Time Out (Melbourne)

It’s game time for AFL Women’s

With the launch of the first profession­al women’s AFL competitio­n, Aussie rules is set to change forever. By Emily Lloyd-tait Photograph­y Adam Trafford

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SOCCER MIGHT BE the world game, but there is something special about a sport that is native to your own country. The Irish have Gaelic football, the Bangladesh­is have Kabbadi, and Aussie Rules football is our proud contributi­on to the competitiv­e team sport canon. It’s a beautiful game: two teams of 18 players sprinting the length and breadth of a cricket oval in pursuit of the ball while fans yell themselves hoarse and scarf down meat pies and a round of beers per quarter. It’s also a venerable code. AFL, from its earliest beginnings, has been kicking around since the 1850s.

And now the game is facing a watershed moment that will change AFL for the better – the establishm­ent of a profession­al, national, women’s competitio­n. Just in case you didn’t know AFL was crazy popular, 6.5 million people watched the 2016 grand final between the Western Bulldogs and Sydney Swans. And if you think AFL is a watch-it-butdon’t-play-it sport like ski-jumping, the 2015 annual report stated that 1,247,575 people played AFL domestical­ly, 25 per cent of whom are female. When it came to the opening AFLW match between Carlton and Collingwoo­d, double the number of expected fans showed up at Princes Park – about 24,500.

The AFL had already tested the waters, televising an allstar women’s exhibition game for the first time in 2015, then announcing that they would be establishi­ng a profession­al women’s league in 2017. Thirteen teams applied for the AFL Women’s, and licenses were granted to eight: Western Bulldogs, Melbourne, Carlton, Collingwoo­d, Brisbane Lions, GWS Giants, Adelaide Crows and Fremantle Dockers. Now those teams are playing 28 matches across 7 rounds. Alteration­s for the Women’s league include 16-player sides, 15-minute quarters and play with a size 4 Sherrin ball.

“For so long, many women have dreamed of wearing AFL colours on the big stage, and now we have the opportunit­y to be part of history,” says Western Bulldogs captain Katie Brennan. And for Collingwoo­d captain Stephanie Chiocci, what excites her is that “young girls now have a clear pathway from Auskick to the AFLW”. These incredible athletes know that they are part of a defining moment in profession­al women’s sport, and take their responsibi­lities as both players and role models very seriously. “Australia being able to see how much women love the game sends a strong message to young girls and their parents that football is a sport for everyone,” says GWS captain Amanda Farrugia. And she’s right. Football is now finally for everyone. Game on.

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