My colleagues are wrong: AFL State of Origin is a terrible idea

By Cameron Rose / Expert

Bringing back State of Origin football is the worst idea in the long, sad history of bad ideas, and I’m going to be there when the 90 percent of fans who ‘want it’ find that out.

My Roar colleague Michael DiFabrizio is an ardent advocate of representative football, as is his partner in crime Vince Rugari.

First seen in these parts last year, and most recently last week, Michael has made this his passion project, and come up with a proposal by which he thinks the concept can be revived.

As impressive as his diagram looks with its coloured boxes, bright dynamic, and arrows pointing every which way, and as sound as his plan may be in theory, unfortunately the entire notion of AFL State of Origin football is as relevant and as welcome as a clown at a funeral.

This latest push for state against state representative football has originated with the players themselves, and this seems to be the number one argument that its supporters have latched onto.

In my opinion, and the late 90s showed this to be true, players like the idea of Origin more than they like actually playing it.

It’s easy for players to say they love the concept, but we saw that when it comes to finally running out onto the ground to compete, a different song is sung.

It’s simplistic to only blame pressure from the clubs. Eventually, once the easy talk of state pride dies down, the players realise that the number one goal in their football life is to play in a premiership, and any concept outside club football compromises this view.

If we need any further proof of the elite players’ lack of interest in representative football, let’s look at last year’s International Rules series.

Only one All-Australian felt compelled to play against the Irish. None of the top 15 in the Brownlow Medal loved representative football enough to pull on the Australian jumper.

And only one player who polled more than 12 votes in last year’s count was running around in either match.

In fact, the 2011 Australian line-up, which should be the most glittering array of talent in our land, and a vastly superior side to that which any mere state could throw up, contained the grand total of four club best-and-fairest winners, only one of whom actually won it last year.

The captain of this auspicious side was Brad Green, who no longer commands a game at a team sitting on the bottom of the ladder.

With all due respect to the likes of Jake King, Robin Nahas, Ben McGlynn, Easton Wood and David Wojcinski, we were seeing a line-up of tradesmanlike footballers and journeymen, as well as a couple of first-year players thrown in for good measure.

Hardly representative of the ‘best of the best’, is it?

And this was for Australia, the highest possible honour. Imagine this lack of elite representation diluted over six or more teams as DiFabrizio suggests.

A straight Carlton v Collingwood match would have more talent on display, and I can assure you that it would mean a hell of a lot more to those involved.

So now that we’ve convincingly quashed the argument of the players, let’s turn our attention to the fans, especially those 90 percent on Superfooty who, according to their apparent fervour, will bring war to the streets if they don’t get Origin football immediately.

I think we’ll see they find it easy to click a mouse button in support, but find it a different story when it comes to buying tickets for themselves and family members to go along.

Let’s not forget that these same people are already paying hundreds of dollars a year for memberships, possibly Foxtel, and then face more expenditure if lucky enough to be there when finals come along.

The last six official State of Origin matches, played between 1996-1999, attracted an average crowd of 22,059. Home and away matches over this period attracted an average crowd of 32,598.

The fans that wanted it showed their passion for State of Origin to such an extent that 30 percent fewer of them showed up.

The same fans that want State of Origin back were no doubt part of the 109,513 people who took in the International Rules series in 1999. By 2005 crowds were down to 84,526, and last year a paltry 35,466 bothered to turn up across two matches.

Damning statistics if you ask me.

Supporters of the concept will point to the Hall of Fame Tribute match in 2008, when 69,294 people turned up to the MCG in support.

This simply proved that people will watch a novelty if it’s put in front of them, much like Meatloaf at last year’s grand final or the sprint at half time. But as the numbers prove, they are not interested enough to keep it sustainable.

Rohan Connolly, senior football writer at The Age, summed it up well when I put the question of the Tribute game to him recently on his weekly blog: “The crowd was good enough, but there seemed a real flatness about the atmosphere, proof to me that it’s the teams that people really follow rather than individual stars.”

Like the Spice Girls, State of Origin was a once mighty phenomenon that died a natural death in 1999.

This is when the professionalism of clubs took over. After all, they’re spending millions of dollars on these elite players, years nurturing them to become the talents they are, and developing game plans built specifically around them. They’re entitled to protect their investment.

AFL is a club game, a national game, and State of Origin is quite simply not required any more in the age of club memberships rising regularly above 40,000, with many pushing and exceeding 50,000.

Go to the MCG this Saturday night for the Dreamtime match between Essendon and Richmond, and you’ll see what the passion of AFL football is all about.

The air will be thick with hope and excitement, 80,000 bloodthirsty fans screaming and raging for their team to win, each wanting their players to physically hurt the opposition in bone-crunching tackles, ready to explode with unbridled joy as victory beckons, and sent spiralling into depression when things don’t go their way.

You will see emotion at its purest and most raw. Friends will become enemies, and hatred will burn within. Agony and ecstasy will be on display in a tribal, primal way that exists only between club supporters.

So, Michael, as bold and imaginative as your idea might be, the fans don’t really want it, the players even less so, and the clubs quite simply and rightfully won’t allow their best players to play.

AFL State of Origin should not now, nor ever again, be on the agenda.

The Crowd Says:

2012-05-26T02:36:16+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


And 100,000 turn up to the Melbourne Cup once a year, it doesn't mean most poeple have any real affinity with racing. SoO, to some extent the F1GP, and the Melb Cup are very much "events" which drag people along regardless of any care for the sport the event is supposedly built around. A bit like non-sporting people watching the Olympics every four years.

2012-05-22T09:48:21+00:00

The Great G Nepia

Guest


An excellent article. I dont follow AFL, but i respect the sport immensely Prior to reading this article i believed in the sense of having an AFL SOO, simply due 2 the huge success if RL SOO, but having the read tihis article i can see how an AFL SOO wont work. In fact it will probably be extremely cheesy. I think what would really be good for AFL is to somehow build a trans-tasman rivarly. If nz could field a strong afl rep team, it would certainly hav potential to capture the imagination of the nz public.

2012-05-22T09:38:07+00:00

The Great G Nepia

Guest


I reckin SOO, great as the concept is, definately detracts from the rest of the season. Once its over, its pretty hom hum till the final

2012-05-21T01:47:42+00:00

Lats

Guest


Good article.. but I honestly think you could play a state of origin round robin series as part of the pre season alongside the NAB cup... clubs nominate 4 guys who want to play state footy, those guys go into camp... play 2-3 games over 2-3 weekends.. then go back to their clubs.. you could play a double header NAB grand final with state of origin grand final on the same day.. that way, all the good players get a decent hit out.. younger draftees get a couple more games at their clubs (since the Judds and Abletts wont be around) .. and no one has to play any more footy than anyone else... Can you imagine Luke Shuey and Andrew Gaff, lining up for the big V, with Shanon Hurn and Beau Waters playing for the Croweaters?? Cox / Natanui lining up for the Sandgropers?? All those guys are top WCE players, but Id like to see them play for their state at some point. Playing for your state used to be one of the top accolades a guy could get back in the 1970's and 1980's.

2012-05-17T08:00:13+00:00

JVGO

Guest


The Swans are only the fourth best attended football club in NSW this year, Newcastle, Canterbury and St George all have better home crowd averages than the Swans. The prospect of the Swans ever getting near to filling ANZ is a long way off, probably never.

2012-05-17T07:33:58+00:00

JVGO

Guest


Do you think if the AFL could add several games that would outrate the GF that they wouldn't do it? But as you say who cares, you have a very good Melbourne based comp with phenomenol crowds as it is, just keep it that way.

2012-05-17T04:57:19+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


JVGO clearly the statement is intended to be preposterous - you know I would never say anything to bad mouth the greatest game in the world. But there is a serious point to be made: does SOO detract from the club game? People might argue it both ways, but I don't think the club game can hit a peak with 3 SOO games per season. The day might come when SOO will have to return to a single game per season, as it was at the start - and that might even become a biennial event.

2012-05-17T04:49:00+00:00

Norm

Guest


Are we supposed to be impressed by an average of 17,500? It is below the 2011 average of 19,500. And in fact, 17,500 is pathetic, given that the NRL is predominant in 1/2 of Australia. IE: 11 mill people averaging 17,500. Hardly worth comparing with AFL getting twice that in the other 50%. Of course, if JVGO was a proud Aussie he would immediately point out that Australia's own code has the 3rd highest average in the world (34,000) despite being #1 in only 1/2 of the country. We wait for his unbiased objective praise!

2012-05-17T04:27:36+00:00

Macca

Guest


JVGO - Remeber the AFL average is "dragged down" by GWS & Suns games too.

2012-05-17T04:25:38+00:00

JVGO

Guest


Sidewalks are in America, we have footpaths in Australia.

2012-05-17T03:20:59+00:00

JVGO

Guest


That statement is a little preposterous C. The NRL average attendance this season is 17,500 per game, admittedly about half what the AFL averages and dragged down by the fact that Melburnians are poor attendees of RL, but nevertheless that figure is at this stage on track to be an average attendance record. A more correct and valid statement would be that noone attends or watches AFL international or representative football because there isn't any.

2012-05-16T23:21:15+00:00

piesman2011

Guest


Its been close to 15 years since the last SOO series, alot of things have changed since then. NSW and QLD are a lot stronger in terms of players they could put on the park. If you dont play it at the end of the season more players will not be injuried or on holiday and be able to play (like what happened with the international rules series). If players get a financial incentive they may just be fighting each other to play for their state. Why not give it a try every 15 years to see if it works. Imagine Buddy, Natanui and Sandilands all playing in the same team. Imagine the midfield of the Big V. Surely to see Vic play WA or NWS play Qld would be worth trying every now and then.

2012-05-16T22:13:38+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


that's the good news, that bad news is that no one goes to club games during the season

2012-05-16T13:01:11+00:00

Galaxy Hop

Guest


More people watched the first game of the League State of Origin last year than the AFL Grand Final, and then there were two more games with essentially the same amount of viewers--can't be that bad a concept.

2012-05-16T08:32:49+00:00

spagey

Guest


This is the best point by far, soo works because its a 2 state tradition, states that hate each other in all sports. With the afl being so dominent across a number of states, what would be the games, you need the tradition of a year after year contest. This wouldnt happen if states played diferent states each year. I think an indigenous all stars would be good, the afl is an amazing platform for great skills to be on show under this concept

2012-05-15T12:47:36+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


Tables and chairs all over the sidewalk?! yewonk, mate - you're breaking my heart!!

2012-05-15T12:34:07+00:00

Michael/Brisbane

Guest


No one in Sydney travels outside their own suburbs, and it's reflected in their crowd figures - despite your amazing weather and table and chair-less sidewalks..

2012-05-15T12:00:31+00:00

yewonk

Guest


no one is travelling to victoria, not with your weather and the tables and chairs all over the sidewalk, travelling football fans is an afl thing. seriously no one in sydney travels south. still that 35 k was a great crowd compared to afl soo crowd.

2012-05-15T10:50:46+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


db Not sure what the Gabba capacity is, but the Lions have had 35+k crowds there between 2001 and 2009 on 12 occasions: http://stats.rleague.com/afl/crowds/vn_gabba.html And the Swans have had 70+k at Stadium Australia on two occasions, including one home and away match: http://stats.rleague.com/afl/crowds/vn_stadium_australia.html

2012-05-15T10:39:25+00:00

doubledutch

Roar Pro


Agree 100 percent

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