New Zealand national Australian rules football team

The New Zealand national Australian rules football team, is the national team for the sport of Australian rules football in New Zealand. The team is selected from the best New Zealand born and developed players, primarily from the clubs of the AFL New Zealand. New Zealand-born players in the Australian Football League are not considered for selection. The team mainly plays only for the purposes of the Australian Football International Cup, and won the tournament in 2005.

AFL New Zealand
Names
Club details
ColoursSilver, black
CompetitionInternational Cup
CoachRob Malone
Captain(s)Andrew Howison
Ground(s)Westpac Stadium, Wellington, New Zealand
 Hutt Park, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
Other information
Official websiteaflnz.co.nz/

Identity

The NZ side wear a distinctive silver and black uniform which consists of a guernsey (singlet), shorts and socks. The guernsey contains New Zealand's silver fern. Before every match, similar to the all blacks, the NZ team will perform a Haka.

History

New Zealand are the modern version of the team that defeated both New South Wales and Queensland at the Jubilee Australasian Football Carnival. Australian Football was seldom played in New Zealand between 1908 and 1974.

New Zealand was reintroduced to international Australian Football at the Arafura Games in 1995. The team also competed in the 1997 and 1999 games, winning the Silver medal in each year of the competition as runners up to Papua New Guinea.

The team competed in the inaugural 2002 Australian Football International Cup finishing in 3rd place.

Warming up for the 2005 International Cup, the Falcons played a touring Maffra (from the strong Victorian Country Football League in Gippsland, Victoria, Australia) at Manurewa in New Zealand but were defeated by 70 points,[1] dulling expectations of the team's appearance in the next international event, but at the same time displaying the massive disparity between the competitive level of the sport in the two countries.

However, with the growing popularity of Aussie Rules in New Zealand, the much improved 2005 New Zealand International Cup side went through the competition undefeated, claiming the title of International Champions by defeating Papua New Guinea in the Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, effectively claiming the title from previous winners Ireland. The team took most by surprise and no other side was able to come close to winning against them.

The Falcon's best and fairest player (from the 2005 International Cup) was Matthew Callaghan.

Following the overwhelming success of the team's 2005 International Cup appearance, the Falcons were invited to play at the Australian Country Championships in 2006 to be held on the Gold Coast. The qualification rules of this competition are more lenient, and the Falcons were able to play non-New Zealand born players to make them competitive against Australian sides from country leagues. The Falcons were not successful at the event, losing heavily to Queensland, by 9 points to Victoria B and by 63 points to the Indigenous All-Stars.[2]

Warming up for the 2008 cup, New Zealand were once again convincingly defeated by Maffra. The team, however went on to win all of its first 3 rounds by massive margins, leading its pool by a massive percentage to play-off in the finals against Ireland, Papua New Guinea and South Africa. Though the Falcons lost to a determined Papua New Guinea in the Grand Final. Richard Bradley was the tournament's equal leading goalkicker with Canada's Scott Fleming and was one of three New Zealanders selected in the All-International (world) team.

Since 2012 the national side has played against the National Australian Under 17 team (NAB AFL Academy). The first game was won convincingly by the AFL Academy by 91 points. 2013 saw the Australian's win by 44 points and in 2014 it took a goal in the final minutes to win their third straight game by only 4 points.

Some of NZ's past and present players include-

Shem Tatupu - Melbourne Storm (NRL) Joseph Baker Thomas - St Kilda International Scholarship Holder (AFL) Cameron Illet - NT Thunder (NEAFL) / St Mary's (NTFL) Khan Haretaku - Port Melbourne Football Club (VFL) / Sydney Swans (Rookie List) Matt Argus -NT Thunder (NEAFL) Lachlan Argus - NT Thunder (NEAFL) / St Mary's Brendan Clark - NT Thunder (NEAFL) / Tiwi Bombers Andrew Howieson - Sandringham Dragons reserves (VFL) / Old Collegians (VAFA) Wayne Schwass - Sydney Swans (AFL) Andrew Christiansen - University Blues (VAFA) Mitchell Ryan - Frankston Dolphins (VFL) Justin Clark- Old Collegians (VAFA) Kurt Hedtherley - Hawthorn Football Club (AFL)

AFL New Zealand Sponsors

AFL, St Kilda Football Club, Foundation North, AVJennings, Sport New Zealand, Sekem, New Zealand Racing Board

International competition

International Cup

Arafura Games

  • 1995: 2nd[3]
  • 1997: 2nd[4]
  • 1999: 2nd[5]
  • 2001: Did not enter[6]

Current Squad

The following players were included in the squad for the 2017 Australian Football International Cup:[7]

NameClubLeagueRegion
Aaron HarrisMorningside PanthersQAFLBrisbane
Adam SimpsonSpringwood PumasQAFLBrisbane
Andrew HowisonOakleigh DistrictsSFNLMelbourne
Andriu SucuNorth Shore TigersAAFLAuckland
Andy ChristensenSouth Melbourne DistrictsVAFAMelbourne
Barclay MillerSt Kilda SaintsAFLMelbourne
Ben HickUniversity BluesAAFLAuckland
Brandon SucuWilston GrangeQAFLBrisbane
Brendan ClarkMaroochydore RoosQAFLBrisbane
Carlos Donnell-BrownWaitakere MagpiesAAFLAuckland
Christian BlackieOtago HooopsOtago AFLOtago
David RattenburyWaitakere MagpiesAAFLAuckland
Jackson ClinceNorth Shore TigersAAFLAuckland
James KuselHutt Valley EaglesWAFLWellington
Jay JohnsonEastern BluesCAFLCanterbury
Joe Baker-ThomasSt Kilda SaintsAFLMelbourne
Josh CunliffeNorth Shore TigersAAFLAuckland
Josh MackieOtago HoopsOtago AFLOtago
Liam BeattieUniversity BluesAAFLAuckland
Michael BoyceMt Roskill SaintsAAFLAuckland
Misilifi FaimaloNorth City DemonsWAFLWellington
Peter HalsteadEastern BulldogsWAFLWellington
Samuel McKenzieMt Roskill SaintsAAFLAuckland
Shane LeatWaitakere MagpiesAAFLAuckland
Te Kopa Tipene-ThomasNorth Shore TigersAAFLAuckland
Ty SmithNorth Shore TigersAAFLAuckland
William DickinsonMt Roskill SaintsAAFLAuckland
William GregsonSandringham ZebrasVFLMelbourne

Alumni

gollark: Obviously you can use new innovations like ultrahyperbases, but there are finitely many of those.
gollark: Or they just get submerged in it and adding more isn't useful.
gollark: I mean, you can make the world worse by covering everything in ultrahyperacid, but you can only add so much ultrahyperacid to constantly dissolve everyone's skin before they get used to it.
gollark: I agree. There are probably diminishing returns on hellness, thus problems.
gollark: The e-ink Kindles run some accursed Linux distro where ALL is browser.

References

  1. New Zealand given a football lesson by touring Maffra Eagles by Aaron Richard for worldfootynews.com
  2. Reality Check for International Footy by Brett Northey for worldfootynews.com
  3. Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Archived 26 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Archived 26 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. http://aflnz.co.nz/blog/2017/06/15/new-zealand-squad-for-2017-international-cup/
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