- May 5, 2016
- 46,135
- 51,679
- AFL Club
- Geelong
The VFL is a different competition to the AFL. Calling it the VFL/AFL is a fallacy in itself because they aren’t the same thing anymore than the VFA/VFL are the same thing.Obviously no one is stating Carter owns the Wikipedia page. The following link is a speech he gave, including in the company of the current Prime Minister. "I also acknowledge all of our sponsors – and in particular our major sponsor Ford and chief executive, Bob Graziano. Ford has supported our club for 88 years in what is the longest running sports sponsorship in the world." https://www.geelongcats.com.au/news/116687/presidents-speech
See above. You've inserted the word 'believed', Carter himself stated it as fact.
Why does that matter? Why is that a technicality? Another example of being loose with reality if he knew of those clubs and still touted the line about Ford and Geelong.
The reality is that the VFA is a different competition to the VFL/AFL. That's not an opinion, it's fact. The byline of his book reads "Reclaiming the AFL Competition’s earliest years―1870 to 1896". Simply stated, it wasn't the AFL (/VFL) competition so to claim the AFL Competition's earliest years were from 1870, as he has done, is disingenuous.
As I said, if you choose to believe the flags should count or not is up to the individual, and I don’t think they should.
The author of the tweets uses the phrase ‘Geelong’s own Wikipedia page claims’ or some such. The phrasing he uses suggests that the club has actually made the claim; I wasn’t referring to you personally.
There are many instances where the word believed has been used. If he was stupid enough to actually state it then he shouldn’t have, but in all those published links that the twitter user links to, it says ‘believed’ I think, so at least it’s not actually stating it. Either way he could have just skirted around it by saying ‘one of the longest’ and left it at that and no one could disprove it one way or the other.