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AFLW 2024 - Round 10 - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
This seems pretty short-sighted to me. English and Irish players dominated in the late 19th and early 20th century but the children and grandchildren of Italian and Greek immigrants (who were not seen as white at the time) took up the sport with passion and became some of the best players of all time. Now we're seeing some great players of African and Middle Eastern heritage filter through, indeed the first Sudanese player was only drafted in 2009 and now another will soon be the best paid player in the league.They could be called the West Sydney Halal Schezuen Tendulkar's and still not have any support.
Majority of the people living in West Sydney are from cultures that don't follow any code of football and never will.
Not having any locals to convert them into fans....it ain't ever going to work.
ITMT you can pack out Homebush with Korean Boy bands or Bollywood star musicals.
Just how it is.
I agree with this 100%. Aussies of many migrant backgrounds are excellent athletes.This seems pretty short-sighted to me. English and Irish players dominated in the late 19th and early 20th century but the children and grandchildren of Italian and Greek immigrants (who were not seen as white at the time) took up the sport with passion and became some of the best players of all time. Now we're seeing some great players of African and Middle Eastern heritage filter through, indeed the first Sudanese player was only drafted in 2009 and now another will soon be the best paid player in the league.
I don't think targeting Western Sydney is misguided at all but I do think the Swans would have been better placed to make more organic connections with that community rather than the creation of a new club. There are cultural barriers, yes, but they can and have previously been overcome. I think GWS would have been better situated to represent Canberra and the Riverina but the capacity for growth is limited there and we all know the AFL is all about $$$.
Agree with this. The greater part makes it sound like a government urban planning document rather than the geographical location of a team. Either drop the greater or relocate to Canberra.I think a lot of the problem with GWS not having supporters is due to their name, which doesn’t inspire any geographical loyalty. “Greater Western Sydney” isn’t actually a thing. Literally no one identifies as being from Greater WS. In their attempt to capture the largest possible geographical area with the name, the AFL ended up capturing no one. GWS is a statistical term only. People either identify with “Western Sydney” or their suburb. The “Greater” part feels like it was forced by some clueless AFL number cruncher in Melbourne who has never actually been to Western Sydney.
It is a tough area to crack, but the name doesn’t help. They should either change it to Western Sydney or admit defeat and relocate the team to Canberra.
I go to every Swans home game and there are a fair few non-anglo fans of many backgrounds in their Swans gear. Mostly younger, I would guess second or third generation.I agree with this 100%. Aussies of many migrant backgrounds are excellent athletes.
But how do you convince them or their parents to take up the game in great enough numbers to warrant having a whole team represent them? Thus your comment about having the Swans, as an established club, do this difficult job, makes the most sense. The Swans have done a great job attracting Australian Chinese fans (like myself).
Also, a team from Canberra / Riverina makes absolute sense playing home games at an upgraded Manuka with the odd game in Wagga or Albury.
Very very few teams can exist across multiple geographic areas. I would hazard a guess that no team on the planet has done it successfully in a market where their sport is not already entrenched in those regions. It should have been Western Sydney from the start.I think a lot of the problem with GWS not having supporters is due to their name, which doesn’t inspire any geographical loyalty. “Greater Western Sydney” isn’t actually a thing. Literally no one identifies as being from Greater WS. In their attempt to capture the largest possible geographical area with the name, the AFL ended up capturing no one. GWS is a statistical term only. People either identify with “Western Sydney” or their suburb. The “Greater” part feels like it was forced by some clueless AFL number cruncher in Melbourne who has never actually been to Western Sydney.
It is a tough area to crack, but the name doesn’t help. They should either change it to Western Sydney or admit defeat and relocate the team to Canberra.
Agree 100%.I actually think it’s more psychological.
So many teams seem to become conservative when they build a lead - the team in front can’t always be the only one to get physically tired.
They seem to stop doing what got them the lead and start focussing on “taking time off the clock”. Which never works.
We used to do it all the time.
Congratulations on missing my point entirely.This seems pretty short-sighted to me. English and Irish players dominated in the late 19th and early 20th century but the children and grandchildren of Italian and Greek immigrants (who were not seen as white at the time) took up the sport with passion and became some of the best players of all time. Now we're seeing some great players of African and Middle Eastern heritage filter through, indeed the first Sudanese player was only drafted in 2009 and now another will soon be the best paid player in the league.
I don't think targeting Western Sydney is misguided at all but I do think the Swans would have been better placed to make more organic connections with that community rather than the creation of a new club. There are cultural barriers, yes, but they can and have previously been overcome. I think GWS would have been better situated to represent Canberra and the Riverina but the capacity for growth is limited there and we all know the AFL is all about $$$.
No, the Greeks and Italians were not initiated into the AFL, they were actively resisted as outsiders. And this same "failure to integrate" argument has been trotted out about new migrants for centuries now and, a generation or two later, never proves true. You sound like you don't really know anyone from Western Sydney or spend much time there at all. Anyway, I'm not going to derail the thread further.Congratulations on missing my point entirely.
The Greeks and Italians (mostly Melbourne, but also Adelaide and regional) had locals to initiate them into the culture of AFL. At that time assimilation was seen as more or less a duty of young migrants. Especially in the workplace. And this is where the AFL was able to bring those cultures into the game, it became a means of fitting in and getting along.
Neither the assimilation expectation, nor the locals interested in AFL and bringing migrants into the game are true today of Western Sydney. People just like what they liked in their home countries, and the internet means they don't have to give those likes up just because they live here. Hence you get 30,000 to Korean boy bands, 20,000 to Indian Bollywood palavar, and only 5,000 to AFL.
Just my sociological take on why it's not working and never will.
FWIW I didn't put any value judgement on integration. I certainly didn't cite any "failure to integrate".No, the Greeks and Italians were not initiated into the AFL, they were actively resisted as outsiders. And this same "failure to integrate" argument has been trotted out about new migrants for centuries now and, a generation or two later, never proves true. You sound like you don't really know anyone from Western Sydney or spend much time there at all. Anyway, I'm not going to derail the thread further.
Thanks. I had to find an excuse to post this graphicGWS were in front for almost 94% of the total time in both finals
And the Australian-born western suburbs folks are wedded to rugby league.Never going to happen in West Sydney where there are very few Australians born here, let alone enough that actually follow AFL and pass on the interest to people from cultures with absolute zero interest in any mode of football.
When I lock horns with soccer fans online they often pull the line that Aussie Rules will fade in relevance as more and more immigrants arrive from countries that only know soccer.I agree with this 100%. Aussies of many migrant backgrounds are excellent athletes.
But how do you convince them or their parents to take up the game in great enough numbers to warrant having a whole team represent them? Thus your comment about having the Swans, as an established club, do this difficult job, makes the most sense. The Swans have done a great job attracting Australian Chinese fans (like myself).
Also, a team from Canberra / Riverina makes absolute sense playing home games at an upgraded Manuka with the odd game in Wagga or Albury.
Soccer should outlaw the header that way a lot of their fans can be a lot less braindead by the time they reach their teensWhen I lock horns with soccer fans online they often pull the line that Aussie Rules will fade in relevance as more and more immigrants arrive from countries that only know soccer.
I point out that Australia has been taking immigrants from one of the most soccer-mad nations in the world; the one that practically invented the modern sport, since, oh.. 1788 and yet somehow, after a generation, so many of them come around to Aussie Rules.
I like to state my theory that once they drop their cultural baggage, they’re willing to admit it’s simply a better game.
But that doesn’t usually go down too well.
Great minds think alike. I have trotted out that very theory more than once myself. To the usual sullen snarls in reply.Soccer should outlaw the header that way a lot of their fans can be a lot less braindead by the time they reach their teens
I don't know you personally jewels but I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and say that whilst you might be seething inside, you'd do the professional thing and shake hands, then go back and trash him in the dressing roomWell for a start, Hinkley wasn't in Ginnivan's face, he had a smart retort to the smartarse tweet, said from a reasonable distance, unlike the Jason McCartney incident and if Papley had posted something like Ginnivan did then yes - don't talk the talk if you can't walk the walk.
I'm not big on social media but like most things in life, every action has a reaction.
Yeah, not sure my husband would agree with you there ashep, but I'd like to think I would!I don't know you personally jewels but I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and say that whilst you might be seething inside, you'd do the professional thing and shake hands, then go back and trash him in the dressing room
I always ask myself "what would Horse do?".Yeah, not sure my husband would agree with you there ashep, but I'd like to think I would!
Put Reid in defense!I always ask myself "what would Horse do?".
This I can attest to living up here in Bne. When we play the Lions, my daughter and I don the red and white, jump on a bus to the Gabba and cheer our guts out. Have never copped any grief, just good natured banter. I compare this to when I attend as a Lions fan and see the behaviour of the fans of the Melbourne based clubs in particular. Not sure if they're bne locals or just visiting but are absolutely disgusting. This year, some d***head Pies supporters went out of their way to pick a fight with the group of friends I was with for absolutely no reason. And they won that game too so can only imagine what they would've been like if they lost.Don't mind playing either.
Geelongs fan arrogance is sickening on here, so hope they lose.
Brisbane are a decent bunch of fans