Australian Rules/AFL - what's in a name?
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"I'll acknowledge there are more talented teams in the competition but I won't acknowledge that there is a better team in the competition" Paul Roos March 2005Comment
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I’m not saying it doesn’t. I was offering an explanation re: AuntieG. For all I know AuntieG is a triple Brownlow medalist and did play AFL (although that would have been VFL)
Thank youComment
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I'm still chasing that horse. Can't stand it. I put it in the same category as "naming rights" for grounds. The AFL corporate types can call it what they like. We don't have to slavishly follow suit.Comment
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yep sorry
Forest > 89 onwards Wing
NorthShore > 93 onwards Wing, small forward or run with...............awesome years of my life and to train with Chris Langford in his last year of AFL when he was still playing for the Hawks but training at Northshore was a treat
NOT AFL lol.............ive had covid19 and seriously my brain has been upside down and back to front last few weeksLast edited by Auntie.Gerald; 17 August 2022, 03:28 PM."be tough, only when it gets tough"
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Nah, that horse is lame.....so it can't even bolt. It must have been an interesting but ultimately flawed discussion a decade ago. The official title of our game is Australian Rules Football. AFL is just an Australian Rules Football league.Comment
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Agreed. However, it is interesting to note that because it has been traditionally a male dominated sport with male dominated leagues, it is even more important to differentiate the sport 'Aussie Rules' from the annual competition/league which is the AFL.
Compare this:
- Man says I played AFL.
- Woman says I played AFL.
The first statement could be true, or it could mean to some that they played Aussie rules.
The second wouldn't statement couldn't be true. A woman would say I played in the AFLW or I played Aussie Rules. Women are not allowed to play in the AFL.
Just because plenty of people refer to the sport as AFL, doesn't make it correct.Comment
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Agreed. However, it is interesting to note that because it has been traditionally a male dominated sport with male dominated leagues, it is even more important to differentiate the sport 'Aussie Rules' from the annual competition/league which is the AFL.
Compare this:
- Man says I played AFL.
- Woman says I played AFL.
The first statement could be true, or it could mean to some that they played Aussie rules.
The second wouldn't statement couldn't be true. A woman would say I played in the AFLW or I played Aussie Rules. Women are not allowed to play in the AFL.
Just because plenty of people refer to the sport as AFL, doesn't make it correct.
This might distress our brethen (or indeed, sistren) from the southern states, but some decades ago, the AFL (being the organisation that runs the Australian Football League, but also has influence over all levels of the sport played in this country) decided to market the sport in NSW and Queensland as "AFL". So many of us easily slip into using that term to describe the sport as well as the league.
*Unless she's Dani LaidleyLast edited by liz; 17 August 2022, 05:03 PM.Comment
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That's not logically coherent. If the man's statement has a second meaning, then that meaning can surely apply to a woman who makes the same statement. Indeed, in her case, you might argue there is no ambiguity (because she can't have played in the AFL).
This might distress our brethen (or indeed, sistren) from the southern states, but some decades ago, the AFL (being the organisation that runs the Australian Football League, but also has influence over all levels of the sport played in this country) decided to market the sport in NSW and Queensland as "AFL". So many of us easily slip into using that term to describe the sport as well as the league.Comment
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That's not logically coherent. If the man's statement has a second meaning, then that meaning can surely apply to a woman who makes the same statement. Indeed, in her case, you might argue there is no ambiguity (because she can't have played in the AFL*).
*Unless she's Dani Laidley
They have different meaning/ambiguity when stated by men/women.
Let me put it another way.
- Man says I played AFLW
- Woman says I played AFLW
The first statement cannot be factually true (unless they have had a gender change after they played in the league), and we would go, 'what do you mean'?
Second statement could be factually true without a gender change, and less likely to be challenged.
Anyway, just interesting how language has different meaning. Not something to die in a ditch overComment
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