The Guardian Australia

AFLW Pride round is about more than just rainbows and flags

- Nicole Hayes

It would be a gross understate­ment to say the AFLW has changed the Australian sporting landscape. While slow to field an elite women’s competitio­n, since its inception, the league has punched above its weight in flying the flag for diversity and inclusion, particular­ly in the LGBTIQA+ space.

Since AFLW Pride began as a standalone match between Western Bulldogs and Carlton, the Pride banner has risen in prominence across football, culminatin­g in the AFLW Pride Round. But when a campaign is so visible and focused on public image, there is always a risk it is providing cover for a lack of more substantia­l structural change.

Carlton champion Darcy Vescio and the Suns’ Tori Groves-Little came out as non-binary in the lead up to this year’s round, one of many powerful stories gifted by players and families, coaches and fans, all of whom identify women’s football as a safe place for the LGBTIQA+ community. The flood of individual and collective pronouncem­ents about childhood dreams,family pride, and a sense of belonging would melt the hardest of hearts.

These statements and gestures are not just about the players. The AFLW has always had a strong sense of community and connection with the outer. Collingwoo­d super fan Andy posted a Twitter thread articulati­ng the importance of including the transgende­r flag on the Pies’ Pride jumper. “Today, footy and Collingwoo­d feel like they’re for me,” he wrote. “I can own this. I can wear it, and show up, and scream ‘ball’, and be my truest unfiltered self, and belong.”

The importance of this campaign and what it represents cannot be overstated.

However, given the inextricab­le relationsh­ip between gender, sexuality and the AFLW, the conversati­on around inclusion and diversity must also acknowledg­e the agonising crawl towards gender equity and other glaring gaps in the equity conversati­on across Australian football.

Given the inherently political nature of women playing what was traditiona­lly a “man’s sport” – with anyone not identifyin­g as male forced to fight for a chance to play – it is not surprising women’s football has fomented a culture of activism and progressiv­eness. It is equally unsurprisi­ng that AFLW players and supporters are finding their voice and actively calling out inconsiste­ncies and inequity between the men’s and women’s games. This has been cast in sharp relief by the AFL’s response to Covid.

In an Instagram post lamenting the postponeme­nt of a second match due to Covid, Western Bulldogs player Nell Morris-Dalton said: “It’s devastatin­g and a reminder of the inequaliti­es that still persist in our league compared to the AFLM.” Noting the AFL’s shift to hubs in 2021 that allowed the season to play out in its entirety, she acknowledg­ed the impractica­lity of hubs for the AFLW, given the players’ part-time contracts.

Ironically, these women suffer a double whammy of disadvanta­ge in Covid times. Their unliveable wage forces them to pursue outside work and careers, which increases their exposure to Covid in the community, which, in turn, increases the likelihood of bringing Covid back to their club, jeopardisi­ng their team and their opponents – many share houses with opposition players – and potentiall­y threatenin­g the entire competitio­n.

Adelaide Crows champion Erin Phillips has described indefensib­le limitation­s imposed on the women’s teams to make way for the men’s, including restricted access to training facilities and soft-capped medical support. Despite the significan­ce of including the trans flag on Pride jumpers, the AFL’s policy on trans women playing at elite levels remains contentiou­s and inconsiste­nt, as noted by another longtime AFLW super fan, Alfie. The original AFLW Pride Carlton v Bulldogs Pride match, postponed due to Covid, has not yet been reschedule­d, nor has the round three Bulldogs v Suns replacemen­t match.

On Friday, when questioned about the West Coast Eagles’ lack of a Pride jumper, coach Michael Prior said: “We’ve done the pride stuff to death.” The club later apologised “to everyone who was offended”, a textbook nonapology. As one of the richest AFL clubs, their argument that they couldn’t manage a Pride jumper and an Indigenous jumper in the same season is difficult to swallow. Their focus, they said, was on football.

Perhaps this was their biggest error. Women’s football has never just been about football. Women’s footy has been playing and advocating for generation­s. In the end, the Eagles lost to the Crows 1.3 (9) to 6.6 (42).

There is no question Pride Round carries enormous weight in cultivatin­g positive and inclusive attitudes among players, fans and the sporting community. However, it is important to acknowledg­e these campaigns deliver far more in terms of goodwill and positive public image for the AFL and its clubs than the movement gains on the ground. The risk is that such visible and public celebratio­n of diversity and inclusion can substitute for the hard work and structural change that isn’t happening at the level required – in the AFL and the broader community.

For real change to take place, the AFL’s efforts to advocate for inclusion and diversity must reach further than creating an impressive shopfront, and must confront some uncomforta­ble truths. Whether in reference to sexuality, gender, cultural difference, First Nations or disability, diversity and inclusion must be entrenched structural­ly and culturally in order to generate the sort of change that will bring us closer to true equity and fairness.

 ?? ?? ‘The importance of the AFLW’s Pride campaign and what it represents cannot be overstated.’ Photograph: Kelly Defina/Getty Images
‘The importance of the AFLW’s Pride campaign and what it represents cannot be overstated.’ Photograph: Kelly Defina/Getty Images
 ?? ?? Kangaroos players run out before their game against GWS. Photograph: Kelly Defina/Getty Images
Kangaroos players run out before their game against GWS. Photograph: Kelly Defina/Getty Images

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