars team and Dustin Martin being declared best on ground.

Since 1996, some past AFL players participated and helped with the promoton of the E. J. Whitten Legends Game, although this, too, was put on indefinite hiatus following the 2019 edition.

Global market

Although no professional leagues or teams exist outside Australia, the AFL has stated that it wishes to showcase Australian rules football to other countries such as India, China and South Africa so as to create a global following, thus creating more exposure for its sponsors in the increasing Asian and African markets.[73] [74] On 17 October 2010, AFL clubs Melbourne Demons and Brisbane Lions played an exhibition game in front of 7,000 people at the Jiangwan Sports Center in Shanghai.[75] This was the first professional AFL game to be played in China. Since then, AFL premiership matches have been played in New Zealand and China, and the competition developed some interest in North America amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.[76]

International Rules Series

See also: International rules football. The AFL has garnered increased interest in Ireland due to the introduction of the International Rules Series played between an AFL-picked Australian Team (sourced entirely from All-Australian players since 2004) and Ireland international rules football team beginning from 1984. The series is organised under the auspices of the AFL and the Gaelic Athletic Association.[77] The game itself is a hybrid sport, consisting of rules from both Australian football and Gaelic football. The series provides the only outlet for AFL players to represent their nation.[78] This series encouraged young Irish footballers switching code to join AFL teams because, whilst the Gaelic Football is strictly amateur, the AFL is fully professional, thus players can make a living out of playing AFL. However, some Irish players fail to make the grade into the very competitive AFL.[79] This also paved the way for extended news coverage and increased broadcasting in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Around the same time that the inaugural International Rules Series commenced, Australian Football Hall of Fame Legend Ron Barassi launched the Irish experiment, which scouted and recruited dozens of Irishmen (usually Gaelic footballers) with potential for crossing over to playing in the AFL. This resulted in successful recruitmant and training of Australian Hall of Famer Jim Stynes among other successful players.

Corporate governance

See main article: AFL Commission.

See also: List of VFL/AFL commissioners and club presidents. The AFL is governed by directors known as the AFL Commission. The commission was established in December 1985 and replaced the board of directors elected by and representing the original member clubs in 1993,[80] after the club parochialism and self-interest which came with the traditional club delegate based administrative structure threatened to undermine the competition.

The commission chairman is Richard Goyder, who took over from Mike Fitzpatrick on 4 April 2017. The CEO of the AFL is Andrew Dillon.[81] [82]

In addition to administering the national competition, the AFL is heavily involved in promoting and developing the sport in Australia. It provides funds for local leagues and in conjunction with local clubs, administers the Auskick program for young boys and girls.

The AFL also plays a leading role in developing the game outside Australia, with projects to develop the game at junior level in other countries (e.g. South Africa) and by supporting affiliated competitions around the world (See Australian football around the world).

The players of the AFL are represented by the AFL Players Association, the coaches are represented by the AFL Coaches Association, the umpires are represented by the AFL Umpires Association and the related media employees are represented by the Australian Football Media Association.

Audience

The AFL was the best-attended sporting league in Australia in 2012.[83] According to market research, the AFL is the second-most-watched sporting event in Australia, behind cricket.[84] Currently, broadcast rights for the AFL are shared between the Seven Network (free-to-air), Foxtel (pay TV) and Kayo Sports (internet). In 2019, a record 1,057,572 people were members of an AFL club.[85] TV audiences during the 2022 AFL season totalled 125.4 million viewers, with an average of 537,000 people watching each match; the TV audience for the 2023 AFL Grand Final was 4.98 million—plus an additional 756,000 on 7plus, for a total of 5.736 million[86] [87] [88] —and the game was seen by 100,024 stadium spectators, which was exactly the same as the 2022 AFL Grand Final. Excluding the grand final (which is exclusive to Seven Network in Australia), 54% of viewers watched using the paid services of Foxtel or Kayo in 2022, while 46% watched the Seven Network's free-to-air broadcasts.[89]

Attendance

The following are the most recent season attendances:

YearHome and AwayAverageFinals1Average1Grand final
7,474,684236,110 664,780 73,864 100,0242
6,112,431 30,871 639,980 71,109 100,0242
20216 3,976,228 19,209 272,746 30,305 61,118
20206 826,458 6,665 206,579 22,953 29,7077
6,954,187 35,122 563,460 62,607 100,014
6,894,772 34,822 700,3932 77,8212 100,022
6,734,062 34,010 553,818 61,535 100,021
6,311,656 31,877 558,343 62,038 99,981
6,367,302 32,321 518,694 57,663 98,633
6,403,941 32,343 570,568 63,39699,454
6,372,784 32,186 558,391 62,043 100,007
6,238,876 31,509 538,934 59,882 99,683
6,533,138 34,937 614,250 68,250 99,537
6,494,564 36,901 651,764 65,176 100,0164 and 93,8535
6,375,622 36,225 615,463 68,385 99,251
6,512,999 37,0062571,760 63,258 100,012
6,475,521 36,793 575,424 63,936 97,302
6,204,056 35,250 532,178 59,131 97,431
6,283,788 35,703 480,112 53,346 91,8983
5,909,836 33,579 458,326 50,925 77,6713
5,876,515 33,389 478,425 53,158 79,4513
5,648,021 32,091 449,445 49,938 91,817
5,919,026 33,631 525,993 58,444 91,482
5,731,091 32,563 566,562 62,951 96,249
5,768,611 32,776 472,007 52,445 94,228
6,119,861 34,772 572,733 63,637 94,431
5,853,449 33,258 560,406 62,267 99,645
5,222,266 29,672 478,773 53,197 93,102
5,119,694 29,089 594,919 66,102 93,678

1 Finals total and Finals average include grand final crowds.
2 Record.
3 Capacity reduced due to MCG refurbishment.
4 Crowd for the drawn grand final.
5 Crowd for the grand final replay, played one week after the drawn grand final.
6 Attendance reduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
7 Capacity reduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Television

Australian television

See also: List of Australian Football League television shows. AFL matches are currently broadcast in Australia by the free-to-air Seven Network and subscription television provider Foxtel. The current deal was announced in August 2015 and covered the inclusive 2017–2022 seasons.[90] In 2020, the deal was extended until 2024 inclusive.

The Seven Network broadcasts an average of three-and-a-half games a round; Friday Night, Saturday Night, Sunday Afternoon and any Thursday or Monday Night matches that may occur throughout the year. Channel Seven also airs the AFL Finals Series and the AFL Grand Final. Foxtel broadcasts every match through their Fox Footy channels, including simulcasts from the Seven Network except for the grand final, which is aired exclusively on Channel Seven. Foxtel also has the rights to air rounds on their internet protocol television platform titled Foxtel Now, as well as via the sports streaming service Kayo.

Telecast history

The 1957 VFL season was the first broadcast after the commencement of television in Australia (introduced in 1956 to coincide with the Melbourne Olympic Games). During the late 1950s and 1960s, all Melbourne stations (ABV2, HSV7, GTV9 and, after it commenced in 1965, ATV0/ATV10) broadcast some games. However, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the VFL was concerned that direct telecasts may affect attendances and stations were only permitted to telecast a delayed replay of the last quarter of games. From 1974 until 1986, the Seven Network and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) were given exclusive rights to VFL/AFL games. The only year Seven did not telecast games was 1987 when the rights were bought by Broadcom, which on-sold the rights to the ABC in Victoria. Seven regained the rights in 1988 and also exclusive rights.

With the launch of subscription television in Australia, AFL match coverage commenced on cable television. Optus Vision bid for and won exclusive pay-TV rights from 1996 to 2001, screening coverage on its own 24-hour AFL channel, branded Sports AFL in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne (where available). The Sports AFL channel was later closed due to financial issues and relaunched in March 1999 as C7 Sport by the Seven Network with AFL match coverage also transferred to the new channel. C7 Sport became available in regional areas not in the Foxtel or Optus Vision licence area via Austar soon after the re-launch. The AFL coverage was not available through Foxtel at this time as the Seven Network and Foxtel disagreed on the cost of carrying the C7 channel. These issues regarding C7 and AFL broadcasting rights evolved into a court case between not just the Seven Network and News Limited but Seven against the owners of the Nine Network and Network Ten in the years that followed.

On 25 January 2001, the Seven Network's main rivals, the Kerry Packer led Nine Network, Network Ten and pay-TV's Foxtel set up a consortium which bid $500 million for the right to broadcast the 20022006 seasons inclusive. Seven had purchased a guaranteed right to make the last bid in 1995,[91] but decided not to outbid their rivals.[92] The games were split between the networks, with Nine screening Friday Night Football, a live Sunday afternoon game in the east and, if needed, a doubleheader for WA and SA, Ten screened a Saturday afternoon and a Saturday night match, with the remaining three matches shown on Foxtel. Foxtel set up its own version of a dedicated AFL-only channel, the Fox Footy Channel, which showed every game on replay during the week, as well as many news, talkback and general interest shows related to Australian rules football.[93]

When the rights were offered again in January 2006 for the 2007 to 2011 seasons, Seven formed an alliance with Ten and used its guaranteed last bid rights to match Nine's offer of $780 million to win back the broadcast rights in what was the biggest sport telecasting deal in Australian history at the time. After lengthy negotiations, Foxtel agreed to be a broadcast partner and showed four live matches each week, although no longer on a dedicated AFL channel.[91] Seven took back the Friday night match and only one game on Sunday, while Ten retained showing two matches on Saturdays. Foxtel showed two games on Saturday and two on Sunday, including a late afternoon or twilight game.[94]

The 2012–2016 rights were bought by Seven, Foxtel and Telstra for $1.25 billion, the biggest sport telecasting deal in Australian history at the time. As part of the deal, Foxtel would show all home-and-away AFL matches live, as well as all Finals bar the grand final, via the resurrected Fox Footy. Telstra would broadcast all matches via mobile and Seven would broadcast three live matches (Friday night, Saturday night and Sunday afternoon) and one delayed match (Saturday afternoon). Seven also had the option to on-sell one game a week to either Nine or Ten; this did not happen.[95] [96]

The 2017–2022 rights were re-bought by Seven, Foxtel and Telstra for $2.5 billion, besting the previous deal to become the most lucrative in Australian history at the time. Under the terms of the deal, Seven broadcasts at least three live matches per round as well as all Finals matches, whilst Foxtel broadcasts (or simulcasts Seven's feed) all nine matches per round, as well as all Finals bar the grand final, which is exclusively broadcast by Seven. Telstra continues to maintain exclusive mobile broadcast rights to all matches.[90] There are some variations in broadcasting dependent on the relevant state or territory.[97] The agreement with Seven, Foxtel and Telstra was extended in 2020 by two years to include the 2023 and 2024 seasons.

In 2021 Telstra's AFL streaming service, AFL Live Pass, was removed and replaced with access to Kayo, run by Hubbl (then called Streamotion), a wholly owned subsidiary of Foxtel.[98]

The 2025–2031 rights were re-bought by Seven, Foxtel and Telstra for $4.5 billion, once again besting the previous deal to become the most lucrative in Australian history. As part of the deal, Seven would show three-and-a-half games a week on average during the home-and-away season, as well as all Finals and the Brownlow Medal. This includes Thursday Night games for the first 15 rounds of each season and streaming rights to all matches they broadcast via 7+. Fox Footy would continue to show every home-and-away game and every final live bar the Grand Final via Foxtel and Kayo. All Foxtel matches will have Fox Footy commentary, including simulcasts of Channel Seven matches and Saturday matches will be exclusive to Fox Footy for the first eight rounds bar any marquee matches. These arrangements differ outside of Victoria, where every local team's match will be broadcast on free-to-air, most of them live.[99]

International broadcasts

International broadcast history

Historically AFL broadcasts in other countries have varied.

In late 1979, the brand new ESPN cable network signed the league's first international TV contract. Coverage began with the 1980 season with matches airing on late Friday and Saturday nights, sometimes live but usually one or two week tape delayed to up to 2.5 million subscribers.[100] At the time, reports indicated ESPN paid the VFL nearly $100,000 (the VFL's Australian TV rights deal at the time was just $600,000[101]). The 1983 VFL Grand Final was the first time in history that the Grand Final was broadcast live into the US.[102] Coverage continued on ESPN until 1986, when the sport was dropped after which it was not broadcast in the US for over a decade.

New Zealand was the second country which held broadcast rights in 1980, with highlight packages with the Grand Final going live into the country.[103]

In the early 1990s, American regional sports network Prime Sports (unrelated to the Australian regional television network) aired Seven's weekly highlight show as well as the grand final. Some other English speaking countries have shown the game, however, it has been since 2008 that channels in other countries began televising matches. From 1998 to 2006 games were broadcast in the United States by the Fox Sports World network.[104]

In 2007, after the record domestic television rights deal, the AFL secured an additional bonus: greater international television rights and increase exposure to overseas markets, including a five-year deal with Setanta Sports and new deals with other overseas pay-TV networks. The deal ended early in 2009 when Setanta stopped broadcasting into Great Britain. ESPN again took up the contract.[105]

Additionally, AFL games can be shown in Irish pubs and sport pubs by request in Bangkok although Thailand has no AFL rights because these pubs have subscribed internet cable services.

International broadcast partners

The following countries are ranked by the approximate extent of their current television coverage (and whether it is free to air):

Station/Channel Countries Free/Subscription Home & Away Finals Grand final Broadcasting since Notes
Africa Subscription One game per week (live/delay) Live See also Australian rules football in Africa
Canada Subscription Two games per week (live/replay) Live See also Australian rules football in Canada, AFANA
Caribbean Subscription Four games per week (live/highlights/replay) Live Live
Ireland Free One game per week (highlights) See also Australian rules football in Ireland
Ireland Subscription See also Australian rules football in Ireland
Free Up to three games per week (highlights) Live LiveSee also Australian rules football in Papua New Guinea
Free One game per week, replay also available Live Live See also Australian rules football in Fiji
Free One game per week Live Live See also Australian rules football in China
People's Republic of China Free One game per week Live Live See also Australian rules football in China
Asia-Pacific region
Indian Subcontinent
Middle East
Free (may required subscription in selected operators) Five games per week Yes Live
Europe Free One game per week (highlights/live/replay) Live See also Australian rules football in Europe
Israel Subscription See also Australian rules football in the Middle East
Latin America
Brasil
Subscription Eight games per week (live/replay) Live Live
Middle East
North Africa
Subscription
New Zealand Subscription Up to two games per week (live/delayed) + highlights See also Australian rules football in New Zealand
Spain Free highlights, delayed matches 2009 See also Australian rules football in Spain
United Kingdom Subscription See also Australian rules football in the United Kingdom
TNT SportsSubscription Three games per week (highlights/live/replay) 2013 See also Australian rules football in the United Kingdom, See also Australian rules football in Ireland
United States Subscription Up to three games per week, some finals Yes 2013 See also Australian rules football in the United States, AFANA
United States Subscription varying number of games per week, some finals, grand final Yes See also Australian rules football in the United States, AFANA
United States Subscription "Game of the Week" (one-week delay; highlights) Live See also Australian rules football in the United States, AFANA
Viasat Sport[106] Russia
Other CIS countries
Live See also Australian rules football in Russia
TVWanat least 6 games per weekLive Live TVWan, TVWan Sports and TVWan Sports 2
Sport1Subscription 3 games per weekLive Live 2022 all on Sport1+

Radio

The first broadcast of a VFL game was by 3AR in 1923, the year that licensed broadcasting commenced in Australia. The first commentator was Wallace (Jumbo) Shallard, a former Geelong player who went on to have a long and respected career in print and broadcast media. The VFL/AFL has been broadcast every year since then by the ABC and (since 1927) by various commercial stations. The saturation period was the early 1960s when seven of the eight extant radio stations (3AR, 3UZ, 3DB, 3KZ, 3AW, 3XY and 3AK) broadcast VFL games each week, as well as broadcasts of Geelong games by local station 3GL. (At this time, the only alternative that radio listeners had to listen to the football on a Saturday afternoon were the classical music and fine arts programs that were broadcast by 3LO).

The AFL's contracted radio broadcast partners are:

Non-English radio

The vast majority of radio broadcasting is done in English. However, ethnic radio stations broadcast the AFL in a variety of languages, including Arabic, Chinese, Greek, Hindi and Spanish.[107] Many also broadcast in Indigenous languages,[108] as the sport is very popular among Indigenous Australians.

StationLanguageState/territoryReference(s)
Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA)ArrernteNorthern Territory
Top End Aboriginal Bush Broadcasting Association (TEABBA)TiwiNorthern Territory
Yolŋu RadioYolŋuNorthern Territory

Internet

The AFL's contracted internet/mobile broadcast partner is Telstra. The AFL also provides exclusive broadband content, including streaming video for international fans, via its website. Telstra also hosts the websites of all the 18 AFL clubs.

However, the website is frequently derided by users for its convoluted information architecture and bloated presentation.[109] [110]

Since 2012, Telstra has broadcast live matches over its Next G mobile network for a pay-per-view or season fee.[111]

Since 2019, Kayo has broadcast every game, except the Grand Final, live. In Feb 2021, Telstra terminated the AFL Live Pass service, replacing it with access to Kayo at a discount for Telstra customers.

Streaming rights outside of Australia for full games are currently held by the Watch AFL subscription service operated by Fox Sports Australia.

Corporate relations

Sponsorship

The VFL/AFL's competition naming sponsors have been:

The AFL's contracted print media partner is News Corp Australia. The AFL Record is a match-day magazine published by the AFL and is read by around 225,000 people each week.

Membership

The AFL sells memberships that entitle subscribers to reserve seats for matches at Docklands Stadium and the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne. AFL members also receive priority access to finals. Three levels of memberships are offered, bronze, silver and full (gold). Only full members have guaranteed access to preliminary and grand final matches. Bronze members are restricted to fewer matches at the MCG only.[112]

Merchandising

The AFL runs a chain of stores that sell merchandise from all clubs. Merchandise is also available from other retailers.

AFL World

A modern museum called the Hall of Fame and Sensation opened in Melbourne in 2003 to celebrate the culture of the AFL and to provide a venue for the Australian Football Hall of Fame. The museum, a licensed offshoot of the AFL, was originally touted for the MCG but the Hall of Fame failed to receive support from the Melbourne Cricket Club. The new QV shopping centre on Swanston Street was then chosen as the location. However, controversy followed the appointment of an administrator as the museum began running at a loss. Many blamed high entry prices, which were subsequently reduced and the museum remained open to the public. In early 2006 the name was changed to AFL World. It featured various honour boards and memorabilia as well as a range of innovative interactive displays designed to immerse visitors in the experience of elite Australian rules football. It was closed in 2008.

Video games

See main article: AFL (video game series).

The following is a list of all the video games from the AFL video game series:

Gambling

The AFL is the subject of footy tipping and betting competitions around Australia run by individuals, syndicates, workplaces and professional bookmakers. In recent years national website based tipping competitions have started to replace the traditional but more labour-intensive, office or pub run competitions.

Fantasy football competitions based on actual player statistics (number of kicks, marks, goals etc.) are also very popular on websites and in newspapers.

Activism

LGBTIQ policy

The AFL has declared its support for LGBTIQ community, organising pride games in June 2017.[113] In September 2017, in conjunction with the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey, the AFL modified its logo sign at Docklands Stadium support of same-sex marriage (however, only for 24 hours).[114] [115] However, there has never been an openly gay AFL player, past or present, making the AFL the only major professional sporting code in the world where this is the case.[116] AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan has stated that "the pressure and the weight of being... the first AFL player who comes out and plays as an out, gay man" was too much of a burden for the known gay players in the league to come out. The AFL has also stated that it will be "proud to stand shoulder to shoulder" with any player who comes out.[117] Former players and officials have suggested that a much stronger reasons for the lack of out gay players is a culture of homophobia and silence within the AFL, with former captain and ally Bob Murphy recalling shamefully his offhanded use of homophobic slurs as a young player. Homophobic language remains a problem at games with legal recommendations from the Australian Sports Commission made in 2000 to address this still not implemented.

In 2015 the Sydney Swans played a pre-season game at Drummoyne Oval against Fremantle Dockers as a Pride Game. This became an annual event, which has grown from year to year in strength and support. The club has Sydney an official LGBTQIA+ supporter group, Rainbow Swans.[118]

In September 2017 the AFL ruled that Hannah Mouncey, a transgender woman, was ineligible for selection in the 2018 AFLW draft.[119] There has been some opposition to the AFL's decision.[120] [121]

It has been suggested that the men's game could do more to promote inclusivity, as has been done in the AFLW. The AFLW Pride Round has been officially held since 2021, although there were individual AFLW clubs who had played Pride games since 2018. The intention of the Pride Round is to celebrate gender diversity, promote inclusion for LGBTIQA+ players, and to help stamp out homophobia.[122] [123] All 18 clubs support the round.[124] the men's league had no plans to introduce a Pride Round in the men's game.[125] [126]

Voice to Parliament

The AFL supported the creation of an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, ahead of the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum.[127]

Lawsuits

In 2023, a group of former players began a class-action lawsuit against the league regarding the concussions that they suffered while playing. The case is similar to the cases including cases against the NFL and the NHL.[128] [129]

In 2023, former female umpire Libby Toovey is taking the league to the Fair Work Commission, claiming that she was dismissed after uncovering systemic abuse of female umpires by the league.[130]

See also

Lists

External links

Statistics and results
Major AFL news websites

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tasmania has signed deal with AFL to establish state team 'after decades of fighting', premier says. ABC News. 3 May 2023. 3 May 2023.
  2. News: The Victorian Football Association . 19 March 1897 . North Melbourne Courier and West Melbourne Advertiser . 72 . North Melbourne . 3 .
  3. Web site: McConville . Andrew . Player payments and the great bribery scandal . 5 May 2020 . State Library Victoria . 12 May 2020.
  4. News: The University Team. 18 September 1914. The Argus. Melbourne. 4.
  5. News: Exit University – Football League Retirement . 17 October 1914 . The Argus. Melbourne. 20.
  6. Wilson, David; “QC warns of Loopholes in League Rules: VFL Zoning in Doubt”; The Age, 23 July 1981; p. 26
  7. Booth, Ross; “History of Player Recruitment, Transfer and Payment Rules in the Victorian and Australian Football League”; in ASSH Bulletin No. 26 (June 1997); pp. 13–33
  8. News: The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. First NFL Cup match next month. 15 April 1976. 18. Barry Rollings.
  9. News: The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. Rules pools plan. 16 November 1976. 18.
  10. News: The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. VFL criticised. 12 November 1976. 22.
  11. News: The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. $2m night-football plan. 28 June 1978. 36.
  12. Web site: 1979 NFL Escort Cup . David . Eastman . 15 November 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180731062154/http://www.hardballget.net/npm-nfl-1979-escort-cup.html . 31 July 2018 . live .
  13. Web site: National Panasonic Cup . 28 December 2015 . AustralianFootball.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20161220171452/http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/afl/138/national%2Bpanasonic%2Bcup/11/12/1987/basic . 20 December 2016 . live .
  14. Book: Stewart, Bob . Sport Funding and Finance . 2nd . 31 July 2017 . Routledge . 9781134470846 . 30 October 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181030170351/https://books.google.com.au/books?id=6HE9BAAAQBAJ&pg=PT118&lpg=PT118&dq=afl+players+wages+1980+1990&source=bl&ots=mWHRd2Z4gc&sig=4p021o5oEyHfb0Q8i2S4sl8sszI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjPuqHxi63eAhXDQY8KHSjvDxk4ChDoATABegQIBhAB#v=onepage&q=afl%20players%20wages%201980%201990&f=false . 30 October 2018 . live .
  15. News: Timeline of VFL/AFL Broadcast Rights. 28 July 2014. Footy Industry. 30 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181030090822/http://www.footyindustry.com/?page_id=597. 30 October 2018. live.
  16. News: When the draft blew in. Emma Quayle. Emma. Quayle. The Age. 17 November 2006 . http://newsstore.fairfax.com.au/apps/viewDocument.ac?page=1&sy=nstore&docID=AGE0611184V1H51J4CQJ . 18 November 2006.
  17. Powerplay Limited and Sydney Swans Limited financial reports
  18. Sydney Swans Limited constitution
  19. News: AUSTRALIAN FOOTBAll . . 55 . 16,459 . 18 October 1980 . 4 May 2016 . 48 . National Library of Australia .
  20. Book: Oakley, Ross. The Phoenix Rises. Slattery Media Group. 2014. 9780987420596 . Melbourne, Victoria . 244 .
  21. Book: Oakley, Ross. The Phoenix Rises. Slattery Media Group. 2014. 9780987420596. Melbourne, Victoria . 131.
  22. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. Peter Simunovich. 78. 24 July 1987. Top WAFL clubs eye VFL spot .
  23. Book: Linnell, Garry. Football Ltd. Pan Macmillan Australia. Sydney. 1995. 0-330-35665-8. 297.
  24. News: About Us. AFLPA. 26 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181026104316/http://www.aflplayers.com.au/about-us/. 26 October 2018. live.
  25. Web site: Flashback 1993: Fremantle announced as the 16th AFL team. The Age. Browne. Ashley. Brown. Mal. 14 December 2018. 13 July 2020.
  26. News: ABN lookup . 8 April 2007 . . 14 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071016064656/http://abr.business.gov.au/(z2yvqy2wuqpjll2idwocz5vz)/search.aspx?StartSearch=True&SearchText=43054263473 . 16 October 2007 . live .
  27. Wilson, Caroline; Raid on home turf of league ; Realfooty.com.au; 16 February 2008
  28. Web site: AFL . 6 August 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121005010530/http://www.goldcoast.com.au/article/2010/07/23/241201_gold-coast-afl.html . 5 October 2012 . live .
  29. Web site: Holmesby. Luke. Riewoldt proud to be part of historic occasion. Official website. . 27 April 2013. 24 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131023005633/http://www.saints.com.au/news/2013-04-24/riewoldt-proud-to-be-part-of-historic-occasion. 23 October 2013. live.
  30. News: Wilson. Caroline. We want AFL team: Kiwis. The Age. 27 April 2013. 26 April 2013. Melbourne. https://web.archive.org/web/20130427070955/http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/we-want-afl-team-kiwis-20130425-2ihk7.html. 27 April 2013. live.
  31. Web site: Matthews . Bruce . Eight teams named for inaugural women's league . Australian Football League . 15 June 2016 . 15 June 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160616181119/http://www.afl.com.au/news/2016-06-15/eight-teams-named-for-inaugural-womens-league . 16 June 2016 . live .
  32. Web site: North and Geelong win AFLW expansion race . Australian Football League . 27 September 2017 . 14 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171102113910/http://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-09-27/afl-set-to-reveal-new-womens-teams-for-2019 . 2 November 2017 . live .
  33. News: Black. Sarah. 'Changing forever and for the better': Final four clubs complete AFLW. womens.afl. 12 August 2021. 12 August 2021.
  34. Web site: AFL rocked by huge job losses on dark day. News.com.au. 24 August 2020.
  35. News: AFL breaks all-time club membership record. afl.com.au. 6 September 2023. 6 September 2023.
  36. News: The Argus. The University Team. 18 September 1914. 4. Melbourne.
  37. News: The Argus. Exit University – Football League Retirement. 17 October 1914. 20. Melbourne.
  38. Web site: University Blues Football Club. Victorian Amateur Football Association. 12 July 2020.
  39. Web site: The old Lion roars again as Fitzroy is reborn. Damian. Barrett. 12 July 2020. 9 December 2008. Herald Sun. 5 May 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090505050145/http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,24771588-19742,00.html. dead.
  40. http://afltables.com/afl/venues/overall.html All venues
  41. http://www.austadiums.com/stadiums/stadiums.php?id=71 Melbourne Cricket Ground
  42. Web site: Done deal: AFL signs off on Etihad Stadium purchase. 7 October 2016. Australian Football League. https://web.archive.org/web/20161007123015/http://www.afl.com.au/news/2016-10-07/done-deal-afl-signs-off-on-etihad-stadium-purchase. 7 October 2016.
  43. http://www.afl.com.au/venue%20information/tabid/82/default.aspx AFL Venues
  44. http://www.saints.com.au/news/2012-09-12/nz-all-your-questions-answered.default NZ: All your questions answered | St Kilda website. Retrieved 17 April 2013
  45. Web site: New Tigers unveiled today – Official AFL Website of the Richmond Football Club. 11 December 2012. Richmond Football Club. 11 December 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121212045641/http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/6301/newsid/152285/default.aspx. 12 December 2012. dmy-all.
  46. Web site: Rookie Rule Amendments. https://www.webcitation.org/6JoyRrgWr?url=http://mm.afl.com.au/Portals/0/2012/MemoRookiesAug14.pdf. dead. 22 September 2013. Anderson. Adrian. 14 August 2012. AFL. 3. 11 December 2012.
  47. News: Players' trade surprise. 6 August 2011. Samantha. Lane. Melbourne. The Age. 3 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140812200403/http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/players-trade-surprise-20110805-1iflg.html. 12 August 2014. live.
  48. News: Free agency becomes a reality . Greg. Denham . The Australian . 24 February 2010.
  49. News: AFL rejects free agency . Craig . O'Donoghue . 25 October 2003 . Melbourne . The Age . 3 April 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20031207235651/http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/10/24/1066974315369.html . 7 December 2003 . live .
  50. http://www.afl.com.au/news/2014-06-04/equalisation-changes-explained The AFL's equalisation changes explained
  51. Web site: Millionaires' club explodes. www.afl.com.au. Nick. Bowen. Peter. Ryan. 25 January 2013. 20 December 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131220081232/http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-01-25/millionaires-club-explodes. 20 December 2013. dead.
  52. Web site: Massive pay hike for AFL top dog . Fox Sports . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070328174906/http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,21424440-23211,00.html?from=news . 28 March 2007 . Denham . Greg . 22 March 2007 .
  53. News: AFL clears Buddy Franklin's $10m move . The Australian . 8 October 2013 . Greg . Denham . 20 December 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140515061116/http://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/afl/afl-clears-buddys-10m-move/story-fnca0u4y-1226735072406 . 15 May 2014 . live .
  54. Web site: Nathan . Schmook . Lee . Gaskin . Players get 20 per cent pay rise in new CBA . AFL.com.au . 20 June 2017 . 20 June 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170620120200/http://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-06-20/players-get-20-per-cent-pay-rise-in-new-cba . 20 June 2017 . live .
  55. http://www.afl.com.au/tabid/208/default.aspx?newsid=104876 2011 club lists
  56. http://aflcommunityclub.com.au/index.php?id=790 2014 Indigenous Players List
  57. http://www.worldfootynews.com/staticpages/index.php/AFL_players_international_connections Current AFL players with strong international connections
  58. http://www.worldfootynews.com/article.php/20080317000031196 International recruitment about to explode?
  59. http://www.worldfootynews.com/staticpages/index.php/International_Scholarship_Listed Current players listed via the AFL's International Scholarship List
  60. News: A multicultural AFL? Not quite. The Age. 13 July 2013. Ian. Syson. 11 April 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402191025/http://www.theage.com.au/comment/a-multicultural-afl-not-quite-20130712-2pvik.html#ixzz2tCInzIJn. 2 April 2015. live.
  61. Web site: A coin toss? How AFL tie-breakers work on the final round ladder. The Age. 20 August 2019. 16 August 2022.
  62. Web site: Collingwood and Essendon leave lasting Anzac Day legacy. Melbourne Cricket Ground Organisation. Melbourne Cricket Club. 18 April 2019. 7 July 2019.
  63. Web site: Bartel: Easter Monday is Cats' annual blockbuster. The Age. Bartel. Jimmy. 20 April 2014. 7 July 2020.
  64. Web site: Big Freeze 3 at the 'G and the annual Queen's Birthday clash on Seven. Yahoo! Sports. 7 June 2017. 7 July 2020.
  65. Web site: Tigers, Dons lock in Dreamtime at the 'G. 26 May 2016. Richmond FC. 16 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20170312201139/http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2016-05-25/essendon-richmond-lock-in-dreamtime-match. 12 March 2017. live.
  66. News: The Guardian. AFL to honour Sir Doug Nicholls in 2016 Indigenous round. 28 October 2016. 30 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190529025053/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2015/oct/28/afl-to-honour-sir-doug-nicholls-in-2016-indigenous-round. 29 May 2019. live.
  67. Web site: Sir Doug Nicholls Round . afl.com.au . 23 December 2019 . 16 February 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200216031538/https://www.afl.com.au/sir-doug-nicholls-round . 16 February 2020 . live .
  68. News: AFL Indigenous guernseys revealed and the stories behind them. The Age. Charlotte. Grieve. 22 May 2019. 30 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190530021800/https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/afl-indigenous-guernseys-revealed-and-the-stories-behind-them-20190521-p51pme.html. 30 May 2019. live.
  69. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne. Old tradition returns. 1 September 2016. 69. Gilbert Gardiner.
  70. Web site: Mitchell . Peter . Mitch Matters: Brownlow medals are made in Frankston . Mornington Peninsula Leader . 12 November 2021 . 10 September 2018 . Cash’s created the first Premiership Cup in 1959, from a design drawn by then VFL President, Sir Kenneth Luke....Incredibly, that’s not the end of Cash’s work with the AFL. You name any AFL or AFLW award and it is made in Frankston, including the Premiership Cups..
  71. Web site: Cornes calls for Origin return . Robertson . Doug . 13 January 2009 . 10 March 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070310213753/http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,21284443-5012456,00.html . dead . . 25 February 2007.
  72. News: Rodney Eade supports return of State of Origin . Jon . Anderson . . 10 May 2012 . https://archive.today/20120905172501/http://www.heraldsun.com.au/afl/more-news/rodney-eade-supports-return-of-state-of-origin/story-e6frf9jf-1226351811775 . 5 September 2012 . live .
  73. Web site: AFL hopes to net China. Herald Sun . 30 November 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110615074835/http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/afl-hopes-to-net-china/story-e6frf9jf-1225857803219 . 15 June 2011 . live .
  74. Web site: Crowd packs stadium for first official Aussie rules match in India . Herald Sun . 27 July 2017 . 27 July 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170731003446/http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/more-news/crowd-packs-stadium-for-first-official-aussie-rules-match-in-india/news-story/f3045e99cdc3e72e1d2d7ef727b85e86 . 31 July 2017 . live .
  75. Web site: Melbourne Demons down Brisbane Lions in Shanghai. 18 October 2010. The Roar. 16 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160917132700/http://www.theroar.com.au/2010/10/18/jurrah-stars-as-demons-win-in-shanghai/. 17 September 2016. live.
  76. Web site: 'About 6 punts a minute': US sports fans fall in love with Aussie footy codes amid COVID sports hiatus. 21 March 2020. Wide World of Sports.
  77. Web site: Croke Park had never seen anything like it. https://archive.today/20120720005645/http://www.aussierulesinternational.com/home/world/europe/ireland/international_rules/croke_park_had_never_seen_anything_like_it. dead. 20 July 2012. Aussie Rules International. 18 February 2019.
  78. Web site: International Rules history, rules and results. .afl.com.au. 3 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170403200354/http://www.afl.com.au/news/event-news/international-rules/history. 3 April 2017. live.
  79. Web site: The AFL is tempting Ireland's true promise. 22 October 2009. The Roar. 6 August 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150518093918/http://www.theroar.com.au/2009/10/22/the-afl-is-tempting-irelands-true-promise/. 18 May 2015. live.
  80. News: The Age. Melbourne. 37–38. Stephen Linnell. Patrick Smithers. 20 July 1993. United club stand forces AFL to back down on expulsion power.
  81. Web site: Beveridge . Riley . 1 May 2023 . 'Truly humbled': Andrew Dillon appointed new AFL CEO . 1 May 2023 . Australian Football League.
  82. Web site: The AFL Administration . AFL . 23 July 2024.
  83. http://www.convictcreations.com/football/battlestats.html Australia's Battle of the Codes – Statistics
  84. http://www.roymorganonlinestore.com/News/Cricket-and-AFL-dominate-sports-watched-on-TV.aspx Cricket and AFL dominate sports watched on TV
  85. https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-membership-ladder-2019-carltons-shock-rise-richmond-top-the-chart-sa-clubs-drop-off/news-story/8a5227832e7966699d48c83695ffa9cc "AFL membership ladder 2019: Carlton’s shock rise, Richmond top the chart, SA clubs drop off"
  86. Web site: Ryan . Aaron . 2023-10-01 . Ratings Seven's AFL Grand Final goes sky high - TV Central . 2023-10-01 . en-AU.
  87. Web site: 2023-10-01 . AFL grand final ratings fall short of Matildas . 2023-10-01 . Yahoo News . en-AU.
  88. Web site: Hope . Shayne . 2023-10-01 . AFL grand final ratings fall short of Matildas . 2023-10-01 . The Wimmera Mail-Times . en-AU.
  89. Web site: 2022 AFL TV Ratings . 9 November 2022 . Sports Industry AU .
  90. Web site: AFL announces record-breaking $2.5 billion television deal, pledges to establish code as Australia's foremost. ABC News. 19 August 2015. 13 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180626014116/http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-08-18/afl-announces-record-breaking-242.5-billion-television-deal/6706738. 26 June 2018. live.
  91. Day, Mark (1 February 2007); Pay TV strikes a deal on AFL ; The Australian
  92. Reynolds, Fiona (25 January 2001); Seven gives up AFL rights ; PM (ABC radio)
  93. http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/08/21/1029114135689.html Live and sweaty
  94. Barrett, Damian (20 January 2007); Foxtel in footy twilight zone; Herald Sun
  95. Web site: Fans the real winners as Seven bounces footy rivals . 14 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171023120241/http://www.news.com.au/finance/fans-the-real-winners-as-seven-bounces-footy-rivals/news-story/0951ae6f73fbfff31f8e4fafeb49d35a . 23 October 2017 . live .
  96. Web site: AFL Television Broadcast Rights 2012 - 2016. AFL. 23 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20110516040433/http://resources.news.com.au/files/2011/04/28/1226046/391336-hs-file-afl-tv-rights-deal.pdf. 16 May 2011. dead.
  97. Web site: 2017-2022 AFL Broadcast Rights Summary. AFL.com.au. 13 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180413221730/http://www.afl.com.au/tv-radio/20172022-broadcast-rights. 13 April 2018. dead.
  98. Web site: Duckett . Chris . Telstra bins AFL and NRL Live Pass streaming for Kayo . ZDNet . 17 September 2022.
  99. Web site: Statement from AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan on historic new broadcast rights agreement . AFL.com.au. 6 September 2022 .
  100. News: VFL on American TV . . 54 . 16,267 . Australian Capital Territory, Australia . 9 April 1980 . 14 November 2021 . 36 . National Library of Australia.
  101. http://www.footyindustry.com/?page_id=597 Timeline of VFL/AFL Broadcast Rights
  102. News: AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL . . 57 . 17,485 . Australian Capital Territory, Australia . 13 August 1983 . 17 December 2021 . 43 . National Library of Australia.
  103. News: Blues set for very tough game with Magpies . . 55 . 16,423 . Australian Capital Territory, Australia . 12 September 1980 . 17 December 2021 . 17 . National Library of Australia.
  104. http://www.backpagelead.com.au/afl/2585-afl-news-the-day-i-bought-the-afl-rights- The day I bought the AFL TV rights
  105. Web site: ESPN picks up AFL in UK and Ireland . 3 April 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130520102652/http://www.worldfootynews.com/article.php/2009080100090050 . 20 May 2013 . live .
  106. Web site: International Broadcast Partners .
  107. Web site: Multi-language AFL broadcasts growing . . 28 September 2023 .
  108. Web site: Three AFL games to be broadcast in First Nations languages . 19 May 2023 .
  109. http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies.cfm?t=688538 New AFL Website
  110. http://www.bigfooty.com/forum/showthread.php?t=429368&highlight=website New AFL website – how bad is it?
  111. Web site: Watch every AFL game this season on your Telstra mobile for $50 . www.eftm.com.au . 13 February 2012 . 15 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130321060259/http://eftm.com.au/2012/02/watch-every-afl-game-this-season-on-your-telstra-mobile-for-50-3792 . 21 March 2013 . live .
  112. Web site: Home – Australian Football League. 6 August 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20121015150301/http://www.aflmembership.com.au/join/afl-silver-membership-packages/. 15 October 2012. live.
  113. News: AFL pride game helping shift attitudes towards LGBTI community, research shows . 19 June 2017 . 14 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170925034038/http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-07-19/afl-pride-game-making-progress-in-fight-against-homophobia/8724542 . 25 September 2017 . live .
  114. News: Same-sex marriage: AFL redesigns logo to support 'Yes' campaign . 20 September 2017 . 14 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171128075855/http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/09/20/same-sex-marriage-afl-redesigns-logo-support-yes-campaign . 28 November 2017 . live .
  115. News: 21 September 2017 . The AFL has taken down the 'Yes' logo outside its Docklands headquarters . live . 14 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170921010243/https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/the-afl-has-taken-down-the-yes-logo-outside-its-docklands-headquarters/news-story/5383053cf093dab0abdc45d6305a24b4 . 21 September 2017.
  116. News: Milligan . Louise . 2023-08-21 . The AFL's never had an openly gay player. Insiders say a culture of homophobia lingers . en-AU . ABC News . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230924210442/https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-08-21/afl-gay-player-culture-homophobia-four-corners/102742466 . 24 September 2023.
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