midfielder
Well-Known Member
I have posted for a while and believe the AFL's push into NSW & QLD is based around a lot of hype and statements that are simply not true .. in fact many are out right lies and this is often done to reflect poorly on other codes...
Until relatively I was unaware of the AFL and its general tactics.. But here are some examples of out right lies ... OK OK OK untruths ... the AFL media over recent years have claimed that AFL was the game played by the ANAZC's at Gallipoli when in fact if anything it was rugby & football especially between the various national troops and at the time only Rugby was played by the officers. The offer by the AFL to cash strapped councils to fund upgrade and maintain ovals in return for them being made AFL grounds and then claiming these buys as conversations to AFL The media buys displayed as sporting articles in local rags Our own Advocate has run a lot of AFL back page articles for what 3 teams and less than 500 players .. all over Sydney in the News local rags there are AFL articles were none have ever been before..
A friend who is employed by the AFL and run their OZ Kick programs says kids come from other codes and sign a form and get to kick an AFL ball They stayed maybe an hour and returned to their sports these numbers are included in AFL player numbers
That the AFL fear football and have do so for over 100 years is well put together by a guy called Media Watch from the MV forum he is currently in the process of writing a book about it which he shared some of his research in a thread called .. Can you smell it is Fear
Roy Masters in an article in the code war between RL & AFL wrote a decent article (OK OK OK OK its maybe pro league) having said that I do agree with Roys general premise pertaining to AFL hype and its all about total dominance
If interested in this kind of thing have a read if this sorta of stuff bores you to tears then move on..
Until relatively I was unaware of the AFL and its general tactics.. But here are some examples of out right lies ... OK OK OK untruths ... the AFL media over recent years have claimed that AFL was the game played by the ANAZC's at Gallipoli when in fact if anything it was rugby & football especially between the various national troops and at the time only Rugby was played by the officers. The offer by the AFL to cash strapped councils to fund upgrade and maintain ovals in return for them being made AFL grounds and then claiming these buys as conversations to AFL The media buys displayed as sporting articles in local rags Our own Advocate has run a lot of AFL back page articles for what 3 teams and less than 500 players .. all over Sydney in the News local rags there are AFL articles were none have ever been before..
A friend who is employed by the AFL and run their OZ Kick programs says kids come from other codes and sign a form and get to kick an AFL ball They stayed maybe an hour and returned to their sports these numbers are included in AFL player numbers
That the AFL fear football and have do so for over 100 years is well put together by a guy called Media Watch from the MV forum he is currently in the process of writing a book about it which he shared some of his research in a thread called .. Can you smell it is Fear
Roy Masters in an article in the code war between RL & AFL wrote a decent article (OK OK OK OK its maybe pro league) having said that I do agree with Roys general premise pertaining to AFL hype and its all about total dominance
If interested in this kind of thing have a read if this sorta of stuff bores you to tears then move on..
http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/afl-masters-art-of-window-dressing-as-nrl-suffers-for-its-transparency-20100730-10zr9.html
'Soccer is a joke,'' the most celebrated player/coach in AFL history, Ron Barassi, declared for the nth time at a forum in Hobart mid week. The occasion was the Ron Barassi Senior Memorial Debate, named for his father, killed at Tobruk.
The topic was: ''Is Your Salary Cap Working Fairly?'' and pitted an AFL team of former Carlton president John Elliott, The Age's chief Australian football writer, Caroline Wilson, and former St Kilda coach Grant Thomas against an NRL team of ex-Storm front-rower Robbie Kearns, a local ABC broadcaster, Tim Cox, who began life as a North Sydney supporter, and myself.
Barassi had been to football's World Cup in South Africa but his rant was not against the pitiful diving in the sport but the lack of a salary cap, which results in the trophies in a half dozen European countries regularly won by teams from about 12 cities
Top AFL people fear football more than they do the rugby codes.
Indeed, they dismiss rugby league derisively as a code lurching from one crisis to the next, and consider rugby union a niche-market irrelevancy.
The Age's Greg Baum recently wrote that the AFL can learn nothing from the NRL. Listening to Thomas talk about his experience as coach of St Kilda during the era Brian Waldron was club chief executive suggests the NRL learnt something from the AFL.
Thomas told the breakfast audience of 300 that the St Kilda board instructed him to do the contracting of players after one year when Waldron was in charge. Two years later, the board decided Thomas should relinquish the responsibility back to Waldron.
Then, in the following year, the board brought Thomas back to do the contracting.
The Storm's problems with secret third-party deals started the day Waldon arrived at the club. A reasonable person might conclude he learnt the trick somewhere.
Furthermore, Thomas said he believed every AFL club, at some time, had cheated on the cap.
When the Storm's breaches were revealed the AFL declared it would send its salary-cap man to investigate Waldon's time at St Kilda. According to Thomas, the investigation took as long as it takes to drink a cup of coffee.
So much of the AFL is window dressing, while the NRL, apart from some News Ltd-conflicted decisions during the Storm saga, suffers for its transparency.
Take the issue of the interchange. The number of substitutions during an AFL game has nearly doubled from an average of 59 in 2007 to 115 this season. The AFL wants to cap the number because its champions aren't spending enough time on the field.
Its football operations manager, Adrian Anderson, pointed to research by Dr Tim Gabbett, described in the Herald Sun as ''an NRL sports scientist'', to justify a cap on interchange. ''The risk of collision injuries and high-intensity running injuries significantly reduced,'' Anderson is quoted saying in reference to the NRL gradually reducing interchanges. ''The relative risk of injury significantly decreased from 72.5 per 1000 playing hours to 51 per 1000 playing hours.''
Not mentioned by Anderson, or the Melbourne newspaper, was that Gabbett's research, published in the Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, clearly specifies his study was of ''sub-elite rugby league players''.' They were juniors, or what some might call ''pub players'', not NRL players.
Indeed, long-term NRL club doctors, such as the Bulldogs' Hugh Hazard, have argued against reducing the interchange because they fear an increase in injuries, with wounded players forced to stay on the field.
Some AFL coaches, such as the Western Bulldogs' Rodney Eade, argue against a cap on interchanges, pointing to 2009 when his club was one of the highest-rotation teams, yet recorded the lowest number of soft-tissue injuries. But the AFL wants its stars to stay on the field (and TV sets) longer and will even stoop to quote the NRL, spuriously, to do so.
The AFL ridicules NRL players' signing mid-season with another club, yet profits from the media soap opera of the subterfuge of star Geelong player, Gary Ablett jnr, and his possible move to new expansion club, Gold Coast.
Speculation over Ablett's future has prompted stories about a 90-year-old Geelong millionaire leaving him a massive bequest, while real estate agents report he has shown interest in buying a Melbourne house he will occupy only a few days a week.
Yet the AFL is perceived, as one senior federal minister told Elliott and myself at Melbourne airport before flying to Hobart, to have a far superior administration to the NRL.
The NSW government obviously believes the Auskick numbers supplied by the AFL, granting the code $45 million for the redevelopment of Sydney's Showground
Still, some politicians see through the AFL's clever window dressing.
A panel of the Tasmanian Premier, his Minister for Sport and the Opposition Leader voted on the Barassi debate.
They declared the NRL team the winners.