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Sport in Australia

Sport is an important part of Australia that dates back to the early colonial period. Australian rules football, rugby league, rugby union, association football, cricket and tennis are among the earliest organised sports in Australia. Sport has shaped the Australian national identity through events such as the Melbourne Cup and the America's Cup. Australia also holds the record for the largest attendance at a Rugby Union match with almost 110,000 spectators watching the Wallabies play the All Blacks in 2000.[1]

There are a number of professional sport leagues in Australia, including the Australian Football League (AFL) and AFL Women's (Australian rules football), National Rugby League (NRL) and NRL Women's (rugby league), Super Rugby Pacific (Australia/New Zealand) (Rugby Union), the National Basketball League and the Women's National Basketball League, A-League Men and A-League Women (soccer), the Australian Baseball League (baseball), the Big Bash League (cricket), Women's Big Bash League (cricket) and Sheffield Shield (cricket), Suncorp Super Netball and the Supercars Championship (touring car racing). Attendance for the AFL in 2019 attracted more than 7.5 million people to games,[2] while the NRL draws just over 3 million people in a single season.

Historically, rugby league and rugby union football codes have been more popular than Australian rules football in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and Queensland, whereas Australian rules football has been more popular in Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, Northern Territory and Western Australia.

Australia boasts 7 former world number one squash players, along with a history of success in the Commonwealth Games.

As a nation, Australia has competed in many international events, including the Olympics and Paralympics. The country has also twice hosted the Summer Olympics in Melbourne (1956) and Sydney (2000), as well as the Commonwealth Games on five occasions. A third Olympics will be held in Brisbane in 2032, and a sixth Commonwealth Games across rural Victoria state in 2026.

The city of Melbourne is famous for its major sports events and has been described as the 'sporting capital of the world',[3] and one of its stadiums, the Melbourne Cricket Ground, is considered the home of Australian rules football and one of the world's premier Cricket grounds. After the United States, which is regarded as the greatest sports nation in the world, Australia is considered one of the best sports nations in the world.[4][5][6][7]

History edit

"Australia's sporting history is marked by great successes, great stories and truly great moments. Sport speaks a universal language in this country – we are a nation of players and enthusiasts."

Kevin Rudd, January 2008[8]

 
An 1860s game of Australian rules football at the Richmond Paddock. A pavilion of the MCG seen on the left in the background. (Wood engraving made by Robert Bruce in 1866.)

Sport came to Australia in 1810 when the first athletics tournament was held; soon after cricket, horse racing and sailing clubs and competitions started. Australia's lower classes would play sports on public holidays, with the upper classes playing more regularly on Saturdays.[9] Sydney was the early hub of sport in the colony.[10] Early forms of football were played there by 1829.[11] Early sport in Australia was played along class lines. In 1835, the British Parliament banned blood sports except fox hunting in a law that was implemented in Australia; this was not taken well in the country as it was seen as an attack on the working classes.[12] By the late 1830s, horse racing was established in New South Wales and other parts of the country, and enjoyed support across class lines. Gambling was part of sport from the time horse racing became an established sport in the colony.[12] Horse racing was also happening in Melbourne at Batman's Hill in 1838, with the first race meeting in Victoria taking place in 1840.[13] Cricket was also underway with the Melbourne Cricket Club founded in 1838.[13][14] Sport was being used during the 1830s, 1840s and 1850s as a form of social integration across classes.[15] Victorian rules football (later known as Australian rules) was codified in 1859.[16][17] Australian football clubs still around in the current Australian Football League were founded by 1858.[14][16][17] Originally formed as the South Australian Football Association on 30 April 1877, the SANFL (South Australian National Football League) is the oldest surviving football league of any code in Australia. The Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia's largest sporting arena, opened in 1853.[18] The Melbourne Cup was first run in 1861.[19] A rugby union team was established at the University of Sydney in 1864.[19] Regular sport did not begin to be played in South Australia, Tasmania and Western Australia until the late 1860s and early 1870s.[10]

 
Early photo of the Ashes Urn, from the Illustrated London News, 1921

The first Australian cricket team to go on tour internationally did so in 1868. The Australian side was an all Aboriginal one and toured England where they played 47 games, where they won 14 games, drew 19 and lost 14.[20]Australia's adoption of sport as a national pastime was so comprehensive that Anthony Trollope remarked in his book, Australia, published in 1870, "The English passion for the amusements which are technically called 'sports', is not a national necessity with the Americans, whereas with the Australians it is almost as much so as home."[21]

The first team formally organised soccer team was formed in Sydney in 1880 and was named the Wanderers.[22][23] Sport was receiving coverage in Australian newspapers by 1876 when a sculling race in England was reported in the Sydney Morning Herald.[10] In 1877, Australia played in the first Test Cricket match against England. In 1882, The Ashes were started following the victory of the Australia national cricket team over England.[19][24] Field hockey teams for men and women were established by 1890.[25] The Sheffield Shield cricket competition was first held in 1891 with New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia participating in the inaugural competition. The remaining states would not participate until much later, with Queensland first participating in 1926–27, Western Australia in 1947–48 and Tasmania in 1982–83.[26][27] In 1897 the Victorian Football League, which later became the AFL the Australian Football League, was founded[19][28] after breaking away from the Victorian Football Association.[28]

The first badminton competition in Australia was played in 1900.[29] The first ice hockey game was played in Melbourne on 12 July 1906 between a local Melbourne team and a team from the crew of the visiting US warship USS Baltimore.[30]

Motor racing began in the first years of federation with motorcycle racing beginning at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 1901 with automobile motorsport following in 1904 at Aspendale Racecourse in Melbourne. A dedicated race track was added to Aspendale's horse racing track in 1906, although it fell into disuse almost immediately.

Rugby league has been the overwhelmingly dominant rugby code in Australia since 1908 (this position remains unchallenged to this day). When Messenger and the All Golds returned from Great Britain in 1908, they helped the new clubs adapt to the rules of rugby league prior to the inaugural 1908 NSWRFL season. The Queensland Rugby Football League also formed early in 1908 by seven rugby players who were dissatisfied with the administration of the Queensland Rugby Union.[31] The Australia national rugby union team had their first international test against New Zealand in 1903, and first international tour in 1908, earning their nickname of the Wallabies after two British journalists used it to refer to the team.[32] The team won gold at the 1908 Summer Olympics; however the majority of the squad joined rugby league clubs upon returning to Australia.[33]

Women represented Australia for the first time at the Olympics in 1912.[19] Surfing came to Australia by 1915[19] with the first surf life saving competition being held that year.[34] Les Darcy began his boxing career in 1915, with some of his later fights taking place at Sydney Stadium. The following year, an American promoter encouraged Darcy to go to the United States at a time when Australia was actively recruiting young men for the armed services. Controversy resulted and Darcy died at the age of 21 in the United States. When his body was returned to Australia, 100,000 people attended his Sydney funeral.[35][36][37][38][39] Darcy would remain significant to Australians into the 2000s, when Kevin Rudd mentioned his story.[39]

 
Group of tennis players, ca. 1922.

In 1922, a committee in Australia investigated the benefits of physical education for girls. They came up with several recommendations regarding what sports were and were not appropriate for girls to play based on the level of fitness required. It was determined that for some individual girls that for medical reasons, the girls should probably not be allowed to participate in tennis, netball, lacrosse, golf, hockey, and cricket. Football was completely medically inappropriate for girls to play. It was medically appropriate for all girls to be able to participate in, so long as they were not done in an overly competitive manner, swimming, rowing, cycling and horseback riding.[40] Dick Eve won Australia's first Olympic diving gold medal in 1924.[41] In 1924 the Australian Rugby League Board of Control, later to be known as the Australian Rugby League, was formed to administer the national team (the Kangaroos), and later as the national governing body for the sport of Rugby league. In 1928 the team also adopted the national colours of green and gold for the first time, having previously used blue and maroon, making the Kangaroos the third national sporting body to do so after cricket (from 1899) and the Australian Olympic team (from 1908).[42] Netball Australia was founded in 1927 as the All Australia Women's Basket Ball Association.[19]

 
1932–33 Ashes: Bill Woodfull evades a bodyline ball at the Gabba

During the 1930s, the playing of sport on Sunday was banned in most of the country outside South Australia.[43] The Bodyline cricket series between Australia and England took place in 1932–33. The English side were determined to win and employed physical intimidation against Australia to ensure victory.[44][45] The bowling style used by the team known as body-line bowling was devised by Douglas Jardine with advice from Frank Foster in England ahead of the series in order to defeat Australian batsman Donald Bradman. Going into the start of the series, Bill Voce told the media "If we don't beat you, we'll knock your bloody heads off." The style of play was such that the Australians contemplated cancelling the series after the Adelaide test.[45][46]

Following a successful Australian racing career, the race horse Phar Lap went to the United States where he died. There were many conspiracy theories at the time and later that suggested people in the United States poisoned the horse to prevent him from winning.[44]

Australian women's sports had an advantage over many other women's sport organisations around the world in the period after World War II. Women's sports organisations had largely remained intact and were holding competitions during the war period. This structure survived in the post war period. Women's sport were not hurt because of food rationing, petrol rationing, population disbursement, and other issues facing post-war Europe.[47] In September 1949, Australian Canoeing was founded as the Australian Canoe Federation.[48]

By the 1960s, Australia had an international identity as a sport-obsessed country, an identity which was embraced inside the country. This was so well known that in a 1962 edition of Sports Illustrated, Australia was named the most sports-obsessed country in the world.[49] In 1967, Australia hosted the second World Netball Championships in Perth.[50] That same year, South Australia became the last state to lift its ban on the playing of sports on Sunday.[43]

Starting in the early 1970s, Australian sport underwent a paradigm shift with sponsorship becoming one of the fundamental drivers of earnings for Australian sport on amateur and professional levels. By the mid-1980s, the need for the ability to acquire sponsorship dollars in sport was so great that job applicants for sport administrator positions were expected to be able to demonstrate an ability to get it.[51]

During the 1970s, Australia was being routinely defeated in major international competitions as Eastern Bloc countries enjoyed strong government support for sport. The Liberal governments at the time were opposed to similar intervention in Australia's sporting system as they felt it would be government intrusion into an important component of Australian life.[52] In the 1974 elections, several Australian sporting competitors endorsed the Liberal party in advertisements that ran on television. Competitors involved included Ron Barassi, NSWRL player Johnny Raper and horse trainer Tommie Smith.[53] That year, the Australian team qualified for the 1974 FIFA World Cup, the first successful qualification to the FIFA World Cup in the country's history after failing to qualify to the 1966 and 1970 tournaments. It would prove to be the only appearance for the Australian team for more than three decades.[22]

 
The Australia national rugby league team kicking off a match

The regional football code divide in Australia was still present in the 1980s, with rugby league football being the dominant code in Queensland, ACT and New South Wales while Australian rules football dominated in the rest of the country. When codes went outside of their traditional geographic home, they had little success in gaining new fans and participants.[26] The Australian Institute of Sport was founded in 1981.[54] In the lead up to and during the 1982 Commonwealth Games, the police were called upon to stop protests by Aboriginal land rights activists who staged protests timed with the event in order to politicise the event.[55] Australia had competitors in the America's Cup yacht race for a number of years. Going into the 1983 race, the Australian media was not that interested in the race as they expected a similar result and in the media lead-up to the event, made it out to be a race for rich people. This lack of interest continued throughout the early races. Near the end, when Australia finally appeared poised to win it, millions of Australians turned on their television to watch the Australia II win the competition.[56] That year, the Liberals used Australian tennis star John Newcombe and race car drivers Peter Brock and Alan Jones in their political advertising.[57] Athletes would again be used, this time by the Labor Party, in the 1989 elections.[57] During the 1980s, Australian soccer players began to start playing regularly in overseas professional leagues, with the most successful player of the decade being Craig Johnston who scored a goal in the 1986 FA Cup Final for Liverpool.[22] During the 1980s, the federal government created a number of sport programs including Aussie Sports and Active Australia.[58] The Australia women's national field hockey team began their run as one of the top teams in the world in 1985, a place they would hold until 2000.[25]

In 1990, the Victorian Football League changed its name to the Australian Football League. During the 1990s, soccer in Australia faced a challenge in attracting youth players because of the ethnic nature of the sport at the highest levels of national competition. The sport's governing body made an effort to make the game less ethnically oriented. At the same time, rival football codes were intentionally trying to bring in ethnic participants in order to expand their youth playing base.[59] Doping became a concern during the 1980s and more active steps were taken to combat it in Australia in the early 1990s. In 1990, the Australian Sports Drug Agency Act 1990 was passed and took control of doping test away from the Australian Sport Commission and put it into the hands of an independent doping control agency as of 17 February 1991.[60]

 
The 2000 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony at Stadium Australia on 15 September 2000

In 2006, Melbourne hosted the 2006 Commonwealth Games.[61] Later that year, the Australian team competed in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, their second FIFA World Cup appearance after 32 years of failing to qualify for the tournament.[62]

 
Black Caviar prior to the 2012 Diamond Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot

In 2012, the Australian Rugby League Commission was formed, bringing to an end the involvement of News Limited in the administration of Rugby League and the media companies' conflict of interests in the sport, finally concluding the fall-out from the Super League war in the 1990s.[63] From 2008 until 2013, the Australian thoroughbred mare Black Caviar was undefeated for her entire 25-race career, a record not equaled in over 100 years.[64] Notable wins include the 2012 Diamond Jubilee Stakes, as well as being named the top sprinter from 2010 to 2012 in the World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings and entering the Australian Racing Hall of Fame while still in training. Another thoroughbred mare, Winx, though not finishing unbeaten for her career, surpassed Black Caviar's record for consecutive wins by winning the last 33 races of her career, a streak running from May 2015 to April 2019. She also entered the Hall of Fame while in training, and set a world record for most Group 1 wins with 25. Among her wins were four consecutive Cox Plates.

Organisation edit

The organisation of sport in Australia has been largely determined by its Federal system of government – Australian Government and six states and two territories governments and local governments.[65]

State and Territory governments have a department with responsibility for sport and recreation. These departments provide assistance to state sports organisations, develop and manage sporting facilities, provide financial assistance for major sporting events and develop policies to assist sports across their state or territory. Each Australian State and Territory has established its own institute/academy of sport – ACT Academy of Sport (established 1989), New South Wales Institute of Sport (1996), Northern Territory Institute of Sport (1996), Queensland Academy of Sport (1991), South Australian Sports Institute (1982), Tasmanian Institute of Sport (1985), (1990) and Western Australian Institute of Sport (1984).[66][page needed]

There are 560 local councils across Australia. Local governments generally focus on the provision of facilities such as swimming pools, sporting fields, stadiums and tennis courts.[67]

Government involvement in sport up until the 1970s was fairly limited with local governments playing a major role through the provision of sporting facilities.[65] However, this changed over the next two decades with an Australian Bureau of Statistics survey in 2001–2002 finding that approximately $2 billion was spent on sport by three levels of government – 10 per cent from the Australian Government, 40 per cent from state and territory governments, and the remaining 50 per cent from local government.[68] State, territory and local government spending was predominantly directed to facilities and their upkeep.[68] In 1973, the Recreation Minister's Council was established to provide a forum for Australian Government and State and Territory Minister's responsible for sport and recreation to discuss matters of interest.[65] With government's taking an increased involvement in sport, it became the Sport and Recreation Minister's Council.[65] More recently is referred to as Meeting of Sport and Recreation Ministers.[69] The Meeting is assisted by the Committee of Australian Sport and Recreation Officials (CASRO) previously called the Standing Committee on Sport and Recreation (SCORS).[69] The Meeting works cooperatively on issues such as match fixing, sport participation and water safety.[70] In 2011, Minister's signed the National Sport and Active Recreation Policy Framework.[71] The framework "provides a mechanism for the achievement of national goals for sport and active recreation, sets out agreed roles and responsibilities of governments and their expectations of sport and active recreation partners."[71] In 1993, National Elite Sports Council was established to provide a forum for communication, issues management and national program coordination across the high performance in Australia.[66][page needed] It includes representatives from AIS, State Institute /Academies, Australian Olympic Committee, Australian Paralympic Committee, and the Australian Commonwealth Games Association.[72][73] In 2011, National Institute System Intergovernmental Agreement provides "guidance on how the sector will operate, with a principal focus on the delivery of the high performance plans of national sporting organisations."[74]

The Australian government provided small amounts of funding in the 1950s and 1960s through the support of the National Fitness Council and international sporting teams such as the Australian Olympic team.[65] The Australian Government's serious involvement and investment into sport came with it establishing the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) in 1981.[65] AIS was set up to improve Australia's performances in international sport which had started to decline in the 1960s and 1970s culminating in Australia winning no gold medals at the 1976 Montreal Olympics.[66][page needed] In 1985, the Australian Sports Commission (ASC) was established to improve the Australian Government's administration of sport in terms of funding, participation and elite sport.[66][page needed] The 1989 Senate Inquiry into drugs in sport resulted in the establishment of the Australian Sport Drug Agency (now called Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA)) in 1990 to manage Australia's anti-doping program.[66][page needed]

Participation edit

 
Total employment in the sports and recreation sector (thousands of people) since 1984

The highest rates of participation for Australian sport and recreation are informal, non-organised sports with bike riding, skateboarding, rollerblading or riding a scooter topping the list of activities for children, with 66% of all boys bike riding and 55.9% of all boys skateboarding, rollerblading or riding a scooter in 2009 and 2010. Girls also participated in these activities at high rates with 54.4% of them doing bike riding and 42.4% skateboarding, rollerblading or riding a scooter. Other sports popular for Australian girls include dancing, which had 26.3% participation, swimming with 19.8% participation and netball at 17%. For boys, the other popular sports for participation included soccer with a rate of participation of 19.9%, swimming with a participation rate of 17.2%, Australian rules at 16%.[75]

 
Bicycle riding is one of the most popular forms of physical recreation in Australia

Participation rates for adults in Australia were much lower than that of Australian children. For adult women in Australia, the number one sport activity they participate in is walking with 30% having done this in 2009 and 2010. The second most popular form of exercise and sport was Aerobics/fitness/gym with a rate of 16.7%. The third most popular for adult women was swimming and diving with 8.4%. For men, the most popular sport activity was also walking with a participation rate of 15.6%. This was followed by Aerobics/fitness/gym with 11.2%. The third most popular sport for adult males was cycling/BMXing with a participation rate of 8.2%.[75]

There are 34,000 athletes, officials and coaches currently registered with the Athletics Australia.[76] A 2007 estimate claimed that Australian football had 615,549 participants,[77] Basketball has become one of the most popular participation sports in Australia. In Victoria, and Melbourne, particularly, it has more participants than any other sport.[78][79][80] Australia's warm climate and long coastline of sandy beaches and rolling waves provide ideal conditions for water sports such as swimming. The majority of Australians live in cities or towns on or near the coast, and so beaches are a place that millions of Australians visit regularly.[81]

According to the National Cricket Census, a record 1,650,030 people played Cricket across Australia in 2018–19. Women participation also reached record figures in growing to 496,484 players.[82]

Amateur sport edit

Amateur sport in Australia follows a corporate management system, with the national tier composed of national sport organisations that support and fund elite sport development. These organisations include the Australian Institute of Sport and the Australian Sports Commission. Below them is the state level, which includes state sporting organisations, state institute of sport and state departments of sport. The last level is district/regional associations and local clubs and community sports along with local government.[83] At the national level, the national sport organisations govern most sports in Australia, with over 120 different national sports organisation overseeing sport in Australia.[84][85] The role of government in this structure is important[83][86] as government funding for most sport in Australia comes from the national government, state and territory governments, and local governments. In the late 1990s, government support for sport was double that of public non-financial corporations.[86]

Amateur sport was transformed in Australia in the 1980s with the creation of the AIS Australian Institute of Sport. The institute, formally opened by Malcolm Fraser in 1981, was designed to make Australian amateur sport at major world competitions, like the Olympics, competitive with the rest of the world and increase the number of medals won by the country.[87] A few years later, in 1984, the Australian Sports Commission was created to better address the distribution of funds to support sport.[88] It had a budget of A$109 million in 2000.[58] By 2009, the Australian Sports Commission had a budget of A$150 million, up from A$5 million when it first was created.[88]

Amateur sport has been able to draw large audiences. In the 1950s, 120,000 fans would go to the MCG to watch major athletics events.[89]

Australian amateur sport has dealt with financial problems. In the 2000s, Athletics Australia was facing duel problems of financial problems and failure for the sport to consistently medal at major international sporting events compared to other sports and their representative organisations like Swimming Australia and Rowing Australia.[90]

National Leagues edit

Major professional sports leagues in Australia are similar to major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada in that they are closed leagues that do not practice promotion and relegation, unlike sports leagues in Europe and Latin America.

Male Major Leagues edit

League Sport Teams Season Popularity by state Established Notes
Australian Football League Australian rules football 18 March – September Most popular winter sport in Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Tasmania. 1897 Most attended sport[91]
A-League Men Association football 12 October – May Popular nationwide 2004
Big Bash League Cricket 8 December – January Most popular summer sport nationwide 2011[o 1]
National Basketball League Basketball 10 September – March Popular nationwide 1979
National Rugby League Rugby League 17 March – September Most Popular winter sport in New South Wales, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory. 1908 Most watched sport by TV[92]

Female Major Leagues edit

League Sport Teams Season Popularity by state Established
Australian Football League Womens Australian rules football 18 September – December Popular nationwide 2017
A-League Womens Association football 12 October – April Popular nationwide 2004
Womens Big Bash League Cricket 8 October – December Most popular summer sport nationwide 2011[o 2]
Suncorp Super Netball Netball 8 March – July Moderately popular nationwide 2017
Womens National Basketball League Basketball 8 November – March Popular nationwide 1979

Other Significant National Leagues edit

League Sport Teams Popularity by state Established Notes
Supercars Championship Touring Car Racing N/A Moderately popular nationwide 1997
Super Rugby (Women's) Rugby Union 5[o 3] Moderately popular in New South Wales and Queensland 1996
Australian Baseball League Baseball 6 Minor sport 2009
Hockey One Field Hockey 7 Minor sport 2019
Australian Ice Hockey League Ice Hockey 8 Minor sport 2000
  1. ^ First league established 2005, current league established in 2011.
  2. ^ First league established 2005, current league established in 2011.
  3. ^ Super Rugby has 12 teams overall — five from Australia, five from New Zealand, with one representing the Pacific Islands as a whole and one representing Fiji. The teams of Fiji and the Pacific Islands joined in 2022.

Spectators edit

Australian sport fans have historically attended events in large numbers, dating back to the country's early history. An early football game played in Melbourne in 1858 had 2,000 spectators.[93] By 1897, tens of thousands of spectators attended an early Australian rules football match at a time when top level soccer matches in England would draw six thousand fans. A finals match between the Carlton Football Club and Collingwood in 1938 drew 96,834 fans.[94] In 1909, at a time when rugby union had not yet become professionalised, 52,000 people in Sydney attended a game between New South Wales and New Zealand. The spectators accounted for 10% of the total population of Sydney at the time. 60,922 fans attended the 1943 NSWRFL Grand Final between Norths and Newtown, and 78,056 attended the 1965 Grand Final between Souths and the then 9-time champion St George, although estimates including those who climbed onto roofs and over the perimeter fence put the actual crowd as high as 200,000. [95] A world record was set for cricket attendance on 30 December 1932 when 63,993 fans watched England take on Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.[96] In 2010, the National Rugby League's premiership set its record for regular season attendance, with 3,490,778 attending across the season, at an average of 17,367 people at each match.[97]

Total average game attendance for the Australian Football League and the National Rugby League increased between 1970 and 2000, with the AFL going from an average attendance of 24,344 people per match in 1970 to 27,325 by 1980 to 25,238 in 1990 and 34,094 by 2000. The National Rugby League had an average per game attendance of 11,990 in 1970, saw a decrease in 1980 to 10,860 but increased to 12,073 by 1990 and improved on that to 14,043 by 2000. Founded later, the National Basketball League had an average per game attendance of 1,158 in 1985, increased this to 4,551 by 1990, and kept attendance steady with 4,636 average fans per game in 2000.[98]

In March 1999, 104,000 fans attended a double header match in the National Rugby League at Stadium Australia four days after the venue formally opened.[99] In 2000, during the soccer gold medal match between Cameroon and Spain, 114,000 fans watched the game live inside Stadium Australia.[100] In the 2006–07 season, the A-League Melbourne Victory averaged 27,728 people to their home matches throughout the season. The 2009–10 regular season was considerably lower.[101]

In 2019, the Australian Football League achieved its highest total attendance for any season of 7,594,302, a record for the competition, at an average attendance of 36,687 for each match.[102]

The Big Bash League (BBL) was established in 2011. The first season attracted an average of 18,021 spectators per match. In the 2014–15 season, the average attendance for each match was 23,590 with the Adelaide Strikers attracting a record average home crowd of 36,023 spectators each game.[103][104] The 2015 Cricket World Cup final was played in front of 93,013 spectators, a record crowd for a day of cricket in Australia. BBL in its sixth season in 2016–17, drew an average crowd in excess of 30,000 for the first time in history, with overall count crossing 1 million for 35 matches.

In April 2024, the 2023–24 A-League Women season set the record for the most attended season of any women's sport in Australian history, with the season recording a total attendance of 284,551 at 15 April 2024,[105][106][107][108] and finishing with a final total attendance of 312,199.[109]


National League attendance of team sports – latest season (Bolded Competitions are Women's Leagues)
Competition Sport Total
spectatorship
Average
attendance
Year Ref
Australian Football League Australian football 8,139,464 36,396 2023 [110]
AFL Women's Australian football 283,922 2,868 2023
Big Bash League Cricket 1,212,696 15,999 2022–23 [111]
Women's Big Bash League Cricket 852,549 6,478 2022
A-League Men Soccer 1,309,087 7,982 2022–23
A-League Women Soccer 137,602 1,336 2022–23
Australian Baseball League Baseball 14,899 16,55 2022–23
National Rugby League Rugby league 3,266,295 16,685 2022 [112]
NRL Women's Rugby league 98,442 8,204 2022
National Basketball League Basketball 970,704 6,303 2022–23 [113]
Women's National Basketball League Basketball 24,630 3,079 2022–23
Super Netball League Netball 266,197 2023
Other Major Competitions/Leagues/Games attendance (Bolded Competitions are Women's Competitions)
Competition Sport Total

Spectatorship

Average Attendance Year Ref
AFLX AFLXAustralian Football 42,730 14,243 2018
E. J. Whitten Legends Game Australian Football 8,000 8,000 2018
JLT Community Series Australian Football 92,333 5,130 2018
Boxing Day Test Cricket (test cricket) 261,335 (88,173 Boxing Day) 52,267 2017
State Of Origin Rugby league 192,255 64,085 2022
Women's State Of Origin Rugby league 11,321 11,321 2022
The Rugby Championship Rugby union 433,657 36,138 2018
Super Rugby Rugby union 773,940 19,348 2012 [114]
Formula One Grand Prix Motorsport 419,114 (128,294 Race Day) - 2022
Total attendance by sport
Sport Total
spectatorship
Average
attendance
Year Ref
Australian football 7,254,478 18,554 2022 [115]
Rugby league 3,604,108 16,609 2022 [116]
Soccer 2,502,789 13,242 2015–16 [117]
Cricket 1,756,131 24,734 2016–17 [118][119]
Basketball 1,073,643 7,304 2019–20 [120]
Rugby union 359,266 Not available 2022 [121]

Sports media edit

Media coverage of Australian sport and athletes predates 1876. The first all Australian sport publication, The Referee, was first published in 1886 in Sydney.[122] The major newspapers for sport coverage in the country include the Sydney Morning Herald, The Courier Mail, the Herald Sun and The West Australian.[122]

There is a long history of television coverage of sports in Australia. From 1957 to 2001, the Seven Network was the network for the Australian Football League. The only year that Seven was not the network for the league was in 1987 when the AFL was on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). An exclusive deal was agreed upon by Seven in 1976 for a five-year deal worth A$3 million.[123]

The media plays an important part in Australia's sporting landscape, with many sporting events televised or broadcast on radio. The government has anti-siphoning laws to protect free-to-air stations. Beyond televising live events, there are many sport-related television and radio programs, as well as several magazine publications dedicated to sport. Australian sport has also been the subject of Australian-made films such as The Club, Australian Rules, The Final Winter and Footy Legends

World Series Cricket was a break away professional cricket competition staged between 1977 and 1979 and organised by Kerry Packer for his TV network, Nine. The matches ran in opposition to international cricket. It drastically changed the nature of cricket and its influence continues to be felt today.[124]

Not all sports have had favourable deals with networks. The first television offer for the National Basketball League was worth A$1 in an offered made by Seven that the league accepted. The deal made by Ten Network to the New South Wales Rugby League was worth considerably more, worth A$48 million for a five-year deal that also included broadcasting rights for the State of Origin and the Australia national rugby league team. This deal was terminated early because the network could not afford to pay out.[125]

The 1967 NSWRFL season's grand final became the first football grand final of any code to be televised live in Australia. The Nine Network had paid $5,000 for the broadcasting rights.[126]

SBS and FoxSports are two of the most important television networks in Australia in terms of covering all Australian sports, not just the popular professional leagues.[122] Administrators for less popular spectator sports, such as basketball and netball, believe that getting additional television and newspaper coverage is fundamental for the growth and success of their sports going forward.[122]

Anti-siphoning laws in Australia regulate the media companies' access to significant sporting events. In 1992, when the country experienced growth in paid-subscription media, the Parliament of Australia enacted the Broadcasting Services Act that gave free-to-air broadcasters preferential access to acquire broadcasting rights to sporting events. The anti-siphoning list is a list of major sporting events that the Parliament of Australia has decided must be available for all Australians to see free of charge and cannot be "siphoned off" to pay TV where people are forced to pay to see them. The current anti-siphoning list came into effect in 2006 and expires 31 December 2010. The Minister for Communications can add or remove events from the list at his discretion. There are currently ten sports on the anti-siphoning list plus the Olympic and Commonwealth Games. Events on the anti-siphoning list are delisted 12 weeks before they start to ensure pay TV broadcasters have reasonable access to listed events, if free-to-air broadcasters decide not to purchase the broadcast rights for a particular event. Any rights to listed sporting events that are not acquired by free-to-air broadcasters are available to pay TV. For multi-round events where it is simply not possible for free-to-air networks to broadcast all matches within the event (e.g. the Australian Open) complementary coverage is available on pay television. The Federal Government is obliged by legislation to conduct a review of the list before the end of 2009. The current anti-siphoning list requires showing listed sports on the broadcaster's main channel.[127]

Rugby league, which includes NRL, State of Origin and national team matches, had the highest aggregate television ratings of any sport in 2022[128] (also 2009[129] and 2010.[130]) Also, in a world first, the Nine Network broadcast free-to-air the first match of the 2010 State of Origin series live in 3D in New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria.[131][132] It has consistently been the most watched sport in the country over the last decade in terms of television ratings and is currently the most popular sport in Australia as at 2022.[133]

Rugby union is currently aired on numerous Nine Entertainment platforms, including Channel 9, 9Gem, and Stan Sport, as part of a A$100 million deal starting in 2021.[134] Super Rugby games are broadcast on 9Gem every Saturday, while all other games are available on Stan Sport. Within a year of the deal starting, the Super Rugby Final had increased its ratings by 13-fold to 1.3 million, with Wallabies International games also experiencing growth.[135]

Cricket Australia announced an unprecedented $590 million deal with free-to-air television networks Nine and Ten in 2013 to broadcast the sport – a 118 per cent increase on the previous five-year contract.[136]

BBL games are currently broadcast in Australia by the free-to-air Network Ten. In 2013 Ten paid $100 million for BBL rights over five years, marking the channel's first foray in elite cricket coverage.[137] Fox Sports had previously covered the Big Bash League.

Network Ten's BBL coverage has become a regular feature of Australian summers and last season attracted an average audience of more than 943,000 people nationally in 2014–15 season, including a peak audience of 1.9 million viewers for the final between the Perth Scorchers and Sydney Sixers.[138]

There are a number of Australian sport films. They include The Club. The film was based on a play produced in 1977, in Melbourne. It has been in the senior English syllabi for four Australian states for many years.[139] The film was written by David Williamson, directed by Bruce Beresford and starring John Howard, Jack Thompson, Graham Kennedy and Frank Wilson.[140] Another Australian sport film is The Final Winter, released in 2007. It was directed by Brian Andrews and Jane Forrest and produced by Anthony Coffee, and Michelle Russell, while independently produced it is being distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was written by Matt Nable who also starred as the lead role 'Grub' Henderson. The film, which earned praise from critics,[141] focuses around Grub who is the captain of the Newtown Jets football team in the early 1980s and his determination to stand for what rugby league traditionally stood for while dealing with his own identity crisis.[142] Other Australian sport films include Australian Rules and Footy Legends.[143][144]

Sport is popular on the radio. This Sporting Life was a culturally iconic Triple J radio comedy program created by actor-writer comedians John Doyle and Greig Pickhaver, who performed as their characters Roy and HG. Broadcast from 1986 to 2008, it was one of the longest-running, most popular and most successful radio comedy programs of the post-television era in Australia. It was the longest-running show in Triple J's programming history and commanded a large and dedicated nationwide audience throughout its 22-year run.[145] 2KY is a commercial radio station based in Sydney, broadcasting throughout New South Wales and Canberra on a network of over 140 narrowcast transmitters as well as the main 1017 AM frequency in Sydney. 2KY broadcasts live commentary of thoroughbred, harness and greyhound racing. Over 1500 races are covered each week, including the pre and post race form and TAB betting information.[146]

There are a number of Australian sport magazines. One is the AFL Record. The magazine is published in a sports magazine style format. Eight different versions, one for each game, are published for each weekly round, 60,000 copies in total, and Roy Morgan Research estimates that the Record has a weekly readership of over 200,000.[147] As of 2009, the week's records are published and are able to be viewed in an online magazine format.[148] Another Australian sporting magazine is Australia's Surfing Life, a monthly magazine about surfing published in Australia. It features articles about surf trips in Australia and overseas, surfing technique, board design and wetsuits. The magazine was founded in 1985.[149]

International competitions edit

 
The Australian national baseball team during the 2013 World Baseball Classic.

Australian representative teams participate in many international competitions, such as the Olympics, Commonwealth Games, Cricket World Cup, Rugby World Cup, Rugby League World Cup, FIFA World Cup, the Basketball World Cup for both men's and women's, Netball World Cup, World Baseball Classic and the Hockey World Cup.

The Australian national cricket team have participated in every edition of the Cricket World Cup. Australia have been the most successful in the event, winning the tournament six times out of thirteen editions held.[150]

The Australian national rugby league team have also participated in every edition of the Rugby League World Cup. Australia have been very successful in the event, winning the tournament a record 12 times.[151]

The Australian national rugby union team have participated in every Rugby World Cup. Australia have been very successful in the tournament, winning it two times[152] despite it not being the most popular sport in Australia.

Australia's women have repeatedly won at the highest level. The Australian national netball team have won the Netball World Cup a record 11 times.[153] The Australian women's national cricket team have won the Women's Cricket World Cup a record five times.[154] The Australian women's national field hockey team have won the gold medal at the Olympics and the Women's Hockey World Cup three and two times respectively.[155][156]

The Australia women's national basketball team, known as the Opals, regularly compete well against the world elite at the FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, having won the event in 2006, finished second in 2018 and finished third three times, and at the Summer Olympics Basketball Tournament, where they have won silver medals three times and bronze medals twice.[157]

 
Nathan Jawai (right) represented Australia at the 2014 Basketball World Cup

The Australia national soccer team, nicknamed the Socceroos, have appeared at the FIFA World Cup in 1974, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 and 2022. At the 2006 World Cup, the Socceroos surprised many by reaching the Round of 16, losing 1–0 in injury time to the eventual champions, Italy.[158] At the 2022 World Cup, an unfancied Socceroos team again advanced to the knockout stage after winning 2 of 3 group stage matches, including a 1–0 upset victory against Denmark.[159] In the round of 16 they were defeated 1–2 by eventual champions Argentina.[160] They also hold the unusual distinction of having won continental soccer championships of two confederations – Oceania's OFC Nations Cup four times between 1980 and 2004 and, after moving to the Asian Football Confederation in 2005, the AFC Asian Cup in 2015. The Australia women's national soccer team, the Matildas, have appeared in all FIFA Women's World Cups except the first in 1991. They have advanced past the group stage in each of the last four editions of the competition (2007, 2011, 2015 and 2019), losing in the quarter-finals in the first three of these editions and the round of 16 in 2019. In 2015, they became the first senior Australian national team of either sex to win a World Cup knockout stage match, specifically in the round of 16, newly instituted for the Women's World Cup in that year. The Matildas have also enjoyed success at the AFC Women's Asian Cup, advancing at least to the semi-finals in all five competitions since joining the AFC in 2006 and winning in 2010. Australia co-hosted the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup alongside New Zealand, finishing with a best-ever fourth place result.[161] Their run in the tournament attracted widespread community support, dubbed by the media as "Matildas fever".

Australia are the most successful side at the Underwater Hockey World Championships, winning 25 titles including 11 men's elite championships and 8 women's elite championships.

Australia has also hosted a number of major international sporting events, including the 1956 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics. The country also regularly hosts a major tennis Grand Slam event, the Australian Open, an FIA Formula One World Championship round (Australian Grand Prix), motorcycle MotoGP round (Australian motorcycle Grand Prix), as well as rounds of the Superbike World Championship, World Rally Championship alongside major domestically created, internationally recognised events including the Melbourne Cup and the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.[44]

Australia has hosted the 1992 Cricket World Cup and the 2015 Cricket World Cup along with New Zealand.[162] The 2015 Cricket World Cup generated more than A$1.1 billion in direct spending, created the equivalent of 8,320 full-time jobs, and had a total of 2 million bed nights across the two host countries.[163] Australia has also hosted the 2003 Rugby World Cup, with the event generating around A$1 billion in economic activity while bringing in 2 million visitors to the country.[164]

The 1868 Aboriginal cricket tour of England was the first tour by any sports team from Australia.[165] [166]

Olympics edit

 
Australia's Olympic medal totals
 
Australian track cyclists Jack Bobridge, Anna Meares and Shane Kelly.

The Olympic movement in Australia started out during the 1900s and 1910s. The first organisations for the Olympics in Australia came out of the athletics governance system and resulted in the creation of state based Olympic committees. The first national governing body for Australian Olympics was created in 1914 and was a joint effort with New Zealand though New Zealand was a less than able partner. The movement in Australia then stagnated as a result of the Great War. The New Zealand and Australian organisation was disbanded and an Australian only national organisation was founded in 1920 called the Australian Olympic Federation. The early goals of the organisation were to ratify team selection and to fundraise to assist Olympians in paying for their travel to compete at the Games. By the 1980s, the organisation had issues on the international level as the IOC wanted them to re-structure; until this time, the organisation followed governance models similar to that of other Australian sporting organisations with a federated model of governance. Changes were made the organisation ended up with an executive board with a president, two vice presidents, a secretary general and a 14-member executive board which had 10 elected members, 4 IOC members and 2 members of the Athlete's Commission.[167]

Australia has hosted the Olympics twice, in 1956 in Melbourne and in 2000 in Sydney. These were the first Games hosted in the southern hemisphere.[168][169][170] Brisbane will host the 2032 Summer Games.[171]

Australia has been influential in the Olympic movement, with four Australian representatives who are members of the International Olympic Committee.[167]

The government has provided monetary support for the Olympics. In the lead up to the 1924 Games, they provided 3,000 pounds and in 1936 provided 2,000 pounds. This support was seen as a way of supporting national identity, but no formal system existed for the funding wider sport at the time.[172]

The 1956 Games were the first time Australia had an Equestrian competitor when Victorian Ernie Barker competed.[170] Australia has generally been a world power in Olympic swimming since the 1956 Melbourne Olympics: swimmers like Shane Gould, Dawn Fraser, Ian Thorpe, Kieren Perkins and Ariarne Titmus have taken multiple gold medals.[173]

Australia performed relatively poorly at the 1976 Summer Olympics. This upset the nation as it challenged a fundamental part of Australian identity. The following Olympics, the 1980 Summer Olympics, some Australian sports sat out as part of a boycott[54][174] and the country earned only nine medals, two of them gold, in Moscow.[175] To prevent a recurrence of this, the Australian Institute of Sport was created to help improve Australia's medal tally at the Games.[175][174]

Channel Seven had exclusive Australian free-to-air, pay television, online and mobile telephone broadcast rights to the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. The live telecast of the 2008 Summer Olympics was shared by the Seven Network and SBS Television. Seven broadcast the opening and closing ceremonies and mainstream sports, including swimming, athletics, rowing, cycling, and gymnastics. In contrast, SBS TV provided complementary coverage focused on long-form events such as soccer, road cycling, volleyball, and table tennis.[176]

Paralympics edit

 
Australian swimmers at the training pool at the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Games

Australia has attended every Summer Paralympics and hosted the 2000 Sydney Games. Australia sent a delegation of 170 athletes to compete at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing,[177] and a team of 11 competitors to compete in two disciplines at the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[178] A team of 161 members was sent to the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London.[179]

Commonwealth Games edit

Australians take the Commonwealth Games seriously because, on one level of national thinking, the event offers the country an opportunity to prove they are superior to the "original country", the United Kingdom.[25][180][181][182] By the 1938 British Empire Games, Australia's combined medal total was already greater than that of the Home Nations tallies combined. Australia would go on to beat England in total medals at the Commonwealth Games in 1950, 1962, 1970, 1974 and 1982.[25] This rivalry with England continued to be an important component of the games up until the mid 2010s.[181][182] Since then the importance of the Commonwealth Games has declined in the minds of the Australian public, due to the decreasing relevance of the Commonwealth in Australia as well as the perceived lack of competition. The Olympics Games has now become the primary way for Australians to measure themselves against the world.[183]

Events edit

January

February – August

March – August

March – September

March – November

June

June – July

July – October

August – November

September

September – February

September – March

October

October – November

October – January

October – March

October – April

November

November – February

December – January

See also edit

By demographic edit

By social and cultural context edit

By sport edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

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External links edit

  • Australian Sports Commission
  • Australian Institute of Sport

sport, australia, this, article, lead, section, long, please, read, length, guidelines, help, move, details, into, article, body, august, 2023, sport, important, part, australia, that, dates, back, early, colonial, period, australian, rules, football, rugby, l. This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body August 2023 Sport is an important part of Australia that dates back to the early colonial period Australian rules football rugby league rugby union association football cricket and tennis are among the earliest organised sports in Australia Sport has shaped the Australian national identity through events such as the Melbourne Cup and the America s Cup Australia also holds the record for the largest attendance at a Rugby Union match with almost 110 000 spectators watching the Wallabies play the All Blacks in 2000 1 There are a number of professional sport leagues in Australia including the Australian Football League AFL and AFL Women s Australian rules football National Rugby League NRL and NRL Women s rugby league Super Rugby Pacific Australia New Zealand Rugby Union the National Basketball League and the Women s National Basketball League A League Men and A League Women soccer the Australian Baseball League baseball the Big Bash League cricket Women s Big Bash League cricket and Sheffield Shield cricket Suncorp Super Netball and the Supercars Championship touring car racing Attendance for the AFL in 2019 attracted more than 7 5 million people to games 2 while the NRL draws just over 3 million people in a single season Historically rugby league and rugby union football codes have been more popular than Australian rules football in New South Wales the Australian Capital Territory and Queensland whereas Australian rules football has been more popular in Victoria Tasmania South Australia Northern Territory and Western Australia Australia boasts 7 former world number one squash players along with a history of success in the Commonwealth Games As a nation Australia has competed in many international events including the Olympics and Paralympics The country has also twice hosted the Summer Olympics in Melbourne 1956 and Sydney 2000 as well as the Commonwealth Games on five occasions A third Olympics will be held in Brisbane in 2032 and a sixth Commonwealth Games across rural Victoria state in 2026 The city of Melbourne is famous for its major sports events and has been described as the sporting capital of the world 3 and one of its stadiums the Melbourne Cricket Ground is considered the home of Australian rules football and one of the world s premier Cricket grounds After the United States which is regarded as the greatest sports nation in the world Australia is considered one of the best sports nations in the world 4 5 6 7 Contents 1 History 2 Organisation 3 Participation 4 Amateur sport 5 National Leagues 5 1 Male Major Leagues 5 2 Female Major Leagues 5 3 Other Significant National Leagues 6 Spectators 7 Sports media 8 International competitions 8 1 Olympics 8 2 Paralympics 8 3 Commonwealth Games 9 Events 10 See also 10 1 By demographic 10 2 By social and cultural context 10 3 By sport 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory editMain article History of sport in Australia Australia s sporting history is marked by great successes great stories and truly great moments Sport speaks a universal language in this country we are a nation of players and enthusiasts Kevin Rudd January 2008 8 nbsp An 1860s game of Australian rules football at the Richmond Paddock A pavilion of the MCG seen on the left in the background Wood engraving made by Robert Bruce in 1866 Sport came to Australia in 1810 when the first athletics tournament was held soon after cricket horse racing and sailing clubs and competitions started Australia s lower classes would play sports on public holidays with the upper classes playing more regularly on Saturdays 9 Sydney was the early hub of sport in the colony 10 Early forms of football were played there by 1829 11 Early sport in Australia was played along class lines In 1835 the British Parliament banned blood sports except fox hunting in a law that was implemented in Australia this was not taken well in the country as it was seen as an attack on the working classes 12 By the late 1830s horse racing was established in New South Wales and other parts of the country and enjoyed support across class lines Gambling was part of sport from the time horse racing became an established sport in the colony 12 Horse racing was also happening in Melbourne at Batman s Hill in 1838 with the first race meeting in Victoria taking place in 1840 13 Cricket was also underway with the Melbourne Cricket Club founded in 1838 13 14 Sport was being used during the 1830s 1840s and 1850s as a form of social integration across classes 15 Victorian rules football later known as Australian rules was codified in 1859 16 17 Australian football clubs still around in the current Australian Football League were founded by 1858 14 16 17 Originally formed as the South Australian Football Association on 30 April 1877 the SANFL South Australian National Football League is the oldest surviving football league of any code in Australia The Melbourne Cricket Ground Australia s largest sporting arena opened in 1853 18 The Melbourne Cup was first run in 1861 19 A rugby union team was established at the University of Sydney in 1864 19 Regular sport did not begin to be played in South Australia Tasmania and Western Australia until the late 1860s and early 1870s 10 nbsp Early photo of the Ashes Urn from the Illustrated London News 1921 The first Australian cricket team to go on tour internationally did so in 1868 The Australian side was an all Aboriginal one and toured England where they played 47 games where they won 14 games drew 19 and lost 14 20 Australia s adoption of sport as a national pastime was so comprehensive that Anthony Trollope remarked in his book Australia published in 1870 The English passion for the amusements which are technically called sports is not a national necessity with the Americans whereas with the Australians it is almost as much so as home 21 The first team formally organised soccer team was formed in Sydney in 1880 and was named the Wanderers 22 23 Sport was receiving coverage in Australian newspapers by 1876 when a sculling race in England was reported in the Sydney Morning Herald 10 In 1877 Australia played in the first Test Cricket match against England In 1882 The Ashes were started following the victory of the Australia national cricket team over England 19 24 Field hockey teams for men and women were established by 1890 25 The Sheffield Shield cricket competition was first held in 1891 with New South Wales Victoria and South Australia participating in the inaugural competition The remaining states would not participate until much later with Queensland first participating in 1926 27 Western Australia in 1947 48 and Tasmania in 1982 83 26 27 In 1897 the Victorian Football League which later became the AFL the Australian Football League was founded 19 28 after breaking away from the Victorian Football Association 28 The first badminton competition in Australia was played in 1900 29 The first ice hockey game was played in Melbourne on 12 July 1906 between a local Melbourne team and a team from the crew of the visiting US warship USS Baltimore 30 Motor racing began in the first years of federation with motorcycle racing beginning at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 1901 with automobile motorsport following in 1904 at Aspendale Racecourse in Melbourne A dedicated race track was added to Aspendale s horse racing track in 1906 although it fell into disuse almost immediately Rugby league has been the overwhelmingly dominant rugby code in Australia since 1908 this position remains unchallenged to this day When Messenger and the All Golds returned from Great Britain in 1908 they helped the new clubs adapt to the rules of rugby league prior to the inaugural 1908 NSWRFL season The Queensland Rugby Football League also formed early in 1908 by seven rugby players who were dissatisfied with the administration of the Queensland Rugby Union 31 The Australia national rugby union team had their first international test against New Zealand in 1903 and first international tour in 1908 earning their nickname of the Wallabies after two British journalists used it to refer to the team 32 The team won gold at the 1908 Summer Olympics however the majority of the squad joined rugby league clubs upon returning to Australia 33 Women represented Australia for the first time at the Olympics in 1912 19 Surfing came to Australia by 1915 19 with the first surf life saving competition being held that year 34 Les Darcy began his boxing career in 1915 with some of his later fights taking place at Sydney Stadium The following year an American promoter encouraged Darcy to go to the United States at a time when Australia was actively recruiting young men for the armed services Controversy resulted and Darcy died at the age of 21 in the United States When his body was returned to Australia 100 000 people attended his Sydney funeral 35 36 37 38 39 Darcy would remain significant to Australians into the 2000s when Kevin Rudd mentioned his story 39 nbsp Group of tennis players ca 1922 In 1922 a committee in Australia investigated the benefits of physical education for girls They came up with several recommendations regarding what sports were and were not appropriate for girls to play based on the level of fitness required It was determined that for some individual girls that for medical reasons the girls should probably not be allowed to participate in tennis netball lacrosse golf hockey and cricket Football was completely medically inappropriate for girls to play It was medically appropriate for all girls to be able to participate in so long as they were not done in an overly competitive manner swimming rowing cycling and horseback riding 40 Dick Eve won Australia s first Olympic diving gold medal in 1924 41 In 1924 the Australian Rugby League Board of Control later to be known as the Australian Rugby League was formed to administer the national team the Kangaroos and later as the national governing body for the sport of Rugby league In 1928 the team also adopted the national colours of green and gold for the first time having previously used blue and maroon making the Kangaroos the third national sporting body to do so after cricket from 1899 and the Australian Olympic team from 1908 42 Netball Australia was founded in 1927 as the All Australia Women s Basket Ball Association 19 nbsp 1932 33 Ashes Bill Woodfull evades a bodyline ball at the Gabba During the 1930s the playing of sport on Sunday was banned in most of the country outside South Australia 43 The Bodyline cricket series between Australia and England took place in 1932 33 The English side were determined to win and employed physical intimidation against Australia to ensure victory 44 45 The bowling style used by the team known as body line bowling was devised by Douglas Jardine with advice from Frank Foster in England ahead of the series in order to defeat Australian batsman Donald Bradman Going into the start of the series Bill Voce told the media If we don t beat you we ll knock your bloody heads off The style of play was such that the Australians contemplated cancelling the series after the Adelaide test 45 46 Following a successful Australian racing career the race horse Phar Lap went to the United States where he died There were many conspiracy theories at the time and later that suggested people in the United States poisoned the horse to prevent him from winning 44 Australian women s sports had an advantage over many other women s sport organisations around the world in the period after World War II Women s sports organisations had largely remained intact and were holding competitions during the war period This structure survived in the post war period Women s sport were not hurt because of food rationing petrol rationing population disbursement and other issues facing post war Europe 47 In September 1949 Australian Canoeing was founded as the Australian Canoe Federation 48 By the 1960s Australia had an international identity as a sport obsessed country an identity which was embraced inside the country This was so well known that in a 1962 edition of Sports Illustrated Australia was named the most sports obsessed country in the world 49 In 1967 Australia hosted the second World Netball Championships in Perth 50 That same year South Australia became the last state to lift its ban on the playing of sports on Sunday 43 Starting in the early 1970s Australian sport underwent a paradigm shift with sponsorship becoming one of the fundamental drivers of earnings for Australian sport on amateur and professional levels By the mid 1980s the need for the ability to acquire sponsorship dollars in sport was so great that job applicants for sport administrator positions were expected to be able to demonstrate an ability to get it 51 During the 1970s Australia was being routinely defeated in major international competitions as Eastern Bloc countries enjoyed strong government support for sport The Liberal governments at the time were opposed to similar intervention in Australia s sporting system as they felt it would be government intrusion into an important component of Australian life 52 In the 1974 elections several Australian sporting competitors endorsed the Liberal party in advertisements that ran on television Competitors involved included Ron Barassi NSWRL player Johnny Raper and horse trainer Tommie Smith 53 That year the Australian team qualified for the 1974 FIFA World Cup the first successful qualification to the FIFA World Cup in the country s history after failing to qualify to the 1966 and 1970 tournaments It would prove to be the only appearance for the Australian team for more than three decades 22 nbsp The Australia national rugby league team kicking off a match The regional football code divide in Australia was still present in the 1980s with rugby league football being the dominant code in Queensland ACT and New South Wales while Australian rules football dominated in the rest of the country When codes went outside of their traditional geographic home they had little success in gaining new fans and participants 26 The Australian Institute of Sport was founded in 1981 54 In the lead up to and during the 1982 Commonwealth Games the police were called upon to stop protests by Aboriginal land rights activists who staged protests timed with the event in order to politicise the event 55 Australia had competitors in the America s Cup yacht race for a number of years Going into the 1983 race the Australian media was not that interested in the race as they expected a similar result and in the media lead up to the event made it out to be a race for rich people This lack of interest continued throughout the early races Near the end when Australia finally appeared poised to win it millions of Australians turned on their television to watch the Australia II win the competition 56 That year the Liberals used Australian tennis star John Newcombe and race car drivers Peter Brock and Alan Jones in their political advertising 57 Athletes would again be used this time by the Labor Party in the 1989 elections 57 During the 1980s Australian soccer players began to start playing regularly in overseas professional leagues with the most successful player of the decade being Craig Johnston who scored a goal in the 1986 FA Cup Final for Liverpool 22 During the 1980s the federal government created a number of sport programs including Aussie Sports and Active Australia 58 The Australia women s national field hockey team began their run as one of the top teams in the world in 1985 a place they would hold until 2000 25 In 1990 the Victorian Football League changed its name to the Australian Football League During the 1990s soccer in Australia faced a challenge in attracting youth players because of the ethnic nature of the sport at the highest levels of national competition The sport s governing body made an effort to make the game less ethnically oriented At the same time rival football codes were intentionally trying to bring in ethnic participants in order to expand their youth playing base 59 Doping became a concern during the 1980s and more active steps were taken to combat it in Australia in the early 1990s In 1990 the Australian Sports Drug Agency Act 1990 was passed and took control of doping test away from the Australian Sport Commission and put it into the hands of an independent doping control agency as of 17 February 1991 60 nbsp The 2000 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony at Stadium Australia on 15 September 2000 In 2006 Melbourne hosted the 2006 Commonwealth Games 61 Later that year the Australian team competed in the 2006 FIFA World Cup their second FIFA World Cup appearance after 32 years of failing to qualify for the tournament 62 nbsp Black Caviar prior to the 2012 Diamond Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot In 2012 the Australian Rugby League Commission was formed bringing to an end the involvement of News Limited in the administration of Rugby League and the media companies conflict of interests in the sport finally concluding the fall out from the Super League war in the 1990s 63 From 2008 until 2013 the Australian thoroughbred mare Black Caviar was undefeated for her entire 25 race career a record not equaled in over 100 years 64 Notable wins include the 2012 Diamond Jubilee Stakes as well as being named the top sprinter from 2010 to 2012 in the World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings and entering the Australian Racing Hall of Fame while still in training Another thoroughbred mare Winx though not finishing unbeaten for her career surpassed Black Caviar s record for consecutive wins by winning the last 33 races of her career a streak running from May 2015 to April 2019 She also entered the Hall of Fame while in training and set a world record for most Group 1 wins with 25 Among her wins were four consecutive Cox Plates Organisation editMain article Organisation of sport in Australia The organisation of sport in Australia has been largely determined by its Federal system of government Australian Government and six states and two territories governments and local governments 65 State and Territory governments have a department with responsibility for sport and recreation These departments provide assistance to state sports organisations develop and manage sporting facilities provide financial assistance for major sporting events and develop policies to assist sports across their state or territory Each Australian State and Territory has established its own institute academy of sport ACT Academy of Sport established 1989 New South Wales Institute of Sport 1996 Northern Territory Institute of Sport 1996 Queensland Academy of Sport 1991 South Australian Sports Institute 1982 Tasmanian Institute of Sport 1985 Victorian Institute of Sport 1990 and Western Australian Institute of Sport 1984 66 page needed There are 560 local councils across Australia Local governments generally focus on the provision of facilities such as swimming pools sporting fields stadiums and tennis courts 67 Government involvement in sport up until the 1970s was fairly limited with local governments playing a major role through the provision of sporting facilities 65 However this changed over the next two decades with an Australian Bureau of Statistics survey in 2001 2002 finding that approximately 2 billion was spent on sport by three levels of government 10 per cent from the Australian Government 40 per cent from state and territory governments and the remaining 50 per cent from local government 68 State territory and local government spending was predominantly directed to facilities and their upkeep 68 In 1973 the Recreation Minister s Council was established to provide a forum for Australian Government and State and Territory Minister s responsible for sport and recreation to discuss matters of interest 65 With government s taking an increased involvement in sport it became the Sport and Recreation Minister s Council 65 More recently is referred to as Meeting of Sport and Recreation Ministers 69 The Meeting is assisted by the Committee of Australian Sport and Recreation Officials CASRO previously called the Standing Committee on Sport and Recreation SCORS 69 The Meeting works cooperatively on issues such as match fixing sport participation and water safety 70 In 2011 Minister s signed the National Sport and Active Recreation Policy Framework 71 The framework provides a mechanism for the achievement of national goals for sport and active recreation sets out agreed roles and responsibilities of governments and their expectations of sport and active recreation partners 71 In 1993 National Elite Sports Council was established to provide a forum for communication issues management and national program coordination across the high performance in Australia 66 page needed It includes representatives from AIS State Institute Academies Australian Olympic Committee Australian Paralympic Committee and the Australian Commonwealth Games Association 72 73 In 2011 National Institute System Intergovernmental Agreement provides guidance on how the sector will operate with a principal focus on the delivery of the high performance plans of national sporting organisations 74 The Australian government provided small amounts of funding in the 1950s and 1960s through the support of the National Fitness Council and international sporting teams such as the Australian Olympic team 65 The Australian Government s serious involvement and investment into sport came with it establishing the Australian Institute of Sport AIS in 1981 65 AIS was set up to improve Australia s performances in international sport which had started to decline in the 1960s and 1970s culminating in Australia winning no gold medals at the 1976 Montreal Olympics 66 page needed In 1985 the Australian Sports Commission ASC was established to improve the Australian Government s administration of sport in terms of funding participation and elite sport 66 page needed The 1989 Senate Inquiry into drugs in sport resulted in the establishment of the Australian Sport Drug Agency now called Australian Sports Anti Doping Authority ASADA in 1990 to manage Australia s anti doping program 66 page needed Participation edit nbsp Total employment in the sports and recreation sector thousands of people since 1984 The highest rates of participation for Australian sport and recreation are informal non organised sports with bike riding skateboarding rollerblading or riding a scooter topping the list of activities for children with 66 of all boys bike riding and 55 9 of all boys skateboarding rollerblading or riding a scooter in 2009 and 2010 Girls also participated in these activities at high rates with 54 4 of them doing bike riding and 42 4 skateboarding rollerblading or riding a scooter Other sports popular for Australian girls include dancing which had 26 3 participation swimming with 19 8 participation and netball at 17 For boys the other popular sports for participation included soccer with a rate of participation of 19 9 swimming with a participation rate of 17 2 Australian rules at 16 75 nbsp Bicycle riding is one of the most popular forms of physical recreation in Australia Participation rates for adults in Australia were much lower than that of Australian children For adult women in Australia the number one sport activity they participate in is walking with 30 having done this in 2009 and 2010 The second most popular form of exercise and sport was Aerobics fitness gym with a rate of 16 7 The third most popular for adult women was swimming and diving with 8 4 For men the most popular sport activity was also walking with a participation rate of 15 6 This was followed by Aerobics fitness gym with 11 2 The third most popular sport for adult males was cycling BMXing with a participation rate of 8 2 75 There are 34 000 athletes officials and coaches currently registered with the Athletics Australia 76 A 2007 estimate claimed that Australian football had 615 549 participants 77 Basketball has become one of the most popular participation sports in Australia In Victoria and Melbourne particularly it has more participants than any other sport 78 79 80 Australia s warm climate and long coastline of sandy beaches and rolling waves provide ideal conditions for water sports such as swimming The majority of Australians live in cities or towns on or near the coast and so beaches are a place that millions of Australians visit regularly 81 According to the National Cricket Census a record 1 650 030 people played Cricket across Australia in 2018 19 Women participation also reached record figures in growing to 496 484 players 82 Amateur sport editAmateur sport in Australia follows a corporate management system with the national tier composed of national sport organisations that support and fund elite sport development These organisations include the Australian Institute of Sport and the Australian Sports Commission Below them is the state level which includes state sporting organisations state institute of sport and state departments of sport The last level is district regional associations and local clubs and community sports along with local government 83 At the national level the national sport organisations govern most sports in Australia with over 120 different national sports organisation overseeing sport in Australia 84 85 The role of government in this structure is important 83 86 as government funding for most sport in Australia comes from the national government state and territory governments and local governments In the late 1990s government support for sport was double that of public non financial corporations 86 Amateur sport was transformed in Australia in the 1980s with the creation of the AIS Australian Institute of Sport The institute formally opened by Malcolm Fraser in 1981 was designed to make Australian amateur sport at major world competitions like the Olympics competitive with the rest of the world and increase the number of medals won by the country 87 A few years later in 1984 the Australian Sports Commission was created to better address the distribution of funds to support sport 88 It had a budget of A 109 million in 2000 58 By 2009 the Australian Sports Commission had a budget of A 150 million up from A 5 million when it first was created 88 Amateur sport has been able to draw large audiences In the 1950s 120 000 fans would go to the MCG to watch major athletics events 89 Australian amateur sport has dealt with financial problems In the 2000s Athletics Australia was facing duel problems of financial problems and failure for the sport to consistently medal at major international sporting events compared to other sports and their representative organisations like Swimming Australia and Rowing Australia 90 National Leagues editMajor professional sports leagues in Australia are similar to major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada in that they are closed leagues that do not practice promotion and relegation unlike sports leagues in Europe and Latin America Male Major Leagues edit League Sport Teams Season Popularity by state Established Notes Australian Football League Australian rules football 18 March September Most popular winter sport in Victoria South Australia Western Australia the Northern Territory and Tasmania 1897 Most attended sport 91 A League Men Association football 12 October May Popular nationwide 2004 Big Bash League Cricket 8 December January Most popular summer sport nationwide 2011 o 1 National Basketball League Basketball 10 September March Popular nationwide 1979 National Rugby League Rugby League 17 March September Most Popular winter sport in New South Wales Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory 1908 Most watched sport by TV 92 Female Major Leagues edit League Sport Teams Season Popularity by state Established Australian Football League Womens Australian rules football 18 September December Popular nationwide 2017 A League Womens Association football 12 October April Popular nationwide 2004 Womens Big Bash League Cricket 8 October December Most popular summer sport nationwide 2011 o 2 Suncorp Super Netball Netball 8 March July Moderately popular nationwide 2017 Womens National Basketball League Basketball 8 November March Popular nationwide 1979 Other Significant National Leagues edit League Sport Teams Popularity by state Established Notes Supercars Championship Touring Car Racing N A Moderately popular nationwide 1997 Super Rugby Women s Rugby Union 5 o 3 Moderately popular in New South Wales and Queensland 1996 Australian Baseball League Baseball 6 Minor sport 2009 Hockey One Field Hockey 7 Minor sport 2019 Australian Ice Hockey League Ice Hockey 8 Minor sport 2000 First league established 2005 current league established in 2011 First league established 2005 current league established in 2011 Super Rugby has 12 teams overall five from Australia five from New Zealand with one representing the Pacific Islands as a whole and one representing Fiji The teams of Fiji and the Pacific Islands joined in 2022 Spectators editAustralian sport fans have historically attended events in large numbers dating back to the country s early history An early football game played in Melbourne in 1858 had 2 000 spectators 93 By 1897 tens of thousands of spectators attended an early Australian rules football match at a time when top level soccer matches in England would draw six thousand fans A finals match between the Carlton Football Club and Collingwood in 1938 drew 96 834 fans 94 In 1909 at a time when rugby union had not yet become professionalised 52 000 people in Sydney attended a game between New South Wales and New Zealand The spectators accounted for 10 of the total population of Sydney at the time 60 922 fans attended the 1943 NSWRFL Grand Final between Norths and Newtown and 78 056 attended the 1965 Grand Final between Souths and the then 9 time champion St George although estimates including those who climbed onto roofs and over the perimeter fence put the actual crowd as high as 200 000 95 A world record was set for cricket attendance on 30 December 1932 when 63 993 fans watched England take on Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground 96 In 2010 the National Rugby League s premiership set its record for regular season attendance with 3 490 778 attending across the season at an average of 17 367 people at each match 97 Total average game attendance for the Australian Football League and the National Rugby League increased between 1970 and 2000 with the AFL going from an average attendance of 24 344 people per match in 1970 to 27 325 by 1980 to 25 238 in 1990 and 34 094 by 2000 The National Rugby League had an average per game attendance of 11 990 in 1970 saw a decrease in 1980 to 10 860 but increased to 12 073 by 1990 and improved on that to 14 043 by 2000 Founded later the National Basketball League had an average per game attendance of 1 158 in 1985 increased this to 4 551 by 1990 and kept attendance steady with 4 636 average fans per game in 2000 98 In March 1999 104 000 fans attended a double header match in the National Rugby League at Stadium Australia four days after the venue formally opened 99 In 2000 during the soccer gold medal match between Cameroon and Spain 114 000 fans watched the game live inside Stadium Australia 100 In the 2006 07 season the A League Melbourne Victory averaged 27 728 people to their home matches throughout the season The 2009 10 regular season was considerably lower 101 In 2019 the Australian Football League achieved its highest total attendance for any season of 7 594 302 a record for the competition at an average attendance of 36 687 for each match 102 The Big Bash League BBL was established in 2011 The first season attracted an average of 18 021 spectators per match In the 2014 15 season the average attendance for each match was 23 590 with the Adelaide Strikers attracting a record average home crowd of 36 023 spectators each game 103 104 The 2015 Cricket World Cup final was played in front of 93 013 spectators a record crowd for a day of cricket in Australia BBL in its sixth season in 2016 17 drew an average crowd in excess of 30 000 for the first time in history with overall count crossing 1 million for 35 matches In April 2024 the 2023 24 A League Women season set the record for the most attended season of any women s sport in Australian history with the season recording a total attendance of 284 551 at 15 April 2024 105 106 107 108 and finishing with a final total attendance of 312 199 109 National League attendance of team sports latest season Bolded Competitions are Women s Leagues Competition Sport Total spectatorship Average attendance Year Ref Australian Football League Australian football 8 139 464 36 396 2023 110 AFL Women s Australian football 283 922 2 868 2023 Big Bash League Cricket 1 212 696 15 999 2022 23 111 Women s Big Bash League Cricket 852 549 6 478 2022 A League Men Soccer 1 309 087 7 982 2022 23 A League Women Soccer 137 602 1 336 2022 23 Australian Baseball League Baseball 14 899 16 55 2022 23 National Rugby League Rugby league 3 266 295 16 685 2022 112 NRL Women s Rugby league 98 442 8 204 2022 National Basketball League Basketball 970 704 6 303 2022 23 113 Women s National Basketball League Basketball 24 630 3 079 2022 23 Super Netball League Netball 266 197 2023 Other Major Competitions Leagues Games attendance Bolded Competitions are Women s Competitions Competition Sport Total Spectatorship Average Attendance Year Ref AFLX AFLX Australian Football 42 730 14 243 2018 E J Whitten Legends Game Australian Football 8 000 8 000 2018 JLT Community Series Australian Football 92 333 5 130 2018 Boxing Day Test Cricket test cricket 261 335 88 173 Boxing Day 52 267 2017 State Of Origin Rugby league 192 255 64 085 2022 Women s State Of Origin Rugby league 11 321 11 321 2022 The Rugby Championship Rugby union 433 657 36 138 2018 Super Rugby Rugby union 773 940 19 348 2012 114 Formula One Grand Prix Motorsport 419 114 128 294 Race Day 2022 Total attendance by sport Sport Total spectatorship Average attendance Year Ref Australian football 7 254 478 18 554 2022 115 Rugby league 3 604 108 16 609 2022 116 Soccer 2 502 789 13 242 2015 16 117 Cricket 1 756 131 24 734 2016 17 118 119 Basketball 1 073 643 7 304 2019 20 120 Rugby union 359 266 Not available 2022 121 Sports media editMedia coverage of Australian sport and athletes predates 1876 The first all Australian sport publication The Referee was first published in 1886 in Sydney 122 The major newspapers for sport coverage in the country include the Sydney Morning Herald The Courier Mail the Herald Sun and The West Australian 122 There is a long history of television coverage of sports in Australia From 1957 to 2001 the Seven Network was the network for the Australian Football League The only year that Seven was not the network for the league was in 1987 when the AFL was on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC An exclusive deal was agreed upon by Seven in 1976 for a five year deal worth A 3 million 123 The media plays an important part in Australia s sporting landscape with many sporting events televised or broadcast on radio The government has anti siphoning laws to protect free to air stations Beyond televising live events there are many sport related television and radio programs as well as several magazine publications dedicated to sport Australian sport has also been the subject of Australian made films such as The Club Australian Rules The Final Winter and Footy LegendsWorld Series Cricket was a break away professional cricket competition staged between 1977 and 1979 and organised by Kerry Packer for his TV network Nine The matches ran in opposition to international cricket It drastically changed the nature of cricket and its influence continues to be felt today 124 Not all sports have had favourable deals with networks The first television offer for the National Basketball League was worth A 1 in an offered made by Seven that the league accepted The deal made by Ten Network to the New South Wales Rugby League was worth considerably more worth A 48 million for a five year deal that also included broadcasting rights for the State of Origin and the Australia national rugby league team This deal was terminated early because the network could not afford to pay out 125 The 1967 NSWRFL season s grand final became the first football grand final of any code to be televised live in Australia The Nine Network had paid 5 000 for the broadcasting rights 126 SBS and FoxSports are two of the most important television networks in Australia in terms of covering all Australian sports not just the popular professional leagues 122 Administrators for less popular spectator sports such as basketball and netball believe that getting additional television and newspaper coverage is fundamental for the growth and success of their sports going forward 122 Anti siphoning laws in Australia regulate the media companies access to significant sporting events In 1992 when the country experienced growth in paid subscription media the Parliament of Australia enacted the Broadcasting Services Act that gave free to air broadcasters preferential access to acquire broadcasting rights to sporting events The anti siphoning list is a list of major sporting events that the Parliament of Australia has decided must be available for all Australians to see free of charge and cannot be siphoned off to pay TV where people are forced to pay to see them The current anti siphoning list came into effect in 2006 and expires 31 December 2010 The Minister for Communications can add or remove events from the list at his discretion There are currently ten sports on the anti siphoning list plus the Olympic and Commonwealth Games Events on the anti siphoning list are delisted 12 weeks before they start to ensure pay TV broadcasters have reasonable access to listed events if free to air broadcasters decide not to purchase the broadcast rights for a particular event Any rights to listed sporting events that are not acquired by free to air broadcasters are available to pay TV For multi round events where it is simply not possible for free to air networks to broadcast all matches within the event e g the Australian Open complementary coverage is available on pay television The Federal Government is obliged by legislation to conduct a review of the list before the end of 2009 The current anti siphoning list requires showing listed sports on the broadcaster s main channel 127 Rugby league which includes NRL State of Origin and national team matches had the highest aggregate television ratings of any sport in 2022 128 also 2009 129 and 2010 130 Also in a world first the Nine Network broadcast free to air the first match of the 2010 State of Origin series live in 3D in New South Wales Queensland and Victoria 131 132 It has consistently been the most watched sport in the country over the last decade in terms of television ratings and is currently the most popular sport in Australia as at 2022 133 Rugby union is currently aired on numerous Nine Entertainment platforms including Channel 9 9Gem and Stan Sport as part of a A 100 million deal starting in 2021 134 Super Rugby games are broadcast on 9Gem every Saturday while all other games are available on Stan Sport Within a year of the deal starting the Super Rugby Final had increased its ratings by 13 fold to 1 3 million with Wallabies International games also experiencing growth 135 Cricket Australia announced an unprecedented 590 million deal with free to air television networks Nine and Ten in 2013 to broadcast the sport a 118 per cent increase on the previous five year contract 136 BBL games are currently broadcast in Australia by the free to air Network Ten In 2013 Ten paid 100 million for BBL rights over five years marking the channel s first foray in elite cricket coverage 137 Fox Sports had previously covered the Big Bash League Network Ten s BBL coverage has become a regular feature of Australian summers and last season attracted an average audience of more than 943 000 people nationally in 2014 15 season including a peak audience of 1 9 million viewers for the final between the Perth Scorchers and Sydney Sixers 138 There are a number of Australian sport films They include The Club The film was based on a play produced in 1977 in Melbourne It has been in the senior English syllabi for four Australian states for many years 139 The film was written by David Williamson directed by Bruce Beresford and starring John Howard Jack Thompson Graham Kennedy and Frank Wilson 140 Another Australian sport film is The Final Winter released in 2007 It was directed by Brian Andrews and Jane Forrest and produced by Anthony Coffee and Michelle Russell while independently produced it is being distributed by Paramount Pictures It was written by Matt Nable who also starred as the lead role Grub Henderson The film which earned praise from critics 141 focuses around Grub who is the captain of the Newtown Jets football team in the early 1980s and his determination to stand for what rugby league traditionally stood for while dealing with his own identity crisis 142 Other Australian sport films include Australian Rules and Footy Legends 143 144 Sport is popular on the radio This Sporting Life was a culturally iconic Triple J radio comedy program created by actor writer comedians John Doyle and Greig Pickhaver who performed as their characters Roy and HG Broadcast from 1986 to 2008 it was one of the longest running most popular and most successful radio comedy programs of the post television era in Australia It was the longest running show in Triple J s programming history and commanded a large and dedicated nationwide audience throughout its 22 year run 145 2KY is a commercial radio station based in Sydney broadcasting throughout New South Wales and Canberra on a network of over 140 narrowcast transmitters as well as the main 1017 AM frequency in Sydney 2KY broadcasts live commentary of thoroughbred harness and greyhound racing Over 1500 races are covered each week including the pre and post race form and TAB betting information 146 There are a number of Australian sport magazines One is the AFL Record The magazine is published in a sports magazine style format Eight different versions one for each game are published for each weekly round 60 000 copies in total and Roy Morgan Research estimates that the Record has a weekly readership of over 200 000 147 As of 2009 the week s records are published and are able to be viewed in an online magazine format 148 Another Australian sporting magazine is Australia s Surfing Life a monthly magazine about surfing published in Australia It features articles about surf trips in Australia and overseas surfing technique board design and wetsuits The magazine was founded in 1985 149 International competitions edit nbsp The Australian national baseball team during the 2013 World Baseball Classic Australian representative teams participate in many international competitions such as the Olympics Commonwealth Games Cricket World Cup Rugby World Cup Rugby League World Cup FIFA World Cup the Basketball World Cup for both men s and women s Netball World Cup World Baseball Classic and the Hockey World Cup The Australian national cricket team have participated in every edition of the Cricket World Cup Australia have been the most successful in the event winning the tournament six times out of thirteen editions held 150 The Australian national rugby league team have also participated in every edition of the Rugby League World Cup Australia have been very successful in the event winning the tournament a record 12 times 151 The Australian national rugby union team have participated in every Rugby World Cup Australia have been very successful in the tournament winning it two times 152 despite it not being the most popular sport in Australia Australia s women have repeatedly won at the highest level The Australian national netball team have won the Netball World Cup a record 11 times 153 The Australian women s national cricket team have won the Women s Cricket World Cup a record five times 154 The Australian women s national field hockey team have won the gold medal at the Olympics and the Women s Hockey World Cup three and two times respectively 155 156 The Australia women s national basketball team known as the Opals regularly compete well against the world elite at the FIBA Women s Basketball World Cup having won the event in 2006 finished second in 2018 and finished third three times and at the Summer Olympics Basketball Tournament where they have won silver medals three times and bronze medals twice 157 nbsp Nathan Jawai right represented Australia at the 2014 Basketball World Cup The Australia national soccer team nicknamed the Socceroos have appeared at the FIFA World Cup in 1974 2006 2010 2014 2018 and 2022 At the 2006 World Cup the Socceroos surprised many by reaching the Round of 16 losing 1 0 in injury time to the eventual champions Italy 158 At the 2022 World Cup an unfancied Socceroos team again advanced to the knockout stage after winning 2 of 3 group stage matches including a 1 0 upset victory against Denmark 159 In the round of 16 they were defeated 1 2 by eventual champions Argentina 160 They also hold the unusual distinction of having won continental soccer championships of two confederations Oceania s OFC Nations Cup four times between 1980 and 2004 and after moving to the Asian Football Confederation in 2005 the AFC Asian Cup in 2015 The Australia women s national soccer team the Matildas have appeared in all FIFA Women s World Cups except the first in 1991 They have advanced past the group stage in each of the last four editions of the competition 2007 2011 2015 and 2019 losing in the quarter finals in the first three of these editions and the round of 16 in 2019 In 2015 they became the first senior Australian national team of either sex to win a World Cup knockout stage match specifically in the round of 16 newly instituted for the Women s World Cup in that year The Matildas have also enjoyed success at the AFC Women s Asian Cup advancing at least to the semi finals in all five competitions since joining the AFC in 2006 and winning in 2010 Australia co hosted the 2023 FIFA Women s World Cup alongside New Zealand finishing with a best ever fourth place result 161 Their run in the tournament attracted widespread community support dubbed by the media as Matildas fever Australia are the most successful side at the Underwater Hockey World Championships winning 25 titles including 11 men s elite championships and 8 women s elite championships Australia has also hosted a number of major international sporting events including the 1956 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics The country also regularly hosts a major tennis Grand Slam event the Australian Open an FIA Formula One World Championship round Australian Grand Prix motorcycle MotoGP round Australian motorcycle Grand Prix as well as rounds of the Superbike World Championship World Rally Championship alongside major domestically created internationally recognised events including the Melbourne Cup and the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 44 Australia has hosted the 1992 Cricket World Cup and the 2015 Cricket World Cup along with New Zealand 162 The 2015 Cricket World Cup generated more than A 1 1 billion in direct spending created the equivalent of 8 320 full time jobs and had a total of 2 million bed nights across the two host countries 163 Australia has also hosted the 2003 Rugby World Cup with the event generating around A 1 billion in economic activity while bringing in 2 million visitors to the country 164 The 1868 Aboriginal cricket tour of England was the first tour by any sports team from Australia 165 166 Olympics edit See also Australia at the Olympics nbsp Australia s Olympic medal totals nbsp Australian track cyclists Jack Bobridge Anna Meares and Shane Kelly The Olympic movement in Australia started out during the 1900s and 1910s The first organisations for the Olympics in Australia came out of the athletics governance system and resulted in the creation of state based Olympic committees The first national governing body for Australian Olympics was created in 1914 and was a joint effort with New Zealand though New Zealand was a less than able partner The movement in Australia then stagnated as a result of the Great War The New Zealand and Australian organisation was disbanded and an Australian only national organisation was founded in 1920 called the Australian Olympic Federation The early goals of the organisation were to ratify team selection and to fundraise to assist Olympians in paying for their travel to compete at the Games By the 1980s the organisation had issues on the international level as the IOC wanted them to re structure until this time the organisation followed governance models similar to that of other Australian sporting organisations with a federated model of governance Changes were made the organisation ended up with an executive board with a president two vice presidents a secretary general and a 14 member executive board which had 10 elected members 4 IOC members and 2 members of the Athlete s Commission 167 Australia has hosted the Olympics twice in 1956 in Melbourne and in 2000 in Sydney These were the first Games hosted in the southern hemisphere 168 169 170 Brisbane will host the 2032 Summer Games 171 Australia has been influential in the Olympic movement with four Australian representatives who are members of the International Olympic Committee 167 The government has provided monetary support for the Olympics In the lead up to the 1924 Games they provided 3 000 pounds and in 1936 provided 2 000 pounds This support was seen as a way of supporting national identity but no formal system existed for the funding wider sport at the time 172 The 1956 Games were the first time Australia had an Equestrian competitor when Victorian Ernie Barker competed 170 Australia has generally been a world power in Olympic swimming since the 1956 Melbourne Olympics swimmers like Shane Gould Dawn Fraser Ian Thorpe Kieren Perkins and Ariarne Titmus have taken multiple gold medals 173 Australia performed relatively poorly at the 1976 Summer Olympics This upset the nation as it challenged a fundamental part of Australian identity The following Olympics the 1980 Summer Olympics some Australian sports sat out as part of a boycott 54 174 and the country earned only nine medals two of them gold in Moscow 175 To prevent a recurrence of this the Australian Institute of Sport was created to help improve Australia s medal tally at the Games 175 174 Channel Seven had exclusive Australian free to air pay television online and mobile telephone broadcast rights to the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing The live telecast of the 2008 Summer Olympics was shared by the Seven Network and SBS Television Seven broadcast the opening and closing ceremonies and mainstream sports including swimming athletics rowing cycling and gymnastics In contrast SBS TV provided complementary coverage focused on long form events such as soccer road cycling volleyball and table tennis 176 Paralympics edit See also Australia at the Paralympics nbsp Australian swimmers at the training pool at the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Games Australia has attended every Summer Paralympics and hosted the 2000 Sydney Games Australia sent a delegation of 170 athletes to compete at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing 177 and a team of 11 competitors to compete in two disciplines at the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver British Columbia Canada 178 A team of 161 members was sent to the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London 179 Commonwealth Games edit See also Australia at the Commonwealth Games Australians take the Commonwealth Games seriously because on one level of national thinking the event offers the country an opportunity to prove they are superior to the original country the United Kingdom 25 180 181 182 By the 1938 British Empire Games Australia s combined medal total was already greater than that of the Home Nations tallies combined Australia would go on to beat England in total medals at the Commonwealth Games in 1950 1962 1970 1974 and 1982 25 This rivalry with England continued to be an important component of the games up until the mid 2010s 181 182 Since then the importance of the Commonwealth Games has declined in the minds of the Australian public due to the decreasing relevance of the Commonwealth in Australia as well as the perceived lack of competition The Olympics Games has now become the primary way for Australians to measure themselves against the world 183 Events editJanuary United Cup Brisbane International Adelaide International Hobart International Australian Open February August Super Rugby Season March August Super Netball Season March September NRL Season AFL Season March November Supercars Championship June A League Grand Final June July State of Origin series rugby league July October NRL Women s Season August November AFL Women s Season September AFL Grand Final September February One Day Cup September March Sheffield Shield Women s National Cricket League October NRL Grand Final October November WBBL Season October January WNBL Season October March NBL Season October April A League Men Season November Australian Open Golf November February ABL Season December January BBL SeasonSee also editConcussions in Australian sport By demographic edit Women s sport in Australia Sport in rural and regional Australia Disabled sport in Australia By social and cultural context edit Australian national sports team nicknames Aussie Aussie Aussie Oi Oi Oi Indigenous Australians Recreation and sport List of sports museums and halls of fame in Australia List of international sports events in Australia List of Australian sports controversies List of Australian sports songs List of Australian sports films By sport edit 1916 Pioneer Exhibition Game Athletics in Australia Baseball in Australia Basketball in Australia Castelling in Australia Cricket in Australia Hockey in Australia List of Australian equestrians Golf in Australia Motorsport in Australia Rugby league in Australia Rugby union in Australia Soccer in Australia Surfing in Australia Tennis in Australia Winter sport in AustraliaReferences edit Rugby union s largest crowd AFL Tables Crowds 2019 afltables com Retrieved 14 July 2022 Melbourne named world s sporting capital 20 April 2016 Top 10 Greatest Sports Countries Greatest Sporting Nation Greatest Sporting Nation Olympics medal table by country Statista 1 000 times gold The thousand medals of Team USA Washington Post The Washington Post The National Sports Museum celebrating moments that made us nsm org au Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2013 Bloomfield 2003 p 14 a b c Bloomfield 2003 p 15 Hess et al 2008 p 2 a b Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p 3 a b Hess et al 2008 p 1 a b Andrews 1979 p 148 Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p 4 a b Andrews 1979 p 236 a b Crego 2003 p 242 Smith 2011 p 96 a b c d e f g R I C Publications 2008 p 90 91 Rolls et al 1999 p 27 Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p 7 a b c Rolls et al 1999 p 42 Andrews 1979 p 203 Andrews 1979 p 9 a b c d Nauright amp Parrish 2012 p 368 369 a b Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p x Andrews 1979 p 1999 a b Andrews 1979 p 227 Badminton Australia History of Badminton in Australia Badminton org au Retrieved 30 October 2011 NSW Ice Hockey Facts and Events NSW Icehockey Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Story of the QRL Queensland Rugby League Archived from the original on 29 September 2009 Retrieved 2 December 2009 Rolls et al 1999 p 39 Fagan Sean The Founding of Rugby League in Australia amp New Zealand rl1908 com Archived from the original on 21 October 2006 Retrieved 25 July 2007 Andrews 1979 p 212 Andrews 1979 p 68 69 Peter FitzSimons 1 June 2010 The Ballad of Les Darcy HarperCollins Australia ISBN 978 0 7304 0066 0 Retrieved 8 October 2012 David John Headon September 2003 The Best Ever Australian Sports Writing A 200 Year Collection Black Inc pp 500 515 ISBN 978 1 86395 266 8 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Graham Seal 1 December 2001 Encyclopedia of Folk Heroes ABC CLIO p 56 ISBN 978 1 57607 216 5 Retrieved 8 October 2012 a b Mungo MacCallum 23 November 2009 Australian Story Kevin Rudd and the Lucky Country Black Inc p 46 ISBN 978 1 86395 457 0 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Women in Print Evening Post New Zealand National Library of New Zealand 19 December 1922 p 19 Retrieved 28 April 2011 About Us Diving Australia Archived from the original on 16 December 2013 Fagan Sean To Wattle Gold and Gum Green Jerseys RL1908 com Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2011 a b Sumerling Patricia 1 May 2011 Adelaide Park Lands The Wakefield Press p 93 ISBN 978 1 86254 914 2 Retrieved 2 October 2012 a b c Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p xii a b Andrews 1979 p 26 Rolls et al 1999 p 28 Stell 1991 p 100 Fifty Years A Celebration Australian Canoeing Retrieved 28 January 2013 Adair amp Vamplew 1997 p 6 All England Netball Association 2009 p 60 McKay 1991 p 42 Crotty amp Roberts 2008 p 198 205 McKay 1991 p 71 a b Bloomfield 2003 p x McKay 1991 p 74 McKay 1991 p 21 a b McKay 1991 p 72 a b Shilbury amp Deane 2001 p 89 Russell Katrina Marie 2011 Youth Sport in Australia Sydney University Press p 11 ISBN 978 1 920899 64 6 Retrieved 3 October 2012 Shilbury amp Deane 2001 p 88 Mojumdar 2009 p 172 Timeline of Australian 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in Liberty A League history has set a new benchmark for women s sport in Australia Facebook A Leagues Retrieved 15 April 2024 Women s A League down to four contenders after first stage of finals series Friends of Football Retrieved 15 April 2024 INVEST IN WOMEN S SPORT The Tillies effect In a record breaking week one of the Finals Series the A League became the most attended season of any women s sport in Australia ever Surpassing the AFLW 2023 cumulative attendance total for the regular season finals series Instagram The Female Athlete Project Retrieved 15 April 2024 Thank you for making season 2023 24 of the Liberty A League the biggest in the 𝐡𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲 𝐨𝐟 𝐀𝐮𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐚𝐧 𝐰𝐨𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐬 𝐬𝐩𝐨𝐫𝐭 A 127 increase on last year Just incredible Facebook A Leagues Retrieved 9 May 2024 2018 AFL Attendance Austadiums com Retrieved 18 July 2019 BBL 2018 2019 ATTENDANCE https www austadiums com sport comp php sid 17 NRL 2018 ATTENDANCE NRL ATTENDANCE Austadiums com Retrieved 29 July 2019 Basketball in Australia 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Australian Commonwealth Games Association Newsletter 2 5 ed Archived from the original on 12 October 2005 Retrieved 6 October 2012 via National Library of Australia a b Wilson Tony October 2010 Beating England is the only game in town The Sunday Age Melbourne Australia p 15 Australia dominated the Commonwealth Games so why doesn t it feel like that SBS Sport Retrieved 29 May 2023 Bibliography edit Brawley Sean Guoth Nick 2013 Australia s Asian Sporting Context 1920s 30s Sport in the Global Society Contemporary Perspectives Routledge p 168 ISBN 978 1 317 96632 6 Archived from the original on 30 October 2023 Adair Daryl Vamplew Wray 1997 Sport in Australian history Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 553590 7 OCLC 37217245 All England Netball Association 2009 Netball A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 7136 7697 6 Andreff Wladimir Szymanski Stefan 2006 Handbook on the Economics of Sport Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 84376 608 7 Retrieved 18 September 2012 Andrews Malcolm 1979 The Encyclopaedia of Australian sports Sydney Golden Press ISBN 0 85558 849 7 OCLC 21526949 Bloomfield John 2003 Australia s Sporting Success The Inside Story UNSW Press ISBN 978 0 86840 582 7 Bale John 2003 Running Cultures Racing in Time and Space Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 7146 5535 2 Bennett Tony Carter David 2001 Culture in Australia Policies Publics and Programs Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 00403 9 Boy Scouts of America Inc 1956 Boys Life Boys Life Inkprint Edition Boy Scouts of America Inc ISSN 0006 8608 Clark Manning 1993 A History of Australia Melbourne University Publish ISBN 978 0 522 84523 5 Collins Felicity Davis Therese 27 October 2004 Australian Cinema After Mabo Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54256 2 Retrieved 3 October 2012 Crego Robert 2003 Sports and Games of the 18th and 19th Centuries Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 31610 4 Crotty Martin Roberts David 1 October 2008 Turning Points in Australian History UNSW Press ISBN 978 1 921410 56 7 Retrieved 2 October 2012 Fort Rodney D Fizel John 2004 International Sports Economics Comparisons Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 98032 0 Guttmann Allen 2007 Sports The First Five Millennia Univ of Massachusetts Press ISBN 978 1 55849 610 1 Hess Rob Nicholson Matthew Stewart Bob de Moore Gregory 2008 A national game the history of Australian rules football Camberwell Victoria Penguin ISBN 978 0 670 07089 3 OCLC 247974138 Higham James 2012 Sport Tourism Destinations Routledge ISBN 978 0 7506 5937 6 Hoye Russell Nicholson Matthew Westerbeek Hans Smith Aaron Stewart Bob 2012 Sport Management Routledge ISBN 978 0 7506 8755 3 McKay Jim 1991 No pain no gain sport and Australian culture New York Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 7248 1080 2 OCLC 24408455 Mojumdar Ram Mohun 2009 History of Physical Education and Sports Pinnacle Technology ISBN 978 1 61820 459 2 permanent dead link Nauright John Parrish Charles 2012 Sports Around the World History Culture and Practice ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 300 2 R I C Publications 2008 Primary Australian History R I C Publications ISBN 978 1 74126 684 9 Rolls Eric C Halligan Marion Mathews Marlene Cliff Paul 1999 A sporting nation celebrating Australia s sporting life Canberra National Library of Australia ISBN 0 642 10704 1 OCLC 44839640 Shilbury David Deane John 2001 Sport management in Australia an organisational overview Second ed Bentleigh East Victoria Strategic Sport Management ISBN 978 0 9580170 0 8 OCLC 777321324 Smith Holly 2011 Melbourne Victoria and Tasmania Hunter Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1 58843 779 2 Stell Marion K 1991 Half the Race A history of Australian women in sport North Ryde Australia HarperCollins ISBN 0 207 16971 3 Stewart Bob 2005 Australian Sport Better by Design The Evolution of Australian Sport Policy Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 34046 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sports in Australia nbsp Wikinews has news related to Sport in Australia Australian Sports Commission Australian Institute of Sport Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sport in Australia amp oldid 1225018464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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