Classroom lesson 路 Sport馃嚘馃嚭 Australia

Australian Rules Football (AFL)

An Aussie sport with tall posts, big crowds and spectacular catches

An AFL player leaping high to take a 'mark' over another player

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Australian Rules Football, or AFL for short, is a sport invented in Australia in the 1850s. It is played on a huge oval-shaped pitch with an oval-shaped ball. Eighteen players from each team try to kick the ball between tall posts at each end. Big games can pack in 90,000 fans, all cheering at once.

Tell me more

AFL pitches are massive - much bigger than a football (soccer) pitch. They are usually shared with cricket grounds, which is why they are shaped like an oval. The ball is shaped like a rugby ball but a bit bigger. Players run, bounce the ball, pass it with their hands, and kick it to teammates.

The most exciting thing in AFL is the 'mark'. When a player kicks the ball a long way through the air, anyone who catches it cleanly - sometimes by jumping up onto another player's shoulders - is awarded a 'mark' and gets a free kick. These leaping catches are spectacular, and the crowd goes wild.

There are six posts at each end of the pitch. Kicking the ball cleanly between the two tall middle posts scores six points - a 'goal'. Kicking it between a tall and a short post scores just one point - a 'behind'. A typical game might finish with scores like 105 to 92, which sounds huge but makes sense when you can score so many ways.

AFL season ends each year with the Grand Final, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Almost the whole country watches. Schools, neighbourhoods and whole families pick a team and stick with them for life. Many Aussies say AFL is more than a game - it's part of who they are.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What's the biggest crowd you've ever seen or been part of? What did it feel like?
  2. 02Why do you think people feel so strongly about their team?
  3. 03In your country, what sport do most people follow? What makes it special?
Try this

Classroom activity

As a class, list every sport you can think of from around the world. Mark on a map where each one began. Then pick one each that you'd love to try. Bring back what you find out the following week.