The Socceroos have proved yet again that only one sport can truly unite Australia

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

The bandwagoners are out in force, politicians are queueing up, the nation is going bananas and the casual sports fan is salivating as the Socceroos advance to the final 16 of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

It is a brilliant vibe and one Australian football fans welcome all and sundry to join in on, yet it is also a moment to reflect on just why the most beautiful game of all is exactly that, with an ability to transcend culture, wealth, status, sexuality and religious affiliation in the right circumstances.

As a sports writer who covers just about every human endeavour, there is no disrespect intended to any of the games that Australians enjoy. I too am an Australian and also an AFL and NRL club member, a former professional golfer, a representative tennis player, a rugby union watcher, a netball dad and a sucker for just about anything that involves physical activity and competition.

However, the Socceroos’ qualification for the final 16 of the 2022 World Cup far exceeds anything achieved in colonial endeavours, where a limited pool of competitors even throw their hats in the ring.

Sadly, such institutions of the British empire continue to draw more attention, money and support thanks to an inherent bias that is amplified by rather questionable media sources that mysteriously claim to be inclusive and all-encompassing.

(Photo by Claudio Villa/Getty Images)

In reality, Australia is still something of a backward nation when it comes to accepting football as its most powerful and apt metaphor and the game most reflective of its people.

The AFL still struggles with fans incapable of seeing past the colour of a player’s skin, with social media and the banana-throwing antics of a small majority reminding us all of just how backward Australians can be and remain.

For all the small talk, little has changed in AFL circles across 50 years, and when Indigenous legends like Eddie Betts appear on quality programs such as AFL 360 in tears after yet another incident where racism is the fundamental driver, it isn’t hard to see why people like Adam Goodes appear to have been lost to the game forever.

Thankfully, the fans at the Al Janoub Stadium cheering on the Socceroos had nothing like that to consider, as they supported their inclusive team.

Rugby league still struggles for credibility, with off-field incidents that demean women common and players openly taking stances against the LGBTIQ+ community so transparent that one wonders when a serious stance will actually be taken against such attitudes.

(Photo by Shaun Botterill – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

As someone who writes and works in the NRL sphere, it is often hard to justify such a role. The many decent, moral and progressive voices are drowned out by the neanderthal views held by a core group destined to threaten the long-term survival of the game and its inability to acknowledge the importance of progress and change.

That is emotionally challenging, as is the 2022 Rugby League World Cup where the Kangaroos secured their ninth title in ten editions. It is difficult to take such a tournament with the seriousness and passion equal to a football World Cup, an event where the winner is far from known beforehand and the potential trophy holders too numerous to pin down with any certainty.

The British empire sent cricket around the globe, with invaded nations all succumbing to what is a charming and superb contest between bat, ball and brain. Yet the recent prostitution of cricket via the T20 format has seen it profit more in small areas and wane desperately in others as the limited field of participants bicker about how to fixture and organise a game that once had some dignity.

The world watched in disbelief as the 2022 T20 World Cup on home soil saw the Australians play before disappointing crowds throughout, and the opening day of the first Test against the West Indies on Wednesday reportedly drew just 10,000 people through the gates despite the eye suggesting the actual number was far less than that figure.

For context, in excess of 8000 Australian fans are in Qatar and supporting the Socceroos in their courageous efforts to become the best performed Australian men’s football team in history.

SBS viewing numbers were in excess of 1.7 million for the Socceroos’ clash with Tunisia, with live sites and residential parties sure to have inflated those numbers further in reality. The win over Denmark will have no doubt exceeded those, and Sunday morning’s match-up with Lionel Messi’s Argentina could well be the most-watched program on Australian television in 2022.

All the while, rugby fans, of which I am one, will talk of the glory of touring the British Isles and launching yet another failed attempt to unseat the All Blacks in a rather futile across-the-ditch rivalry that means nothing compared to the truly international challenge of a FIFA World Cup.

Despite my deep-seated passion for the Canterbury Bulldogs and a 40-year love of Australian Rules football, the Australian cricket team and the Wallabies, my feverish support of the national men’s football team in Qatar surpasses them all. It’s a truly global and more inclusive endeavour than the sports that still struggle to move beyond their colonial roots.

That is why what we are seeing in Qatar is so special, so broad and so universally appreciated. That reality is not disrespectful to other games, merely reflective of the fact that as Australia slowly and more widely embraces the beautiful game, it will eventually succeed in articulating itself as the nation’s most powerful metaphor for the people who occupy its lands.

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-05T11:10:46+00:00

So you

Guest


Cricket is 2nd most popular sport not sure what you mean

2022-12-05T10:55:08+00:00

Benny

Guest


Problem is no gonna are about a-league or soccer after the world cup, once cricket afl nrl start it will be just a memory

2022-12-05T07:32:32+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Thanks, I was wondering what other AFL there is.

2022-12-05T06:19:29+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


I think some of the State leagues.

2022-12-05T05:39:07+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


Get an Australian at Wimbledon or especially the Australian Open final and you get enormous interst. The Hewitt - Saffin game in 2005 was the most watched event for many a year - don't think anything has surpassed it since, but I think the Football world cup would have more sustained interest.

2022-12-05T05:33:08+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


It's interesting that AFL in Sydney is a middle class game - hence why little success with GWS, but a lot of success in eroding the Rugby base in the east and north. However, as you state, AFL outside of Sydney is an all class game (like Football, but unlike league, which is lower class in every country it's played)

2022-12-05T05:17:10+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Who do the other 1% of AFL fans follow?

2022-12-05T05:13:56+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


It was very evident in the league 'world up' which couldn't even muster enough interest to be shown on FTA and featured Australians of Samoan descent and Australians of non Samoan descent playing each other in the final!

2022-12-05T02:57:56+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


Racism in the AFL? perhaps the author can google "racism in football" and see it is a GLOBAL issue in the game

2022-12-04T19:05:15+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


I think you may want to have a look at the ticket sales of the women's WC. Last comment, so many non football fans cannot differentiate the sport of football & it's popularity in Australia, compared to the competition of the the A-League. Football has WCs mens & women, Asian cups men & women, Champions league, EPL, La Liga Serie A, Euros men & women, many Aussies also follow the Scottish leagues & the Japanese leagues due to Aussies connection. Some also follow the A-League. The game of football is very healthy & very strong, the A-League is a long was behind AFL & NRL. See the difference.

2022-12-04T12:30:05+00:00

Billo

Roar Rookie


The Women's World Cup will be a big event if Australia do well in it. Not so much if they don't. I'm not sure what you mean by your last comment.

2022-12-04T01:14:04+00:00

Randy

Roar Rookie


It's a dumb and unrealistic comment, by your definition there is 8? countries that are a genuine sporting nation - that includes Uruguay.

2022-12-03T14:42:28+00:00

Gary

Roar Rookie


7,9, or 10 will definitely secure fta broadcast rights. Lol. Just googled, and ch7 is the fta broadcaster.

2022-12-03T05:42:38+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


I've only just discovered that Argentina is ranked no. 1 in a different sport to football, and Australia is about to play them in the world championships! I would like to see all Australian sports fans get behind this because one could argue this is every bit as important. Argentina are ranked #1 in the world in Men’s Softball (who knew?) and Australia play them today with a win giving us a chance of making tomorrow’s gold medal game. Get around the green and gold!

2022-12-03T05:09:53+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The more sport the better I say.

2022-12-03T05:08:20+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


This had nothing to do with RL. You stated that Australia will not be a true sporting nation until we win a World Cup. I merely pointed out that therefore you only acknowledge 8 sporting countries.

2022-12-03T05:05:38+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


It might just lurch them back to the centre right. Or even break the party in two

2022-12-03T05:04:35+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


You have no idea Chris. I played football. Slowest left wing in history :laughing: And what the author is doing is not defending, but attacking. It’s an article designed to invite animosity in what could be the greatest week in our football history.

2022-12-03T05:01:35+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Don’t you think these articles perpetuate animosity, for clicks, right when we should be celebrating?

2022-12-03T02:53:39+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Randy, What I actually said was: "Australia won't ever be able to call itself a genuine sporting nation until it wins the FIFA world cup". And for added accuracy, I will mention I even accidentally left the 'r' off ever, typing eve. The sentence means me, you, everyone. I was speaking in the plural, not personal. Obviously you don't have anything better to contribute than take random pot shots.

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