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World Footy Atlas and Wiki changes

  • Monday, December 04 2006 @ 10:22 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,468
Site

A quick note to say that the link to our World Footy Wiki has been removed due to problems when WFN changed host provider (no perjorative implied towards the provider, more an issue regarding our lack of technical support). We also feel that wikipedia has become such a major source of information that it is better that clubs and leagues maintain their information there. As such, links to countries on our World Footy Atlas to our internal wiki have been re-directed to wikipedia sites. Where an equivalent is not available a stub (a simple initial page) will be created. Our thanks to all who contributed to our wiki and if anyone feels there is significant information worth retrieving please let us know and we will try to extract it for use in wikipedia.

Thursday Island, Palm Island: Same country - foreign game

  • Monday, December 04 2006 @ 04:59 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by: Sean Finlayson
  • Views: 5,859
Oceania Despite being 150 years old and played in every Australian state and territory for a century, some readers may be surprised to find that there are places in Australia that Australian rules football has not, until very recently, reached. While the game continues to grow overseas, on Australia's own soil there are still remote areas where the code is has never been played. The game starts fresh in these areas similarly to the way it starts overseas. And with a little assistance, it is thriving. Following our story on footy in the Tiwi Islands we investigate the progress that the code is making in regions where rugby league has been well established for decades and Australian rules is very much considered - a foreign game. It is afterall, a very big country ....

Bombers soaring on the Tiwi Islands

  • Thursday, November 30 2006 @ 03:39 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by: Sean Finlayson
  • Views: 29,500
Oceania

Football on the Tiwi Islands is one of the biggest success stories for the sport of Aussie Rules. The history of the sport on the island also tells the story of how difficult, yet eventually rewarding it can be to find pathways to the elite level, a path that countries like South Africa and Papua New Guinea may one day follow. The Tiwi Islands may be officially part of Australia's Northern Territory, but the 2,600 indigenous inhabitants of Bathurst and Melville Islands 80 kilometres north of Darwin consider themselves simply "Tiwis", distinct from Indigenous Australians. With the isolation from the mainland, Tiwis developed a unique culture, they speak Tiwi, have their own government and proudly wave their own flag. But since 1942, an important part of their culture has also been the sport of Australian rules football.

Houli gets the nod

  • Tuesday, November 28 2006 @ 11:48 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 5,178
Middle East

Earlier this year, WFN ran a story on a a young Muslim, Bachar Houli and his aspirations to become the AFL's first high-profile Muslim footballer. For those that aren't aware, the draft took place last Saturday and Houli was fortunate enough to have been selected by Essendon with pick 42.

Michael in shock retirement reversal

  • Saturday, November 25 2006 @ 05:38 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,394
Oceania

Just weeks after retiring from the AFL, former Brisbane Lion Mal Michael has been signed by Essendon to continue his stellar career for at least two more years.

ClustrMaps added

  • Friday, November 24 2006 @ 05:03 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,546
Site

Just a quick note to let readers know that we have recently added "ClustrMaps" to our site, in the right hand column, under Geo Stats. This third-party software produces a nice snapshot of where across the world people are viewing worldfootynews.com

Dubai tries to get footy moving in the Middle East

  • Thursday, November 23 2006 @ 04:39 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 10,940
Middle East

In the West, the Middle East is never far from front page news. Unfortunately, in the world of Aussie Rules, it has been quite the contrary. There have been attempts to set up competitions in Lebanon, Israel and Turkey, but ultimately, they either haven't yet come to fruition, or they are on hiatus. Furthermore, the recent tension in the area is unlikely to have done a great deal to help proceedings. Yet almost unnoticed, the United Arab Emirates, renowned for its rapid city construction levels and more tolerant way of life (at least from a Western perspective), has produced a team in the city of Dubai.

French footy gets on board with Leo Lagrange

  • Wednesday, November 22 2006 @ 04:09 pm ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 9,449
Europe

The footy scene in France is hoping to soon affiliate with the polysports association Leo Lagrange in an effort to improve the profile of Australian Rules football and give itself a channel to receiving funding through government channels.

The move comes as the French footy clubs debate the best way forward for the sport in France, with Strasbourg pulling out of the AFLG after a tough first year and options for regional leagues in and around France up for discussion.

PNG's King Mal retires early from AFL to help his country

  • Wednesday, November 22 2006 @ 06:48 am ACDT
  • Contributed by: Sean Finlayson
  • Views: 5,239
Oceania

Mal Michael, Papua New Guinea's most celebrated AFL footballer retired last month, but the effects on footy in PNG are yet to be known. Early signs are that he will spread his time between Melbourne and his country of birth.

Graham's giant kicks doing the job for Jets

  • Monday, November 20 2006 @ 11:07 am ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 4,378
North America

Australian punter Ben Graham has continued his excellent form for the New York Jets in the NFL, averaging 44.3 yards, slightly above the league average - a top result in his first full season. A longest kick of 69 yards is another impressive result. Two more long kicks weren't counted in his stats due to team penalties.

AFL Canada 2006 season full of ups and downs

  • Sunday, November 19 2006 @ 09:11 am ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,329
North America

The 2006 Canadian footy season was marked by progress in some areas and setbacks in others. Two clubs, with players from five sides competed at the US Nationals. Several clubs had difficulty fielding a side, others folded, but there was some expansion with at least two full clubs starting play next year. However, this still leaves AFL Canada with fewer sides than at the end of last year.

Finland domestic comp ready to break the ice in 2007

  • Thursday, November 16 2006 @ 07:36 am ACDT
  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 10,077
Europe

Since the end of last year, footy in Finland has seen the Finland Lions make two trips to Prague, play a three-game series against the Stockholm Dynamite and hold a match Finland vs The World, with an all-Finnish team taking on Irish and Aussies from the Finnish footy scene and only going down by twenty points.

Now the crew are putting together plans for a local league featuring teams from Helsinki, Espoo, Turku and possibly Vantaa (all fairly close together on Finland's southern coast), with the goal of having enough Finns playing regularly in the league to push for a Finnish team (tentatively nicknamed the "Ice Breakers") at the 2008 International Cup.

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