Australian rules football in Ireland

Australian rules football in Ireland is a recently introduced team sport but the country has a long history of interaction with Australian rules leagues.

History

There has been some awareness of Australian rules football in Ireland since the first International rules football tests took place in late 1967, however Aussie Rules was not officially played in Ireland until clubs were simultaneously formed in Dublin and Belfast in 1999.

The two clubs recruited and trained through the winter and played a number of British clubs in challenge matches in early spring.

The ARFLI was formed in October 2000 after the first ever Irish Grand Final was contested between the Dublin Demons and the Belfast Redbacks.

National team

An Irish National Aussie rules team, drawn from all ARFLI affiliated clubs headed to London between October 6th –15th to take part in the Atlantic Alliance Cup 2001 – a five nations International competition with USA, Canada, Great Britain and Denmark providing the opposition. A final panel of 24 players, whittled down from 60 over a three-month training period made the trip. Ireland, playing their first ever competitive International matches won all their games in the round robin series and went on to record a historical win against Denmark (pre tournament favourites) in the Grand Final. This was a huge achievement for such a young league against teams from leagues that had been established for ten years plus. Darren Fitzpatrick, who now lives in Kilkenny and who previously played Aussie Rules at a professional level with the Western Bulldogs in Australia, coached the team.

In August of 2002 the National team attended the Australian Football International Cup (An Amateur World Cup for Nations outside of Australia). The Team went into the competition as third seeds behind Papua New Guinea and New Zealand. The competition was a resounding success for Ireland as they beat Canada, Samoa, USA, South Africa and New Zealand in the group stage and went on to beat PNG in a televised final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The team which was again coached by Darren Fitzpatrick, was captained by Michael Johnston.

In 2005 the "Green Machine" again attended the Australian Football International Cup. With injuries and late withdrawals, the team managed a 4th place behind a much improved New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and USA.

Governing Body

The governing body is the ARFLI

Participation

Ireland currently has almost 150 senior Australian Football players representing 6 teams and a junior development program.

Current Issues

The sport in Ireland faces constant struggle, due to the massive popularity of the indigenous and similar sport of Gaelic football.

A controversial International Rules series in 2005 may have irreparably damaged the reputation of the code in Ireland, however the continued export of Gaelic football converts to Aussie Rules ensures that the sport continues to have a small following in Ireland.

Proximity to Great Britain and mainland Europe, where there are fairly strong Aussie Rules leagues gives teams from Ireland the opportunity to regularly participate in international competition and remain competitive through access to Gaelic football players.

Great Irish Aussie Rules players

Australia has recruited several Irish Gaelic footballers to play Aussie Rules. As Gaelic football is primarily amateur competition and the AFL competition is professional, there is a strong financial lure.

Converts have generally been highly successful and include Jim Stynes, Sean Wight, Tadhg Kennelly and Setanta Ó hAilpín (hurler).

See Also Players who have converted from one football code to another

Leagues

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.