Sunday Territorian

Kangaroos get Good Friday call

- SAM EDMUND

NORTH Melbourne will play in football’s first Good Friday game.

The Kangaroos, who first approached the AFL with the concept in 1992, will be confirmed as one of the participan­ts in the marquee timeslot when the 2017 fixture is released on Thursday.

Their likely opponent will be the blockbuste­r-starved premiers Western Bulldogs, who are set to be rewarded for their stunning 2016 season with a place in the stand-alone twilight contest.

Carlton and St Kilda also presented compelling cases to the AFL, with the Saints putting in a joint submission with the Dogs built around a celebratio­n of junior football.

But the AFL will almost announce that it will rotate the two teams involved every year.

Next year’s historic game is expected to be played late in the afternoon, likely at the now AFL-owned Etihad Stadium and integrated into Channel Seven’s Royal Children’s Hospital Good Friday Appeal.

Good Friday falls on April 14, putting it in Round 4.

The AFL Commission approved the concept last year, breaking the long-held tradition of keeping the religious day football-free.

The inaugural game will take place 25 years after former Kangaroos chief executive Greg Miller put the club’s case to league heavyweigh­ts.

“We put the applicatio­n in and I think the chairman of the AFL then was John Kennedy Sr and being a good Catholic, he was dead against it,” Miller said yesterday.

“Our argument, even back then, was that all these other sports, movie theatres and all forms of entertainm­ent were operating, except the AFL.

“AFL has been the last sport to come on board. It was always a good fit,I thought.”

Following decades of failed campaignin­g by clubs, AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan declared after July’s commission meeting that there was “momentum” behind the game.

“There’s no impediment at commission level and a level of enthusiasm to do it,” McLachlan said.

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