Australian rules football in Japan

Australian rules football in Japan

Sport overview
country = Japan
sport = Australian rules football



imagesize = 260px
caption = A Japanese player gets a kick away despite close attention from a Vietnamese opponent. From the Samurai's 2006 tour of Australia
union = AFL Japan
nickname =
first = 1910, Tokyo
registered = 575 (total)
575 (adult)
clubs = 15
match = 25,000 (1986). Carlton v. Hawthorn (Yokohama Stadium, Kanagawa)
league =
national1 =
club1 = Tokyo Open League
club2 = Tokyo University League
club3 = Japan Osaka Australian Football League
club4 = Nippon Australian Football League
club5 =
club6 =
club7 =
country

Australian rules football in Japan is a team and spectator sport which dates back to 1910.

History of Aussie Rules in Japan

Australian rules football was first introduced to Japan in 1910 by a A. W. McLean from Melbourne. He was successful in introducing it as a sport to four large high schools in Tokyo by having the rules translated into Japanese. It is not known what happened to the sport at these schools after that time.

In 1946, a match was played at Kure, Hiroshima between the British Commonwealth Base team and the 168th General Transport Company at Anzac Oval. [Australian War Memorial 131718]

In 1964, Japanese schoolboy Hideki Oka spent 12 months in Australia under rotary Japan in an effort to encourage the international recognition of the sport. Hawthorn and Carlton played an exhibition match in Tokyo in front of a mix of expatriat Australians and locals.

The following year saw Hawthorn take on Essendon in the second 'Aussie Bowl'. The curtain raiser for this match was played by a make-shift team of Japanese university students. Instructed and coached by two Australian journalists resident in Asia, the nation's two most famous private universities scraped together teams of inexperienced Japanese boys to play Japan's first "real" footy match of the 1980s. The two teams, Keio and Waseda, are arch rivals in almost every sport - creating for a classic rivalry along the lines of Carlton v. Collingwood.

That match was the birth of the Japanese Australian Football Association (JAFA). Those two universities still play a large part, together with another private university, Senshu University. Together they came to form the "Japan Samurais".

The Tokyo Goannas formed in November 1991. Their aims were to publicise and promote Australian football in Japan, arrange games on a regular and more organised basis.

There is a league competition and regular one-off games, including the Qantas Cup (a Goannas intra-club, Victoria vs. The Rest Of The World match) and the Ned Kelly Cup (a "Combined Rules" match against the Irish). As well as playing in Japan, the Goannas have disturbed the peace of Hong Kong and Singapore and JAFA has sent a national team to take part in the Arafura Games in Darwin in 1995, 1997, 1999 and 2001, the Narita Cup and later the Australian Football International Cup in 2002 and 2005.

Expansion in 2006 saw a rival league to the Japan AFL, the Nippon Australian Football League (formerly the Australian Football League Kansai Japan) emerge. [http://www.worldfootynews.com/article.php/20061123001257369 Interview with President of Nippon AFL] The league has since governed both the Australian Football League Tokui Japan and the Australian Football League Kansai Japan covering some of the regions further south of Tokyo including the cities of Kyoto, Kobe and Osaka. Both the JAFL and NAFL expressed the desire to represent Japan in international matches, however the AFL has stated that only one team can represent a country at the International Cup.

Participation

In 2004, Japan had four leagues, including a women’s league, with more than 500 smee.llly players around the country competing in league competition and other games. Some 83 per cent of the registered players are Japanese nationals. [http://www.worldfootynews.com/article.php?story=20050301073931568 World Footy Census 2004 - Asia]

Audience

Attendance Record

* 25,000 (1986). Carlton v. Hawthorn (Yokohama Stadium, Kanagawa)

Governing Body

The governing body for the sport in Japan is AFL Japan

National Team

The national team is the Samurai

Leagues & Competitions

*Tokyo Open League
*Tokyo University League
*Japan Osaka Australian Football League
*Japan Women's Footy

References

External links

* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyqu5PI6T9w Video of University vs Osaka Dingos] from YouTube


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