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INTERSTATE
FOOTBALL
[ Home ] [ Intercolonial Match Results1879 to 1894 ] [ Intercolonial And Interstate Match Results 1899 to 1914 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1919 to 1928 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1929 to 1937 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1938 to 1954 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1955 to 1962 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1963 to 1972 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1973 to 1982 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1983 to 1992 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1993 to 2008 ] [ Carnival Placings ] [ Carnival Summaries 1908 to 1993 ] [ All Australian Teams ] [ Tassie Medallists ] [ 'Sporting Life' Teams of the Year ] [ Amateur Interstate And Representative Football ]
[1908 Melbourne Carnival ] [1911
Adelaide Carnival ] [1914 Sydney Carnival
] [1921 Perth Carnival ] [1924
Hobart Carnival ] [1927 Melbourne
Carnival ] [1930 Adelaide Carnival
] [1933 Sydney Carnival ] [1937
Perth Carnival ] [1947 Hobart Carnival
] [1950 Brisbane Carnival ] [1953
Adelaide Carnival ] [1956 Perth
Carnival] [1958 Melbourne
Carnival] [1961 Brisbane Carnival]
[1966 Hobart Carnival] [1969
Adelaide Carnival] [1972 Perth
Carnival] [1975 Knock-out
Carnival] [1979
Perth State of Origin Carnival] [1980
Adelaide State of Origin Carnival] [1988
Adelaide Bicentennial State of Origin Carnival]
Until fairly recently elite level Australian football meant interstate
football. Moreover, it was primarily, indeed almost exclusively, in the
interstate arena that football could in any serious way be argued to be a genuinely national
sport. Since the transmutation of the VFL into the AFL, however, the
overwhelming majority of Australia's elite footballers have participated in a
single, national (or near-national) club competition, and the importance of
senior interstate footy has diminished.
Nevertheless, its overall significance in terms of the sport's development - and, indeed, arguably its very
survival - cannot be over-stressed.
Prior to the 1960s the vast majority of the game's elite players saw
out most if not all of their careers in their home states or territories.
By the time of the inception of state of origin football in 1977, however, the
trend for the very best footballers, from all parts of Australia, to gravitate
towards Victoria, and in particular the VFL, was becoming irresistible. Interstate
matches between state league selections were no longer remotely representative
of the quality of each state's footballers. This is exemplified by the
fact that, prior to the arrival of the state of origin concept, the VFL had not
lost an interstate contest for 12 seasons. However, the fact that such
success was not uniquely attributable to the quality of footballers being
produced within the boundaries of the state of Victoria must be readily conceded
when you consider that the list of prominent 'Victorians' during that era
included names like Hudson, Hart, Stewart (from Tasmania), Farmer,
John, Marshall
and the Richardsons (from Western Australia), Jesaulenko (from the ACT), and Blight (from South
Australia). The swing in the balance of power, once the state of origin
concept was implemented, was immediate. In the very first state of origin
contest Western Australia thrashed the Vics by 94 points, a victory of
unprecedented magnitude. The Victorian response, perhaps predictably, was
to dilute the state of origin rules in such a way as, effectively, to load the
dice in Victoria's favour. Essentially, this meant restricting the number
of VFL-based players available to Victoria's opponents, whilst allowing the
Victorian selectors access to any VFL-based players whatsoever who did not
qualify for the opposition . Nevertheless,
there could be little doubt that the playing field had been levelled somewhat:
in the 12 seasons following the introduction of the state of origin concept
Victoria's record in such matches against Western Australia was 9 wins from 15
starts, and against South Australia 5 wins from 9. Perhaps more
significantly, some of the state of origin contests which took place during the
1980s constituted arguably the finest expositions of the game ever seen.
The question was though whether it really mattered; what mattered - and
continues to matter - most to the overwhelming majority of Australian football
aficionados was - and is - the performances of their favourite clubs. VFL
football may have been a good deal less pretty to watch than state of origin,
but the average punter would settle for 'club success' over 'pretty' every time. It
is arguably the same in most other sports. In soccer, the typical
Liverpool, Bayern Munich, Real Madrid or Juventus supporter is warmly ambivalent
at best to the performances of England, Germany, Spain or Italy, but the success
or failure of their favoured clubs is a critical index of self esteem and
emotional contentment. A similar situation holds with fans of North
American sports such as ice hockey, baseball, basketball and gridiron.
What gridiron fan ever lost any sleep over the result of the annual AFC-NFC All
Star game? The emergence of the AFL as a near-national competition has, sadly
it seems - at least to this author - rendered interstate representative football
at the elite level an irrelevance. Where it does still have a place though
is in the many tiers which undergird the AFL: state leagues, country
competitions, under-age football, and so on. For footballers striving to
attain elite standard, or even for those simply wishing to maximise their
achievements at one of the many levels beneath the AFL, interstate
representative football remains, and is likely to remain, a critical
benchmark. This alone would be sufficient reason to acclaim it.
However, the fact that for well over a century interstate football constituted
the only truly national stage available to Australia's best footballers means
that its importance in an historical sense, in terms of the sport's development
and indeed survival, is probably unrivalled.
Where now?
Back to Top
or
[ Home ] [ Intercolonial Match Results1879 to 1894 ] [ Intercolonial And Interstate Match Results 1899 to 1914 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1919 to 1928 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1929 to 1937 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1938 to 1954 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1955 to 1962 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1963 to 1972 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1973 to 1982 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1983 to 1992 ] [ Interstate Match Results 1993 to 2008 ] [ Carnival Placings ] [ Carnival Summaries 1908 to 1993 ] [ All Australian Teams ] [ Tassie Medallists ] [ 'Sporting Life' Teams of the Year ] [ Amateur Interstate And Representative Football ]
[1908 Melbourne Carnival ] [1911
Adelaide Carnival ] [1914 Sydney Carnival
] [1921 Perth Carnival ] [1924
Hobart Carnival ] [1927 Melbourne
Carnival ] [1930 Adelaide Carnival
] [1933 Sydney Carnival ] [1937
Perth Carnival ] [1947 Hobart Carnival
] [1950 Brisbane Carnival ] [1953
Adelaide Carnival ] [1956 Perth
Carnival] [1958 Melbourne
Carnival] [1961 Brisbane Carnival]
[1966 Hobart Carnival] [1969
Adelaide Carnival] [1972 Perth
Carnival] [1975 Knock-out
Carnival] [1979
Perth State of Origin Carnival] [1980
Adelaide State of Origin Carnival] [1988
Adelaide Bicentennial State of Origin Carnival]
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