Tuesday, March 25, 2008

2008 Dubai 9s


After a successful debut in 2007, the Dubai 9s returns again in March 2008. Officially known as the SMATS Dubai 9s, the tournament will take place on Friday, March 28.

Ten teams from Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Oman and Qatar will battle for the right to hold aloft the winner's trophy at the Sharjah Wanderers Sports Club.

The event was conceived by Aussie Rules International and the Dubai Dingoes in November 2006. Since then the region has also featured an AFL match between Adelaide and Collingwood, with the curtain-raiser featuring the Dingoes against local rivals the Dubai Heat.

For more information please visit www.dubaidingoes.com.

For map & directions to the ground please visit www.sharjahwanderers.com.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

UK keen to play


By Monique Crapper
The Warrnambool Standard
19 March 2008

AFL International Cup co-founder Brian Clarke was yesterday blown away with Warrnambool's football facilities.

In 1999 Clarke - the general manager of Aussie Rules UK - collaborated on the idea of an international competition with Aussie Rules New Zealand general manager Will McKenzie.

The duo approached the AFL with their concept and in 2002 the first cup carnival was held in conjunction with the VCFL.

Clarke visited Warrnambool yesterday on behalf of the UK team to inspect the football grounds, accommodation and tourist attractions.

Formerly from Darwin, Clarke said he had never visited Warrnambool but was overwhelmed with what was on offer.

"I have looked at all the venues and the grounds and they are awesome. I am blown away how good they are," he said.

"I have checked out Royal Park in Carlton where the other games will be played but Warrnambool thrashes them in the quality of grounds and facilities."


The English team is coached by Aussie ex-patriot Charlie Kielty and will be one of 18 sides competing for cup honours.

Clarke said AFL had taken off in England with the establishment of a junior competition in 2005.

Senior football kicked off in 1989 with six teams in London. An under 16 competition will be introduced this year.

"At the start of 2005 we had no juniors and now we have 5800 kids playing," Clarke said.

Aussie Rules UK is planning to send a junior team to Victoria in October for the international cup to accompany its senior side - the Great Britain Bulldogs.

While in town, Clarke and Hampden Football Netball League general manager Michael Harrison met with members from Warrnambool College to discuss playing a showcase match between the school and the British junior side.

Clarke said he would also make contact with Brauer and Geelong colleges.

"The international cup is a sensational event. It is not just about football but seeing other cultures and styles," he said.

Clarke was confident the Bulldogs would be semi-finalists at this year's carnival but expected stiff competition from New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Canada.

Harrison said the local football community had thrown its support behind the event with plans to play one match under lights in Cobden.

Monday, March 17, 2008

AFL a diverse world


Chelsea Roffey
AFL website
17 March, 2008

March 17-23 is Cultural Diversity Week, celebrating cultural, linguistic and religious diversity and community harmony.
When nine AFL players with Indigenous or international backgrounds took part in a photo shoot to mark the occasion, afl.com.au caught up with several of them to discuss how football has reflected cultural diversity in their lives.

James Gwilt: St Kilda

James was born in Melbourne. His mother is from Rabaul in Papua New Guinea and his father is from Wales.

"Dad used to play footy over in PNG, which is completely different to here. So I started playing through dad and my mates."

"He played for Port Moresby. He and his mate were the only two 'white fellas' playing. Everyone else was dark skinned – in the competition that is, so there were only two white blokes playing.

"He said it was pretty rough but it was good. The ground's usually rock-hard, so he's suffering a bit from that now with his feet. But he enjoyed it."

Nathan Djerruka: Geelong

Nathan grew up in Gove, in a small community in Arnhem Land. He played rugby union at boarding school before concentrating on Australian football.

"It was a pretty big thing on the weekend for all the families to get together and come and watch us play footy."

"In Darwin I went to a multicultural school, I went to school with black and white people. Everyone got along pretty well so I was lucky."

Aaron Edwards: North Melbourne

Aaron was born in Western Samoa and came to Australia with his family at age four.

"I played rugby [union] from under-nines to under-13s, and then soccer for a year."

"All my mates played footy, so I decided to take it up at under-14s. Everyone at school played it and I didn’t, so I thought I’d play with all my mates, and it was a good change.

"They [my family] all still follow rugby keenly because every kid in my family plays rugby. Over the past couple of years they’ve really got to know more about football, and know the rules and what’s going on and what’s good and what’s bad. They follow my football but they’re still very much into their rugby.

"It’s obviously helped me interact with a lot of different cultures as well and get along with a lot of different walks of life. I think it would help them [my family] as well, definitely.

Harry O'Brien: Collingwood

African-Brazilian Harry (Heritier) has lived in Australia since he was three years old and frequently returns to Brazil to visit family and friends. He first lived in Melbourne but the family later moved to Perth, where he played his junior football.

"When I first came to Australia, when I was younger coming through school, no-one really played soccer, which was the number one sport for Brazil. I suppose to make friends you’ve got to do what everyone else is doing, so I decided to take up football. And I really enjoyed it."

"They [my parents] were just happy to see me happy running around with all the kids. Soccer wasn’t really popular at that stage. It is now, but it wasn’t when I was younger.

"It's hard to interpret what the game means here because it's such a unique thing to Australia. It's such a foreign sport to Brazilians.”

Paddy Ryder: Essendon

Patrick grew up in Geraldton, four hours north of Perth, before being drafted to Essendon in 2005.

"I’ve been into footy since I was a little tacker, really. Footy’s a big part of my family. Everyone plays footy and is always having a kick. We saw rugby on TV but didn’t really take any interest because it was always footy for us."

"It’s good to have family and friends there for support. It’s fun playing and it’s sort of fun watching it as well so everyone can get involved in it.

"I’ve been pretty lucky. I haven’t had to deal with racism. I’ve got friends, mates and cousins who have been attacked. I reckon today it’s pretty much stamped out, the AFL and everyone who works with it has done a tremendous job so I reckon it’s been stamped out."

Will Thursfield: Richmond

Will was born in England and moved to Australia at age five. He has a soccer and cricket background in his family.

"My dad at first didn’t know much about footy, so I had to teach him a bit but now he’s a full Tigers fan and gets to every game."

"My cousins were over here first and they were big [Essendon] Bombers fans so we grew up going for the Bombers but the whole family’s Tigers now.

"I started footy in under-nines. All the kids at school were doing it so I joined in with them and caught on pretty quickly. We loved sport so it was pretty easy to fit in.

"I have grandparents and cousins in England. They like to get a DVD made up and send it over so they can keep track of my progress. I’m not sure they really know what’s going on – I think they just like seeing me on the tele."

Adam Yze: Albania

Adam's father was four when he came to Australia from Albania. The family grew up in Shepparton.

"I’ve played ever since I was little. It’s just something that’s been in our family, something we’ve always loved doing. I’ve got two brothers that played, they loved playing their sport. We have a massive wider group of cousins that always stuck together and we’ve always played in the same sort of teams."

"Especially being in a country town, sport’s such a big thing, and footy in general’s such a big thing, so it’s always kept us close.

"In little towns like that, little communities, sport’s massive, and footy’s the biggest sport going around. And it’s always something that’s been in our family.

"I’ve got younger cousins that are playing and hopefully they can look at it [what I’ve achieved] and really give it a go. Maybe try and get as far as they can and if I can help them with that then so be it.

"In the end you’ve got your parents you’re going to listen to and you’ve got your own role models but if you can give them some sort of inspiration than can help them, then I’ll do that."

Saturday, March 15, 2008

AFL targets overseas recruits

Michael Gleeson
The Age
March 15, 2008

CLUBS are being encouraged to aggressively cultivate international players under an AFL rule change yesterday that paves the way for academies in developing countries such as South Africa and Papua New Guinea.

The AFL Commission yesterday ratified a change to the international scholarship system that will quadruple the number of international players clubs can put on scholarship and slash the costs.

The clubs will be allowed to sign up to eight international players a year — up to a maximum of 24 players — and pay them as little as $1000 each a year. Clubs could previously sign six players and had to pay them $10,000 if they remained in their home country.

The existing requirement that clubs pay the player a minimum $24,000 each a year if they are relocated to Australia remains unchanged. Ireland also remains quarantined from the international scholarship system as a concession to the Gaelic Athletic Association.

Collingwood is exploring a football academy in South Africa and the change will better facilitate that. The larger group would also better justify the employment of a dedicated coach and football infrastructure.

"As yet no club has been active internationally other than in Ireland and we think these changes offer an incentive to see more players from places such as PNG, to see the first players coming through from places like South Africa," AFL game development executive David Matthews said.

"Expansion is a key AFL priority and as part of that expansion we want to work with clubs to aggressively expand the talent pool."

Matthews said the change in cost was a recognition of the lower cost of living in many of the target countries.

The AFL intention is not to restrict focus to South Africa as about 25 Samoans play in the National Rugby League, while a prospect for this year's AFL national draft is of Fijian heritage, Nick Naitanui.

The AFL made a similar change to the NSW scholarship program before Christmas, lifting to 24 the number of players clubs could sign from NSW.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Aussie Rules Zimbabwe


Aussie Rules has been a great success in South Africa and now plans are underway for a second African country to take up the world's greatest game.

Larry Ferrier is an Australian who is keen to establish Aussie Rules Zimbabwe. Married to a Zimbawe national, Larry has lived in Zimbabwe previously and is well aware of the challenges facing the country.

He hopes to use the sport of Australian football to make a difference and improve the quality of people's lives, with a focus on orphanages and street kids.

"We would love to introduce a specialised, possibly Auskick-style program to a number of these orphanages, to be able to give them a sustainable and highly enjoyable activity for the children to do. We would also work this in with us providing the children with nutritious meals to improve their health. Many of these kids eat a meal only once every couple of weeks, and survive on scraps and rubbish. By providing them with nutritious food and a great healthy activity - Aussie Rules - then their lives will be totally transformed and they will always have something to look forward to."

Larry is currently looking for sponsors to help make this great vision a reality. He can be contacted via email at larry_ferrier@yahoo.com.au

Thursday, March 13, 2008

India latest to embrace AFL


THE AFL has announced a team from India as the latest entrant for in the Australian Football International Cup which is being held in Warrnambool and Melbourne in August, 2008 as part of the 150th year celebrations.

The Indian side joins the likes of USA, South Africa, Canada, Great Britain, Sweden, Denmark, PNG, New Zealand, Japan, China, Ireland, Spain, Nauru, Samoa, Finland, and the Peace Team from Israel and Palestine.

It will be the first time that India has taken part in the International Cup.

AFL talent and international manager Kevin Sheehan said their inclusion was further testimony to the game’s growth.

"Our game of Australian Football is spreading to other countries and the fact that India is taking part this year is a further endorsement of the growing popularity of the game," Sheehan said.

"[AFL] has got a stranglehold in Australia as the number one football code with 638,000 participants and a growing number of players in countries across the globe are now experiencing the game.

"We think the combination of skill, speed, courage, spectacular high marking, brilliant goal kicking and the high scoring makes it the greatest football game on earth and an increasing number of people agree."

Last week, two AFL India board members, Ravinder Chadha and Pranab Bhattacharjee, attended an AFL international coaching course at AFL House with another two Chinese delegates.

AFL in India is just starting to emerge with players having been involved in the game for less than 12 months.

Many of these players have come from other sporting backgrounds such as kabbadi, soccer and cricket. The game has also recently moved into Indian primary schools and India’s population of 1.14 billion now have the opportunity to see three AFL matches a week on television as well as finals.

The game is getting a further boost from Indians who have studied in Australia and returned home with an appreciation for the game.

During his stay in Melbourne Chadha forecast a rapid spread of football throughout India in the next five years.

"I would like to see AFL emerging into other regional competitions in Kolkata, New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai as well as Bangalore and Hyderabad," Chadha said.

"With China and Japan also playing AFL we plan to have challenge matches annually against our nearest AFL neighbours".

"Further down the track, in two to three years, we also aim to have an AFL exhibition or fixtured match played in a venue like Wankhade Stadium in Mumbai or Eden Gardens in Kolkata, both with big enough surfaces and a crowd capacity of up to 100,000 people the potential is enormous".

India has a great affinity and rivalry with Australia through sport, in particular cricket and hockey, and the AFL believes that in time Australian football can be added to the list.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Aussie Rules UK Schools

The Aussie Rules Schools program, established by Aussie Rules UK in 2005, continues to go from strength to strength. Numbers have risen from zero in 2005 to 5,800 in 2007.

GWN television (Western Australia) recently did a story on the Aussie Rules Schools program featuring David Bell, an ex WA boy and President of the London Swans.

Check out the footage below and see how the world's greatest game is being taught in the UK.

Join the Convicts at the International Cup


Planning on attending the International Cup as a spectator? Enhance your experience and maximise your fun by doing it as part of the Convicts!

This is your chance to be involved in all of the colour and excitement of the unofficial World Cup of Australian football. The Convicts will be cheering on all the teams during the Cup and having a great time doing so - be a part of it!

The full itinerary is available at http://www.theconvicts.com/internationalcup2008.htm

International Cup

Great article from the AFL website ...

Chelsea Roffey
AFL website
8 March, 2008


WHEN Prime Minister Alfred Deakin referred to the “Australasian game of football” in a 1908 speech at the Melbourne Carnival, he could not have imagined that an event involving six Australian states and New Zealand would grow into a global game encompassing leagues in more than 20 countries.
Australian Football had crossed the Tasman but nearly 100 years would pass before its popularity would lead to the establishment of 13 governing bodies throughout Asia, Europe, the Americas, Africa and Oceania.
Players from around the world have converged to showcase their talents for more than a decade, with the first international competition attracting Asia Pacific nations at the 1995 Arafura Games in Darwin.
The meet prompted the formation of the International Australian Football Council, which in turn conceived the idea for the International Cup.
Originally known as the World Cup of Australian Football, the event was scheduled to commence in 2008 to mark the 150th anniversary of the game. When the IAFC sought the support of the AFL to bring the inaugural event forward to 2002, it was renamed the International Cup and the AFL became the governing body.
Eleven nations competed in that first carnival in Melbourne, with Ireland taking the flag after beating Papua New Guinea in the Grand Final at the MCG.
Papua New Guinea was tipped as hot favourite over New Zealand in 2005, but again the cup was snatched during a tight grand final which came down to just 18 points.
Will 2008 be the year of the Mosquitoes? The third International Cup will pit PNG against Canada, Denmark, Great Britain, Ireland, Japan, New Zealand, Samoa, South Africa and the United States in Division 1.
Division 2 comprises Sweden, Finland, China, Tonga, Spain, India, Nauru, Sudan, Somalia, Vietnam and an unprecedented Peres Peace Team combining Israeli and Palestinian players, who are yet to see a set of goal posts.
The Peace Team is just one example of the curious ways that International Cup contenders have been introduced to Australian football – from the formation of a team which forges unlikely friendships between players from warring nations, to the colourful arrival of AFL to Spain in 2002.
The impetus for establishing a local team in Madrid stemmed from a broadcast of the AFL Grand Final between Collingwood and the Brisbane Lions, when an Adelaide Crows supporter who had become a Lion for a day arrived decked out in full Lions’ kit – including boots. The lasting impression prompted the formation of the Madrid Bears, and inclusion of a Spanish team in the 2005 International Cup.
Regardless of the path taken to embrace Australian football, nations of the International Cup are united by their passion for the game, an omen that promises to produce some thrilling competition in Melbourne and Warrnambool this August

New International Footy website on the block

Welcome to Global Footy News, the No. 1 site for news relating to international Aussie Rules!

We intend to bring you the latest news and views from the international footy scene.