Contributed by: Stephen Alomes Wednesday, July 23 2008 @ 08:08 am ACST
The recent debate on the relationship between the international and the national in Australian Football has several scenarios which might encourage fear in Australia.
This 100 Year Plan (below) which I wrote first in the late 1990s and has appeared on various sites and is now slightly revised: (1) shows those fears are groundless and more importantly (2) shows how far internationalisation has come – most of the first 8 points have already been achieved (see also the World Footy News Timeline).
Here I present the revised version.
The beginning of international Australian Football in the current era is as recent as the VFL international matches and the TV coverage of 1987 and 1988, the year of the Australian Bicentenary (200 years since European settlement). Since then, more has been achieved in only 30 years than even the visionaries who support the international game such as Kevin Sheedy, Brian Dixon and Ron Barassi would have expected.
Now, as we celebrate Australian Football’s 150 years, and as the AFL and the different nations discuss the future and the assistance which will be most helpful for development, we need to see the details in the context of the larger picture. The list below speaks of football but draws parallels to the spread of people and culture throughout history.
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL
INTERNATIONALISATION: TEN STAGES
THE 100 YEAR PLAN 1980s - 2080s
Result: Australian Football becomes an international high profile, rather than low profile, sport in a globalised world, which strengthens its hold at the original metropolitan centre (Melbourne and southern capitals of Australia). Its international aspect becomes all the more important given two yearly world cups in other sports including rugby, soccer, cricket, American football, baseball and basketball and the rise of Asian leagues in which most Australian sports have competing clubs.
• Stephen Alomes is Associate Professor of Australian Studies at Deakin University Victoria. He also wrote a book on Australians going the other way, exporting talent rather than Australian culture to London in the period from the late 1940s (When London Calls). One of his most recent forays onto a footy field was to umpire a scratch match at the Helsinki Heatseekers training while passing through Helsinki en route from Japan to France. He is currently researching nationalism and expatriates in Paris, and occasionally contributes to worldfootynews.com.
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