Australian rules football in Canada

Australian rules football in Canada
Action from the 2010 ECAFL Grand Final
Country Canada
Governing body AFL Canada
National team(s) Canada
Nickname(s) Northwind
First played May 1989, Toronto
Registered players 825 (total)
525 (adult)
300 (junior)
Clubs 21
Club competitions
Audience records
Single match 32,789 (1987). Melbourne v. Sydney (B.C. Place, Vancouver)

Australian rules football is a rapidly growing sport in Canada. Australian football is currently played in six Canadian provinces - Ontario, Alberta, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec and British Columbia. Saskatchewan is in the formative stages of development. The Ontario league, centred on Toronto but also including sides from cities as far afield as Guelph, Hamilton and Ottawa, is considered the largest league outside Australia. In western Canada, there are clubs in Edmonton, Calgary and a six-team league in the Vancouver area.

There is also a number of junior and women's clubs across Canada. This has increased dramatically after the introduction of the Aussie x program in Ontario and Vancouver. Also the performance of Canadian Mike Pyke in the 2012 AFL Grand Final has brought added publicity to the game of Australian Football in Canada.

History

Between 1987 and 1989, the Australian Football League staged several exhibition matches in Canada, attracting large crowds and much interest. The 1987 game holds the record for a VFL/AFL match held outside Australia.

YearLocationStadiumTeamsAttendance
1987VancouverMelbourne v. North Melbourne7,980
1987VancouverBC PlaceMelbourne v. Sydney32,789
1987VancouverCollingwood v. Hawthorn
1988TorontoVarsity StadiumCollingwood v. Hawthorn18,500
1989TorontoToronto SkydomeGeelong v. Melbourne24,639

[1]

In the late 1980s, regional ESPN broadcasts in Canada showed highlights of the Victorian Football League from Australia.

First league

The Canadian Australian Football League was established in May 1989 when two clubs, the Mississauga Mustangs and the Toronto Panthers, were formed and played in the inaugural Conacher Cup game in Toronto, Ontario. Since then, the game of Australian football in Canada has expanded considerably nationwide.

In 1990, the Scarborough Rebels, the North York Hawks and the Hamilton Wildcats joined, with the Balmy Beach Saints coming on board in 1992. The North York Hawks later relocated and became known as the Broadview Hawks.

The Brampton Wolverines, the league's seventh team, were formed in 1993. The Scarborough Rebels relocated and became the Lawrence Park Rebels.

International competition

Northwind's All-International ruckman Manny Matata kicking a drop punt

In 1993, a Canadian representative team, known as the Northwind, beat a British (BARFL) representative team.

In 1994 and 1995, the Canadians again defeated the British at home.

In 1995, several local CAFA games were broadcast on a Hamilton cable television channel.

In July 1995, the Hamilton Wildcats played a Canadian All-Star team in front of 21,000 fans during the half-time break at a Canadian Football League (gridiron) match.

In 1999, the first USA v Canada game was played (49th Parallel Cup, named after the 49th parallel north). The Revolution narrowly defeated Team Canada (Northwind). Later matches enforced strict rules based on player origins. The 49th Parallel Cup is held every two years.

In 2002, Canada participated in the inaugural Australian Football International Cup, with Canada represented by the Northwind team consisting purely of Canadian-born players. The Canadian national team has competed in every International Cup since its inception and now competes with its national women's team named the Northern Lights.

Grassroots

In 2003, the first junior league in Canada, the North Delta Junior Australian Football League, was formed.

AFL Canada was formed as governing body on July 30, 2004, when the Canadian Australian Football League changed its official name. The move corresponded with funding from the Australian Football League, and a junior participation program was put in place. The clubs were split into two regional leagues, the Ontario Australian Football League and the North West Pacific Football League. The remaining Alberta-based clubs participate in AFL Canada organised regional conferences such as the British Columbia Cup.

In 2005, the Northwind participated in the 2005 International Cup.

In early 2006, AFL Canada sent a small delegation to the AFL exhibition match in Los Angeles. London and Windsor folded due to distance but the new OAFL club, the Central Blues, formed and began competing. In Alberta, the Calgary Bears also formed and the Westcoast challenge commenced.

In early 2007, the Ottawa Swans formed, and affiliated with the OAFL, and the Demons relocated from Mississauga to High Park in Toronto.

In late 2007, AFL Canada hosted the Ironbark challenge, including the 49th Parallel Cup between Canada vs United States, including historic first women's and junior (under 17) tests between the two countries. Canada defeated the United States for the first time at both senior and junior level, but were soundly defeated in the women's match. The tournament also included a touring Japanese team and attracted a record attendance of 2,500 at Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver.[2]

Notable Canadians in Australian Rules

Andrew McGrath, Canadian born professional at AFL club Essendon

In early 2008, Canadian junior Scott Fleming moved to Australia to play with the Broadbeach Cats semi-professional club in the AFL Queensland State League at 17 years of age.

Later the same year, former Canadian rugby union international Mike Pyke was signed by the Sydney Swans AFL team as an international rookie at 24 years of age.[3]

Andrew McGrath, who was born in Canada,[4] was drafted first overall in the 2016 AFL draft by Essendon.[5]

Kendra Heil has signed with Collingwood of AFL Women's.[6]

Governing Body

The governing body for Aussie Rules in Canada is AFL Canada.

National team

Team Canada for men is known as the Northwind. Team Canada for women is known as the Northern Lights.

Participation

A map of Canada indicating the provinces in red where Australian rules football is organised in 2007

In 2006, there were over 420 senior (approximately 250 Canadian national) Australian rules football players in Canada out of a total of 484, an increase of 25% from 2005.[7][8]

By the end of 2007, this figure had increased to a total of 825 players in organised competitions, of which 525 were senior and 300 were junior, an increase of over 70% from 2006, and a total of 95% increase over 2 years.[9]

Women's Football

Canada boasts 9 women's football clubs nationwide. Youth girls development programs operate in Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec. The national team, formed in 2007, is known as the "Northern Lights". They were formerly known as the "Eagles". They played in the first women's international footy matches during 2007, when they lost twice to the USA Freedom. In 2011 the national women's team competed in the inaugural women's division of the Australian Football International Cup, where they came second to Ireland.[10] In 2014 the Northern lights became world champions when they defeated the Irish Banshees at the AFL International Cup. In 2015 the Northern Lights defeated the USA Freedom to win the annual 49th Parallel Cup.

Leagues & Clubs

Alberta

Alberta Footy Men's League

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
Calgary KangaroosCalgaryAlberta2002Official Site
Calgary BearsCalgaryAlberta2007Official Site
Calgary CowboysCalgaryAlberta2008Official Site
Edmonton WombatsEdmontonAlberta2009Official Site
Calgary WolvesCalgaryAlberta2015Official Site

2016 Banff is under development.

Alberta Footy Women's League

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
Calgary KookaburrasCalgaryAlberta2007Official Site
Edmonton EmusEdmontonAlberta2009Official Site
Hillhurst NighthawksCalgaryAlberta2008Official Site
Kensington KingfishersCalgaryAlberta2008Official Site

British Columbia

British Columbia Australian Football League

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
Burnaby EaglesBurnabyBritish Columbia2001Official Site
Delta BayHawksNorth DeltaBritish Columbia2009Official Site
Vancouver Cougars (Blue)VancouverBritish Columbia2001Official Site
Vancouver Cougars (White)VancouverBritish Columbia2001Official Site
West Coast SaintsVancouverBritish Columbia2008Official Site

2016 Victoria Sharks.

North Delta Junior Australian Football League

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
North Delta Junior Australian Football LeagueNorth DeltaBritish Columbia2003Official Site

Ontario

Ontario Australian Football League

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
Broadview HawksBroadviewOntario1989Official Site
Ottawa SwansOttawaOntario2007Official Site
Etobicoke KangaroosEtobicokeOntario2003Official Site
Grand River GargoylesGuelphOntario2001Official Site
Hamilton WildcatsHamiltonOntario1997Official Site
High Park DemonsTorontoOntario1989Official Site
Toronto Downtown DingosTorontoOntario1996Official Site
Toronto EaglesTorontoOntario1989Official Site
Toronto RebelsTorontoOntario1990Official Site
Central BluesTorontoOntario2006Official Site

Quebec

ClubCityProvincefoundedOfficial Website
Quebec SaintsMontrealQuebec2008Official Site

Nova Scotia

2014 Halifax Dockers founded

Major Tournaments

Domestic

International

Audience

Television

TV coverage of the AFL in Canada has historically included the weekly highlights program going back to the 1980s. In the mid 1990s when ESPN briefly reacquired the rights to the AFL in US again (due to lobbying by fans associated with AFANA), the sport first appeared on The Sports Network, better known as TSN. In succeeding years, the sport moved between several networks but was primarily on TSN. Coverage remained limited to highlights programs save for one time each year, where the Grand Final (championship game) was usually live. In 2006, due to growing demand and lobbying by AFANA for regular live coverage, the new Setanta Sports acquired rights in both Canada and the USA. In mid-season that year, live matches began appearing regularly on television in Canada for the first time on Setanta Sports (STS). When Setanta's North American operations failed in August 2010, the sport briefly moved to Rogers Sports. Following ESPN winning the rights once again in the US, the sport returned to TSN, where it remains. TSN now airs one live match and one delayed match each round of the AFL season, both available in HD. For many years, fans in extreme western Canada have been able to see coverage via mid-size or large satellite dishes able to catch signals low on the horizon intended for the Pacific via first Australia TV and now by its successor Australia Plus. AFANA provides listings of Canadian TV schedules on its web site [11] along with information on the coverage.[12]

In 2011, the first televised all-Canadian Aussie Rules match was shown on Rogers TV, and featured the Ottawa Swans hosting the Toronto Rebels.

Attendance Records

Exhibition Matches

Canada holds the world record for attendance at a match outside Australia.

International Tests

References

  1. IAFC
  2. Northwind blows over Revos from worldfootynews.com
  3. Swans sign 24-year-old Canadian rugby player from news.com.au
  4. Twomey, Callum (June 24, 2016). "Gun athlete to draft bolter: McGrath's great leap forward". AFL. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  5. Schmook, Nathan (November 25, 2016). "Draft wrap: Bombers take McGrath with No.1 draft pick". AFL.com. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  6. Prime, Toby (November 1, 2016). "Canadian Kendra Heil one of three Eastern Devils recruited to Collingwood as free agents". Herald Sun. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
  7. World Footy News - World Footy Census 2004 - North America
  8. AFL International Census 2007 Archived 2011-05-24 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. http://www.aflcommunityclub.com.au/index.php?id=724
  10. http://www.afana.com/drupal5/tvsched
  11. http://www.afana.com/drupal5/tvinfo
  12. Vancouver Olympics Winter Games 2010 - Our Broadcast - Our Broadcasters Archived July 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  1. AFL Canada
  2. AFANA
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