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Danger On Groote Eylandt

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Not the name of a new horror flick, but actually a pleasant by-product of the AFL off-season where players often end up visiting remote parts of the country. Sometimes it is for promotional reasons, other times personal. But for Groote Eylandt it barely matters why – to have Geelong superstar, Patrick Dangerfield, visit is a local sensation.

Groote Eylandt is located in the Gulf of Carpentaria, about 50 kilometres from the Arnhem Land coast of the Northern Territory. The locals love their footy, and for their Community Football Day at Alyangulu, the Groote Eylandt Football League invited the 2016 Brownlow Medallist to be the guest umpire.

After the BBQ lunch and NGA Cats Clinic, Dangerfield partnered with Bomber Farrell to umpire the local exhibition match between the Groote Eylandt Cats and the Djarrak Hawks. Organised in conjunction with the Rirratjingu Aboriginal Corporation’s Football Program, the match featured local Groote Eylandt talent playing against the Djarrak team from Galiwinku on Elcho Island – a community and island to the north of the Arnhem Land coast.

Word from the match suggest that Dangerfield had “all the right moves” as an umpire, but also when mingling with the people of the local communities, especially the kids. For the record, the Djarrak Hawks were too good in the end for the local Groote Island Cats, but the score was the least of anyone’s thoughts.

The day was a wonderful success and tribute to the efforts of the many people who put in the hard work to not only get teams on the field, but to travel from so far away across one of the more remote and least visited parts of Australia. The logistics and costs of staging such an event can be appreciated far better with a quick look at a map of the region - and it was all in the name of Australian Rules football.

To have someone of the calibre of Patrick Dangerfield come to the island and be such a significant part of an island celebration would have cheered the hearts of many.

For more information of football on both Groote Eylandt and Elcho Island, these stories from World Footy News give some insight. For a look at footy on Groote Eylandt, see Groote Eylandt Football – Brave New Worlds. For more on footy on Elcho Island, see Galiwinku – An “Island Home” to Aussie Rules Footy.

Photos: AFLNT

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Houston Lonestars at USAFL Nationals

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Hurricane Harvey dropped historic rainfall on the Texas coast in late August in the United States. Many locations reported at least 30 inches (76 cm) of rain. Nederland, east of Houston, recorded 64.58” of rainfall. Pearland, in Houston’s southern suburbs, a reported 9.92” fell in 90 minutes.

The rain definitely affected the Houston Lonestars footy club. No players were directly affected by the effects of Hurricane Harvey, but their families definitely were. Club members worked to help many others in the aftermath. The Lonestars also pitched in financially, raising $10,000 US between several members.

Their August 26th Texas Cup triangular with the Austin Crows and Dallas Magpies was canceled. They did get back into action on September 9 with a sweep of Baton Rouge (seven points) and Nashville (a 26-point win). The Lonestars also fell to Dallas and to the Los Angeles Dragons on September 23, and went 0-2 while hosting the Magpies and Crows on October 7.


So it was against this backdrop that the Houston Lonestars reported to San Diego recently for USAFL Nationals. The Division 1 side beat the Chicago Swans by five points, but fell to Portland Steelheads and the Quebec Saints to finish 1-2 in pool play.

The Division 4 Lonestars also went 1-2 in San Diego, dropping decisions to the New York Magpies and Calgary Kangaroos, but ending on a positive note with an eight-point win over Ft. Lauderdale.

On the women’s side, the Lonestars joined forces with the Dallas Magpies to form the Texas Heat. The team went 2-2 with wins over Columbus and Baltimore-Washington.


At the championship level, the Denver Bulldogs women’s side were the six-time reigning D-1 premiers until losing to San Francisco last year. The Iron Maidens repeated as champions by winning the rematch in San Diego 2.2.14 to 1.0.6 for Denver.

The Austin Crows were D-1 Premiers in 2013 and in 2015-16, but it was Golden Gate who took their second premiership, and first since winning the D-2 title in 2005, beating Los Angeles 6.4.40 to 2.1.1 ...

Saints Back In NTFL Race

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Just when you think that St Mary’s have been dealt a mortal blow and may miss out on finals, along they come and pinch a win that changes everything. Such was the case in the Round Four action of the NTFL competition in Darwin when the Saints, after three consecutive losses to start the 2017/18 season, downed Waratah convincingly and in the process sauntered back into the top five.

Their win against Waratah was set up with a powerful eight goals to one first half to effectively end the contest. From there the Saints were rarely troubled as they powered away to win by 73 points.

Amongst the highlights was the senior debut of young Maurice Rioli Jr, who in April was playing for the Northern Territory Kickstart Under 15 team. His rapid rise to senior level has tongue wagging about the continuation of the Rioli dynasty, but for now his goal on debut is a fine start.



In other matches, the Palmerston Magpies turned their season around with an important win over the Darwin Buffaloes. For Palmerston the win rights the ship somewhat after three losses to start the season (like St Mary’s). The Buffaloes, however, must be kicking themselves after winning their opening two matches and having since lost to consecutive bottom teams – the Magpies and Tiwi Bombers. They will need to address that inconsistency quickly to stay in the frame for finals.

Wanderers led for much of the day against a willing Tiwi Bombers unit. The Bombers grabbed a quarter-time lead, and were within eight points at the final change as they continue their on-field improvement this season. But, Wanderers steadied when it mattered and kicked away to a 28 point win, leaving the Bombers goalless in the final term.

The big match of the round was Sunday’s “top of the table” clash between Southern Districts Crocs and Nightcliff Tigers. After leading by just two goals at the first break, Crocs continued to pressure the Tigers out of the match, increasing their lead at every change to run out convincing 38 point winners and go to the top of the ladder as the only undefeated team after four completed rounds.

Round 5 Matches:

Wanderers v St Marys
Nightcliff Tigers v Waratah
Tiwi Bombers v Palmerston Magpies
Southern Districts v Darwin Buffalo ...

AFL's Essendon bring footy to NBA's Washington Wizards

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Yesterday some of the Essendon football club players including Michael Hartley and Marty Gleeson, who have been travelling in the US, brought their skills to the NBA's Washington Wizards in an indoor cross training session.  Video of the session can be seen below.

  

New faces for Australia in IRS

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The Australian squad has had some modifications heading into the final week of training before the first international rules test match at the Adelaide Oval on November 12th.

GWS gun Toby Greene broke a toe in an unusual incident while on holiday in the States, and Australian coach Chris Scott decided to pick a handful of new players to take on Ireland. There’s a lot of backline speed to choose from among this group, including North Melbourne veteran Robbie Tarrant and the Melbourne Demons’ Neville Jetta.

Other new faces include West Coast gun Luke Shuey, versatile young Hawk Jack Gunston, Carlton’s Kade Simpson, and North Melbourne’s Ben Brown. It will be the fourth IRS series for Simpson, but all of the other squad additions are newcomers to the hybrid sport.

Jetta is a former two-time selection of the Indigenous All-Stars, while Shuey -- the vice-captain of the Eagles -- remains one of the competition’s most reliable playmakers. Brown, a key forward, was the Kangaroos’ leading goalkicker in the past two seasons and booted 63 of them in 2017, finishing third in the Coleman Medal voting.

These additions will give Chris Scott more than enough experience and firepower to make it a competitive contest against the Irish. AFL CEO Gill McLachlan has predicted a potential sellout at Adelaide Oval on the 12th, while the IRS will also be giving Subiaco Oval a suitable farewell when the IRS comes to Perth on the 18th.
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Darebin and Melbourne Uni still standing in 2018 VFLW

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Darebin Falcons and Melbourne Uni are the only original clubs to remain in the Victoria's state league competition for women, with final 2018 teams named today. 

The other clubs through a variety of factors have either chosen, or been forced to hand over their licences to VFL/AFL clubs or hand in their licence.  One of these factors has been the massive increase of the licence fee by a factor of around ten times which clubs believed they would not be able to finance in their current state. 

Other factors such as the imposition of a minimum standard of facilities the club must provide should bring great benefits to the development of players, but have also made it impossible for clubs to meet as stand alone community clubs with limited financial resources.

International players in the league such as Irish pair Laura Corrigan-Duryea and Clara Fitzpatrick, and Canadians Kendra Heil and Valerie Moureau will all need to find new clubs if they are to continue at state league level.

AFL Victoria has confirmed the position of the remaining 2017 Swisse Wellness VFL Women’s clubs for the expanded 2018 competition.

In changes from the 2017 structure, Diamond Creek, Eastern Devils and St Kilda Sharks have informed AFL Victoria they will not be continuing in the VFL Women’s competition, while premiers Darebin and Melbourne Uni have committed to the league for next season.


AFL Victoria Competitions Manager John Hook wished to thank the three departing clubs for the role they played in establishing a state-league competition for women, with their community level teams now their key focus into the future.

“These clubs have played a significant role in the development of women’s football from the VWFL through to being foundation clubs in the VFL Women’s competition,” Hook said.

“They have been leaders in providing opportunities for players and officials to develop in their regions, while building strong community relationships to help grow the game.

“Each club has a rich history in women’s football, and should be acknowledged for the role they have played over many years at the highest level.

“These clubs will continue to lead the way in women’s football, as they focus on the next generation of players and coaches at a community level.”

The third season of the state-league women’s competition will see Box Hill Hawks, Darebin, Geelong and Melbourne Uni joined by Casey Demons, Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon, Richmond, St Kilda (Southern Saints), Western Bulldogs (VU Western Spurs) and Williamstown next year.

The 2018 Swisse Wellness VFL Women’s season will start in May, with the full fixture to be released by mid-December. ...

A Day Out For The Birds – French Footy

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The Paris Cockatoos and Toulouse Hawks have enjoyed a big weekend with important victories over their opponents. The Cockerels travelled to Lyon to down the reigning premiers, the ALFA Lions, whilst the Toulouse Hawks were too good for the Bordeaux Bombers at home.

The ALFA Lions have learned quickly what it means to go from the hunter to the hunted. After winning last season’s flag and displaying good form in the pre-season, the Lions have lost both of their opening premiership matches. Losses to both the Cockatoos and the revitalised Toulouse Hawks I the opening round have made the season much harder for the Lions – from here it has to be as close to five wins from five starts as possible to challenge again for back to back honours. A tough task.


The Cockatoos, however, enjoyed their opening win of the season. The 2015/16 premiers were determined to make up for last season’s grand final loss in this rematch against the Lions. They exacted revenge for that loss to a point and are on the scoreboard with wins and a big chance to reach the finals again.

Final Scores: Paris Cockatoos 85 d ALFA Lions 67

The Toulouse Hawks made their biggest statement in their opening round when they convincingly defeated the ALFA Lions by 11 goals. We just didn’t really know it then. But their follow up 60 point thumping of the Bordeaux Bombers will have send some shivers down the spine of all opposition teams. After tasting the wooden spoon last season, they have dispatched both last season’s premiers and a team which won their opening match by over 200 points in fine style. Everyone now knows the threat this Hawks unit will be, and that suits the Hawks just fine.

For the Bombers it will be time to return to the drawing board and assess what went right in Round One and what went wrong in Round Two. Their promising start to the season has to get back on track quickly, starting next weekend with their clash in Paris against the Cockerels.

Final Scores: Toulouse Hawks 136 d Bordeaux Bombers 76

But for now, it has been a great weekend for the birds – Cockatoos and Hawks.

Not only will the next round feature the Bombers against the Cockerels, but the Paris Cockatoos will take on the Cergy-Pontoise Coyotes in what shapes as an enormous match for both teams as it could well shape each team’s finals destin ...

Falcons Make A Stand – AFL Middle East

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Whilst the AFL Middle East football community had eyes firmly locked on the grand final replay between the Dragons and Bulls, it was another Emirates team that sent a strong message of their own. The Abu Dhabi Falcons fought hard against the Dragons in Round One and followed that up with a comprehensive win against the Dingoes to drive home the message that the Falcons are right there in the finals mix.

In a game of two halves, the Falcons did the damage with a 74 to 21 first half. The second half belonged to the Dingoes as they clawed back some of the deficit to outscore the Falcons after half time. Their effort was even more commendable with just two players on the bench. But the damage had already been done early as the Falcons ran out convincing 43 point victors. So early in the season yet, but the Falcons are on track to stay in the finals battle waiting for one of the top two teams to falter.


Final Scores: Abu Dhabi Falcons 17 14 116 d Dubai Dingoes 11 7 73

In what was regarded the match of the round, seemingly perennial grand finalists – the Dubai Dragons and Multiplex Bulls – played the grand final replay. Both teams have gathered new personnel to replenish their squads over the off-season. This Round Two match would measure whether or not the Dragons had covered their losses or whether the Bulls had found that extra talent and depth needed for them to finally topple the Dragons.

As it was, after a points decision in a heavyweight stoush, it was the Dragons once again holding on to win what has fast become the biggest football rivalry in the Middle East…possibly across all codes.

The Dragons have already grabbed premiership favouritism, defeating both the Bulls and Falcons in successive matches. Their remaining matches will see them hone their craft against the Kangaroos and Dingoes – matches they would be expected to win on current form.

Final Scores: Dubai Dragons 9 9 63 d Multiplex Bulls 7 10 52

Round Three will see another Dubai derby when the Dragons take on the Dingoes at Dubai Sports City whilst the Bulls will host the Falcons in a home match at Sevens Stadiu ...

Tah’s Upset Shapes Ladder – NTFL Round 5

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The Waratah Warriors have produced the upset of the NTFL Round 5 fixture, knocking out the Nightcliff Tigers by 27 points. The result, along with wins to Saints and the Tiwi Bombers, have seen three of the bottom half teams defeat three of the top half teams in a round that has completely changed the race. The Southern Districts Crocs sit undefeated atop the ladder and two games clear of the pack, whilst the Palmerston Magpies now inhabit bottom place – a game behind the field.

In between, just a game and percentage separates second place from seventh as this NTFL season shows how much more even the competition is for 2017/18.

The round opened with a thriller between St Mary’s and Wanderers in a grand final replay. In a tight game it was Wanderers leading at half time and at the final change. But the indefatigable Saints team would not be denied and stunned Wanderers with a four goals to one final quarter to get over the line by just three points. A last gasp shot at goal by Wanderers missed, handing Saints the valuable four points and consecutive wins after a slow start to the season.

The Tiwi Bombers put on a show for their home crowd at Tiwi Oval, Wurrumiyanga, on Bathurst Island. After having won one match and performed well for most of the season, the Bombers were desperate for another win. A solid first half saw the Bombers go into the sheds at the big break ahead by 27 points. Then a six goal to two third quarter put the game away before a shoot-out in the final quarter. In the end the Bombers came away with a vital 62 point win.

In the upset of the round, Waratah downed the much-fancied Nightcliff Tigers. It was a game that the Tigers would have pencilled in as a likely win, which makes the Tah’s efforts so much more commendable. A five goal to nil first quarter by Waratah set the game up well, but for the next two quarters the momentum was with Nightcliff as they scrapped and clawed their way back into the match – trailing by just 10 points at the final change and seemingly about to run over Waratah. But the Tah’s would not be denied such an important win and rammed on five last quarter goals to two to claim victory and keep themselves firmly in the finals race. After starting the season with three wins, the Tigers have now dropped consecutive games and will need to turn their fortunes around quickly.

The final match of the round saw the Southern Districts Crocs slay the Darwin Buffaloes by 113 points in a one-sided affair. A low-scoring first quarter saw the Crocs up by just 11 points at the first break, but after that they kicked 16 goals to one for the rest of the match in a powerful display which saw them firm already as flag favourites. The two wins to start the Buffaloes’ season must seem like a distant memory. Since then they have slid to three consecutive losses and face a tough season if they cannot turn their fortunes around quickly.

The next round will see the Palmerston Magpies take on Wanderers, the Southern Districts Crocs host the Tiwi Bombers, Nightcliff will meet St Mary’s and Waratah will clash with the Darwin Buffaloes.

Final Scores:
St Mary’s 13 11 89 d Wanderers 13 7 85
Tiwi Bombers 23 18 156 d Palmerston Magpies 14 10 94
Waratah 12 6 78 d Nightcliff Tigers 7 9 51
Southern Districts Crocs 19 17 131 d Darwin Buffaloes 2 6 18
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Michael Long Cup Decided For 2017

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Almost fittingly, the Essendon NGA team has taken out this year’s Under 14 Michael Long Cup in Darwin. The annual tournament showcases the next generation of young talent from across the Northern Territory and pits local junior Darwin teams against teams from Alice Springs as well as throughout Arnhem Land and the Tiwi Islands.

 

After the round robin matches to decide finals, the tournament was won by Essendon NGA over Collingwood NGA. Geelong NGA finished third ahead of the Cenral Redtails. Final scores:

Essendon NGA (Tiwi & East Arnhem) 5 4 34 d Collingwood NGA 3 4 22 ( first v second)

Geelong NGA (Gove Island) 8 7 55 d Central Redtails (Alice Springs) 8 3 51 (third v fourth)

St Mary’s 4 4 28 drew with Palmerston 4 4 28 (equal fifth place)

 

The event is named in honour of Essendon great, Michael Long. The  AFLNT details the event as follows:

 

The first phase of the reinvigorated Michael Long Cup will rollout this weekend as AFLNT goes in search of the best young football talent from right across the Territory.

 

The 2017/18 version of the Cup will see NTFL youth teams compete against teams from Alice Springs, East Arnhem, Tennant Creek and the Tiwi Islands/West Arnhem in a series of carnivals.

 

Round 4 of the NTFL Under 14 Gundersen Boys will be replaced with the Outback Stores Michael Long Cup round-robin this Friday and Saturday at Asbuild Oval in Palmerston.

 

Each of the NTFL teams; Darwin Buffaloes, Nightcliff, Palmerston, St Mary’s, Southern Districts, Wanderers and Waratah, will be in attendance. Joining them will be under-14 teams from Central Australia, and two teams representing the Next Generation Academies of Collingwood (Tennant Creek) and Geelong (West Arnhem), plus a combined team from Tiwi and West Arnhem.

 

Each team will play four games of 12-minute halves across Friday evening and Saturday morning before finals matches on Saturday afternoon.

 

A similar format including NTFL and regional-teams will be run in carnival-style for other Cup divisions:

 

Under 15 Girls – scheduled for 1st and 2nd December (Round 9)

Under 16 Boys – scheduled for 8th and 9th December (Round 10)

Under 18 Women’s – scheduled for 15th and 16th December (Round 11)

Under 18 Men’s – scheduled for 9th and 10th February (Round 17)

AFLNT High Performance Manager Wally Gallio said running the Michael Long Cup this way would expose more young talent than ever before.

 

“The vastness of the NT makes it hard for us to get to see all the skill on offer, so these carnivals will help us get a better gauge of talent from all over the Territory to select players to represent the NT at the 2018 Diversity Championships and to be part of our Academy teams.

 

“Not only will we as an organisation benefit greatly but I believe having intra-Territory representative games is a win for our juniors who would very rarely get the opportunity to compete against their fellow Territorians for a spot in an NT representative side,” he said.

 

 

The Essendon, Collingwood and Geelong clubs have put an enormous amount of work into the development of talent across the Norther Territory. It is no coincidence that the Long and McDonald Tipungwuti names have become entrenched in Essendon’s story and Geelong are embarking on that path with Steven Motlop, Brandon Parfitt and Nakia Cockatoo all recent Territorian Cats.

Photo Credit: AFL Northern Territory (AFLNT)

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Doha Kangaroos On Hold

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Australian Rules football in the Middle East is unique – and at times problematic. Unlike most leagues that play their games with teams from within a country, AFL Middle East (Like AFL Asia) is a competition played amongst nations. The traditional nations in the league – United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain – have held the league together through many formats over the years depending of the availability of teams for that season.

But the political, economic, social and geographical challenges involved across this part of the world have conspired to halt the progress of some clubs – the latest being the Doha Kangaroos from Qatar. Just three seasons ago, the Kangaroos claimed their maiden AFL Middle East premiership. Now, after a period of travel instability across the region, mainly political in nature, the Kangaroos will sit out the remainder of the 2017/18 season.


In the following brief from AFL Middle East, the situation is explained.

“The league and all clubs sat down to discuss the issue after it was highlighted that flights to Doha would be extremely expensive for the UAE based clubs, especially when Doha use to be a 1 hour flight and it is now 4-5 hours minimum with a stopover.
All options were looked at, including playing the games in Bahrain in Muscat but unfortunately Doha could not commit to enough players to field a team for 3 international trips
The final decision was made by all clubs, and the league, that Doha will withdraw from the 2017/18 season that was a tough and unfortunate call to make
Pitre Bourdon, President of Doha Kangaroos accepts and understands the decision. However he will endeavour to keep the club alive over the next 6 months with regular training sessions, continuing the Doha Auskick every Friday morning for the kids and even taking part in mixed international rules tournaments against the Irish (first one Friday November 17)
A one off tournament will be scheduled on January 19 in either Muscat or Bahrain that will involve all 7 affiliated clubs. Full format on the one-day tournament will be confirmed shortly.
The fixture looks likely to change with the scheduled Jan 12 Falcons v Dragons game being moved to March 2. Grand Final will remain March 16.
The future of Doha in AFLME unfortunately rests on powers much bigger than the league and hopefully the travel ban between the GCC countries will be lifted over the next 12 months.”

The Bahrain Suns are looking at a possible return to the league for the 2018/19 season.(see:Bahrain Taking Steps Towards AFL Middle East Return) No clear timeline exists for the return of the Muscat Magpies (Oman), but the door is open for their return to the league at a time that is suitable for all parties. Now the Doha Kangaroos will sit in that same position, waiting for the stars to align again to signal their return.

The remainder of the 2017/18 season will be, in terms of round by round fixture, a wholly United Arab Emirates competition featuring the three Dubai based clubs (Dragons, Dingoes and Bulls) along with the Abu Dhabi Falcon ...

BW Eagles amicably split to create Eagles/Dockers rivalry

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The Baltimore Washington Eagles have announced they will amicably split the club into two new entities. Following a very successful year on and off the field in the club located in two cities, it has been agreed that each location will now have their own team. The new Washington based entity the DC Eagles will retain the club mascot and colours (and support of the AFL's West Coast Eagles) and continue to play in the nations capital.

The Baltimore Dockers Australian Rules Football Club announced themselves on Facebook this week with a post stating "We are excited to announce the Baltimore Dockers Australian Rules Football Club! After growing the sport in the DMV area and playing as the Baltimore Washington Eagles Australian Rules Football Club for 20 years, we been able to establish independent football clubs in DC and in Baltimore. We're looking forward to your support and seeing what the 2018 season has in store!"

They hope to garner the support of AFL club Fremantle and emulate the Eagles/Dockers rivalry that thrives in the city of Perth, Australia.

A full statement on the split can be read here - https://eaglesfooty.com/2017/11/09/baltimore-washington-vote-to-expand-to-two-clubs/ 

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2017 International Rules - 1st Test International Broadcast Schedule

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The first of two IRS Tests between Australia and Ireland will kickoff at 3.40pm in Adelaide on Sunday local time.

The match will be broadcast on limited overseas networks (not including North America). It will also be streamed live on the Watch.AFL service, available by subscription.

The full schedule is as follows.

 

NETWORKTerritoryLocal Broadcast Scheduled
AUSTRALIA PLUSAsia12/11 @ 13:04 HKT (Live)
AUSTRALIA PLUSPacific12/11 @ 18:04 FIJI (Live)
AUSTRALIA PLUSIndia12/11 @ 10:34 IND (Live)
ESPN - BT SPORTUK & Ireland12/11 @ 13:30 GMT (Delay)
GEE - Boats & CruisesWorldwide (excl. Aust.)12/11 @ 04:30 GMT (Live)
ORBIT SHOWTIME NETWORKMiddle East12/11 @ 07:30 AST (Live)
RTE2Ireland12/11 @ 05:00 IST (Live)

 

 

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ONLINE STREAM (SUBSCRIPTION)Territory AvailableBroadcast scheduled start
WATCHAFL.AFL.COM.AUWorldwide (excl. Aust)12/11 @ 05:10 GMT (Live)

Warriors Old And New – Cardwell Cup

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There was something quite congruent and in-synch about having two teams of young girls play as a curtain-raiser to an AFL Masters carnival. So many ways the two could be linked – old and new, past and present, a vision of the future through the eyes of those who have already been there.

But, however you look at it, two groups of players separated by generations took to the field yesterday in Cardwell, North Queensland, and all were proud warriors. The fact that these matches were played on Remembrance Day just added to importance of the event – and every player stepped up accordingly for the occasion. Young local kids from Mission Beach and Innisfail stopped their Auskick Clinic for the minute’s silence, then launched back into their scratch match with giggles and cheers of delight.

Across the nation Australian Rules football continues to grow, and one of the key growth areas is in women’s and girl’s footy. In Cairns, the Pyramid Power club has fostered that development with an under 14 Girl’s team. There is also the powerhouse Gordonvale State School squad, rested after having recently reached the Queensland State Championships for primary schools (see: The Little Engine That Could). Yesterday, the two were fused together to be one impressive team. As a sign of growth, the newly formed Cassowary Coast Crows – centred around the Mission Beach/Innisfail district – took to the field for their first hit-out as a competitive unit.

The scoreboard was probably predictable – a comfortable win to the Power – but it didn’t tell the story. On the field, across four quarters of commitment, over 30 young girls showed the delighted crowd how far girls footy had come. One crowd member asked who these girls were, and that statement probably summed things up beautifully. The girls on both teams had captured the imagination of the crowd.

Once the curtain-raiser was done, it was the “old blokes” from the Over 45 AFL Masters teams taking the field. The title-holders, and dominant champions for many years, the Cairns Stingers, up against their arch rivals, the Townsville Sharks.

In a game, unofficially titled “The Jatzy Cup” in recognition of one of the Cairns Stingers’ players who was not well and was being suitably recognised, didn’t go the Stingers way. Townsville came out firing and made the early running. They were able to hit the scoreboard often enough to rattle the bones of the Stingers and create a gap which would be hard to peg back. This proved to be the case right through to the siren as the Townsville Stingers went on to record a 44 point victory, to the delight of their fans – especially the ones who had camped overnight prior at the football ground and cheered from their tents.

Final Score: Townsville Sharks 13 7 85 d Cairns Stingers 6 5 41

The Cairns boys were determined to make up for the loss by seeing their Over 35 team continue years of dominance over Townsville and win the big match of the day. By quarter-time Cairns held a two-point lead. The game remained tight, and willing, through to the end, but in the biggest upset of the day it was the Townsville Sharks that held on in a thriller by just six points. It completed a great day for the Sharks and the team – augmented by players from the Whitsunday Bald Eagles and Charters Towers Gold City Suns – was rumoured to be partying well into the tropical night.

Final scores: Townsville Sharks 9 12 66 d Cairns Stingers 8 12 60

Now, eyes turn to the return bout – the Cairns Cup next year – and then back to Cardwell for the next edition of the Cardwell Cup in 2018. But the old boys might just have a new permanent travelling companion, as the girls fully intend to be back again, representing the region and their clubs as the precursor to the AFL Masters clashes.

It seems fitting and right. It certainly was today.

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Australia take 10 point lead into 2nd IRS Test

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In hot and mostly overcast conditons at Adelaide Oval the Australians scored 2 goals, 13 overs and 12 points (63 ) to Ireland's 1 goal, 13 overs and 8 points (53) to take a 10 point lead into next week's second test at Subiaco Oval.

The Irish lead at quarter time but the Australians worked back to a one point lead at half time. The Australians then dominated the second half of the match despite the constant scoring efforts from the likes of Murphy and McManus for Ireland.

Scott Pendlebury looks to have suffered a possible broken hand and may miss for the Australians in Perth.

A full match report from Frederick Shaibani to follow. ...


Aussies beat the heat -- and the Irish

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A solid group effort and a big second half lifted Australia to a 10-point victory over Ireland on Sunday afternoon at the Adelaide Oval.

There were a lot of variables in play coming into the first 2017 International Rules test match -- the Aussie team hadn’t practiced formally up until the week of the match, the weather conditions weren’t in anyone’s favor, and the Irish team dealt with several players falling ill earlier in the week. A couple of late withdrawals for Australia -- primarily Toby Greene and Gary Ablett -- left a few question marks in the lineup.

But, as it turned out, for many of the Aussies, it was just another day at the office -- albeit with a round ball. Team captain Shaun Burgoyne, Nat Fyfe, and Patrick Dangerfield showed off their skills and fought off the Irish onslaught in front of a crowd of 25,000-plus (25,502 official).

After an impressive first quarter from the visitors, the Aussie side came alive and began to keep up with the fast pace of the game, dominating the disposals and clearances. Goalkeeper Brendan Goddard helped with his steady kick-ins, and also made two crucial saves to keep the Irish attack at bay.

However, perhaps Australia’s biggest strength in the first test match was their ability to be patient and control the game clock. Players such as Zach Merrett, Kade Simpson, Jack Gunston, and others were able to slow down and speed up at will, resulting in silky smooth passages of play and some great clearances from halfback and the midfield. Combined with the quality pressure and tackling, this methodical approach wore down the Irish and the Aussies managed to hold on to a narrow halftime lead. Fyfe kicked Australia’s first goal early in the second half and added three overs, while forwards Ben Brown and Chad Wingard booted a combined four overs.

But the pesky Irish wouldn’t go away quietly, buoyed by Michael Murphy (one goal, four overs) and Conor McManus (a game-high seven overs). Zach Tuohy managed to keep the Irish within striking distance with some quality clearances throughout the match, while Paul Geaney and Conor Sweeney booted one over apiece. McManus, a County Monaghan product, won best on ground for Ireland, while Fyfe earned it for the Aussie side.

Ireland appeared to escape with a clean bill of health, but Australia wasn’t so lucky. After an outstanding first half, Scott Pendlebury left the ground with a hand or finger injury and did not return. Dayne Zorko had to have his hip iced in the fourth quarter, but it looked to be a minor niggle.

The second IRS test match will be held on Saturday, Nov. 18th at Subiaco Oval in Perth at 4:45 PM local time.

AUSTRALIA     0.3.5    0.7.7    1.12.8  2.13.12 (63)
IRELAND         0.4.3    1.6.3    1.8.5    1.13.8 (53)

GOALS
Australia: Fyfe, Shuey
Ireland: M.Murphy

OVERS
Australia: Fyfe 3, Wingard 2, Brown 2, Dangerfield, Zorko, Simpson, Betts, Ryder
Ireland: McManus 7, M.Murphy 4, Sweeney, Geaney

BEST
Australia: Fyfe, Goddard, Dangerfield, Wingard, Simpson, Shuey
Ireland: McManus, M. Murphy, Tuohy, O'Shea 

INJURIES
Australia: Pendlebury (finger)
Ireland: Nil

Reports: Nil

Referees: Matt Stevic (Australia), Maurice Deegan (Ireland)

Official crowd: 25,502 at Adelaide Oval ...

Coyotes Come From Behind Victory Stuns Cockatoos

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The Cergy-Pontoise Coyotes have come from the clouds to defeat the Paris Cockatoos in their home clash in Pontoise. The match was a double header hosted by the Coyotes, with the Paris Cockerels downing the Bordeaux Bombers in the other match.

Early in the match, the Cockatoos jumped the Coyotes and led by 20 points at the first break. From then the Coyotes kept creeping back into the game, but still trailed by two points at the final change. But a powerful final quarter, and a defensively brilliant effort to keep the Cockatoos to a solitary behind, saw the Coyotes run out 19 point winners.

The win keeps the Coyotes well in finals contention, though the Cockatoos now have won one of their two games to date and need to find some consistency headed deeper into the season.


Final Scores: Cergy-Pontoise Coyotes 78 d Paris Cockatoos 59

The Paris Cockerels set their win up in the first quarter, leading by 29 points at the first break. The Bordeaux Bombers mounted a challenge to win the second quarter and drag the deficit back to a manageable 26 points by half time. But the Cockerels piled on the pressure in the second half to surge away with the game, in the end running out 65 point victors.

The Cockerels have started their season well with two wins and are well placed to consolidate their finals chances before the winter break. The Bombers, after a stirring win in the opening round, have lost consecutive games and need another win quickly to stay with the finals group.

Final Scores: Paris Cockerels 103 d Bordeaux Bombers 38

The next matches in the CNFA season will be interesting. The Toulouse derby will see the Hawks and the Aviators clash whilst the ALFA Lions will host the Perpignan Tigers in a vital match for both teams – both winless and desperate to turn those fortunes aroun ...

Strasbourg Kangourous Host German Neighbours

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It was just a fraction over two years ago that the Strasbourg Kangourous won their last CNFA match – a 123-point walloping of the Perpignan Tigers. They didn’t win another match that season and their final outing saw them walloped themselves by the Paris Cockatoos by a nasty 118 points. The club did not field a team in the 2016/17 season and it was anyone’s guess when or if they might return.

Well, the Kangourous are back, and their victory on the weekend against a combination of German teams – the Freiburg Taipans, Stuttgart Emus and Dresden Wolves (a team that, amazingly, travelled 600 kilometres to play) – suggests the team is well on the path back to CNFA status.

Played in Strasbourg, a French city 400 kilometres east of Paris and almost on the Rhine River where it marks the French German border, the city is relatively close to both Stuttgart and Freiburg. It makes geographical sense for the Kangourous to have a closer football connection with these two nearby teams – Stuttgart around 150 kilometres away and Friedburg just 90 kilometres away.

Our “man on the ground” in Hautepierre, Baptiste Finck, reported that the Kangourous ran out comfortable winners on a wet and windy afternoon. The ground was muddy, creating difficult playing conditions. But the Strasbourg team, armed with two Western Australian players, played to the conditions and won by 51 points. The match was played over four twenty-minute quarters, though the final quarter was shortened due to the light waning.

The match was a friendly with nothing but fun riding on it. But it marks a big step forward for the Strasbourg Kangourous as they build belief that they can find the players and resources to return to the national competition sooner rather than later.

It will be interesting to see what the next step might be for the Kangourous, but for now there is still the chance to play more matches with their German neighbours and keep building.

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WFN World Rankings Post IC17

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Apologies for the delay, mostly an editor (Brett Northey) availability issue.  Story text is by the editor.

Here we present the WFN World Rankings from immediately after the 2017 AFL International Cup.

Australia retains its notional #1 ranking as unarguably the leading nation, and PNG's victory at IC17 kept their #1 contender position intact.  In fact the top 5 positions were unchanged.  The big changes were Croatia rising 5 places to 7th and China up 6 to 13.  Perhaps unfairly France fell 3 spots to 17th courtesy of playing in the tough Division 1 (compare with Croatia's rise from dominating Division 2).  We'd love to see more cross-over matches with sides touring outside of IC years which would help address that; a modified rankings system is not imminent.  South Africa's slow decline continues.  We welcome Indonesia and Pakistan as fully ranked for the first time (playing the necessary 8 games) and Sri Lanka's debut sees them onto the provisional list.

 

 

World Footy News Australian Football Men's World Rankings

(as at end of 20th August 2017, end IC17)

Rank       TeamPointsGamesRank Change
1Australia- 0steady
2Papua New Guinea61.9939steady
3New Zealand57.8843steady
4Ireland56.6459steady
5Nauru52.9732steady
6United States49.3448+2
7Croatia47.0913+5
8South Africa46.6132-2
9Great Britain46.2364-2
10Canada45.8448-1
11Denmark43.6747-1
12Tonga41.9314-1
13China39.9125+6
14Fiji38.0119-1
15Germany37.5525steady
16Peace Team36.4611+1
17France36.0918-3
18Japan35.0634-2
19Sweden34.1839-1
20Indonesia30.9412new
21Pakistan29.1410new
22Finland27.4518-2
23India20.7121-2
Prov.Sri Lanka37.415*
Dorm.Iceland35.644**
Prov.Indochina34.002*
Prov.Timor-Leste27.406*

 

Indonesia and Pakistan joined as fully qualified for the first time

* Sri Lanka join as provisional (partially qualified)

** Iceland (dormant) need to play by 07/08/2018 to stay on the list at all

Samoa fell off in 2016

Spain fell off in 2013

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Movember Cup In Manchester This Weekend

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The Nathan Blakey Movember Cup will enter its seventh season in Manchester on Sunday. The event honours former high-flying Mozzie, Nathan Blakey, who passed away in 2011 after a battle with cancer. The event is designed to raise funds for and awareness of men’s health, specifically cancers. The event is run in conjunction with the Movember Foundation and will feature plenty of men with moustaches. Women are under no such obligation, but will also be playing for the cause.

This year’s event will feature two round robin divisions with finals decided by pool winners. Pool A will feature the Manchester Mozzies, Wolverhampton Wolverines, Glasgow Giants from Scotland and one of two University of Birmingham teams. Pool B will include the Nottingham Scorpions, Huddersfield Rams, Wandsworth demons from London and the second University Of Birmingham team. There will also be two combined women’s teams playing across the day.


All pool games will feature two seventeen minute halves whilst the final will be two twenty minute halves. The carnival will be played at the Mozzies home ground at the Burnage Rugby Club from 11am to 6pm. The final will be played under lights. A cool day is expected with a strong chance of rain, but that will not slow down the players as they give their all for the cause.

Reigning Movember Cup title holders, the Huddersfield Rams, will be keen to once again hold up the cup, but they will face tough opposition which features three 2017 premiership teams in the Manchester Mozzies (AFLCNE), the Wandsworth Demons (AFL London) and the Greater Glasgow Giants (SARFL – Scotland). Once again it is sure to be a hard fought and entertaining tournament and a fitting tribute to Nathan Blakey and everyone to have been afflicted with the ravages of cancer.

For more information, go to the Manchester Mozzies facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/ManchesterMo...tion=group




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