Football in Australia

Football in Australia can refer to several different variations of football as there are regional variations of the use of the word "Football" (and also the derived colloquialism "footy") in Australia.

There are four major football codes in Australia, Australian rules football, rugby league, association football and rugby union, with different levels of popularity based on different measures in different regions. In some areas, multiple codes of football are popular, in others there is a monopoly.[1]

Nationally, the most important football matches in Australia are the Grand Final matches, particularly the AFL Grand Final and the NRL Grand Final. Also important are major internationals featuring the Socceroos and the Wallabies (particularly FIFA World Cup qualification and Tri Nations matches respectively). The Australian Kangaroos also compete in various Ashes, ANZAC, Four Nations and World Cup rugby league test matches.

Australia is unique among major sporting markets in having four football codes competing for market share. The irony is that the two international games, association football and rugby union, are getting trounced by the two parochial codes, rugby league and Australian Rules, which are both fast and furious, and both built on deep tribal roots.

Paul Sheehan, The Sydney Morning Herald, 2010[2]

Contents

Participation

The Australian Bureau of Statistics shows that soccer is the most played football code in Australia, with the highest number of total participants. Followed in order by Australian Rules Football, Rugby League, and Rugby union.[3]

Attendance

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the most attended football code overall in Australia is Australian rules football[3] although Rugby League is more popular in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory which together make up about 54% of the Australian population. Australian rules football currently holds the record for a football code in Australia for the highest individual match attendance (121,696) which was set at the 1970 VFL Grand Final and also league season attendance (7,083,015) which was set for the 2008 AFL season.

Television

Rugby league and Australian rules football directly compete for the largest overall Audience measurement and Media marketshare, primarily measured in terms of television ratings (these two codes share the most free-to-air broadcasting, with other codes being restricted mostly to pay tv) as well as popularity surveys and polls such as the Sweeney Sports Report. Australian rules tends to rate higher in metropolitan figures (major capital cities). In 2009 and 2010, the AFL Grand Final was slightly ahead of the NRL Grand Final as the most watched sporting telecast of the year. The annual Rugby League State of Origin is the most viewed representative series of any sporting code, out-rating soccer and rugby union international matches.[4]

Professional football codes in Australia

Football code Common names Overview Most players Most spectators Main Governing Body National Competition Australian Clubs
Australian rules football, footy, Aussie rules, AFL Australian rules football in Australia VIC, SA, WA, TAS, NT [3] VIC, SA, WA, TAS, NT [3] AFL Commission Australian Football League 17
Rugby league league, football, footy, rugby league, rugby Rugby league in Australia NSW, QLD NSW, QLD, ACT, NT [3] Australian Rugby League National Rugby League 15 (+1 in NZ)
Soccer soccer, football Association football in Australia NSW, QLD, ACT [3] Football Federation Australia A-League 10 (+1 in NZ)
Rugby union rugby, union, rugger, football, footy Rugby union in Australia ACT Australian Rugby Union Super Rugby 5 (+5 in both NZ, SA)

Minority and amateur codes

The following football codes are generally not referred to as "football" in Australia.

See also

References

  1. ^ Football in Australia
  2. ^ Paul Sheehan (4 October 2010). "Fast and furious, a league apart". The Sydney Morning Herald (Australia: Fairfax Media). http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/fast-and-furious-a-league-apart-20101003-162kf.html. Retrieved 4 October 2010. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Not so hot on going to the footy". The Herald-Sun (Melbourne). 26 May 2009. http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,25538110-2862,00.html. Retrieved 9 July 2011.  Based upon Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 May 2009). "Feature Article 1: Football: Four Games, One Name". http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Previousproducts/4156.0.55.001Feature%20Article1May%202009?opendocument&tabname=Summary&prodno=4156.0.55.001&issue=May%202009&num=&view=. Retrieved 9 July 2011. 
  4. ^ Top 50 Programs - Combined