View Poll Results: Can Australia beat Brazil
- Voters
- 33. You may not vote on this poll
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Yes
16 48.48% -
No
7 21.21% -
Draw
3 9.09% -
Who cares
6 18.18% -
As long as we can have sex too.
1 3.03%
Thread: Australia v Brazil
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13th June 2006, 09:02 PM #16.
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Originally Posted by boban
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13th June 2006, 10:17 PM #17
If you want to pretend that you dont primarily use your hands in AFL, that's fine. If you want to believe that you have higher participation rates, that's fine. We can all stick our head in the sand and pretend that the rest of the world doesn't play football and that AFL is the most popular game in the world.
Read this excerpt from your own (AFL) administration and have a think about it. The full story is at http://www.iafc.com.au/soccer.html
The biggest threat of all to Australian football and the AFL is soccer. At the junior level Australian soccer has been the envy of the other football codes, with over 300,000 kids playing the world game. By contrast Australian football and rugby league manage to attract approximately 170,000 and 95,000 respectively.
Due to a number of factors Australian soccer has been unable to take advantage of these vastly superior numbers, much to the relief of the other codes. These factors include the incompetence of Soccer Australia and the failure of the Socceroos to qualify for the greatest prize of them all, the FIFA World Cup.
That is why we should all be alarmed at recent events. The decision of FIFA to award Oceania direct qualification to the World Cup is an absolute disaster for our game. The failure of the Socceroos against Iran in 1998 and Uruguay in 2002, were greeted with a sigh of relief by the AFL, but this will no longer be the case.
The potential of soccer to adversely impact on our game should not be underestimated or lightly dismissed. The most watched game in Australia in 2002 was not the AFL Grand Final but the World Cup final between Brazil and Germany. Matches involving the Socceroos in Australia have drawn massive crowds, with an atmosphere rarely experienced at AFL matches.
But it is at the grassroots level where the impact of the rise of soccer will be felt the most. If the Socceroos qualify for the 2006 World Cup (and based on past results it is fair bet that they will) then our sport will suffer greatly. How many of us grew up dreaming of playing for our beloved VFL club and kicking the winning goal in the grand final?
Instead, a whole generation of Australian children will dream of wearing the green and gold of the Socceroos and of scoring the winning goal in the World Cup.
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13th June 2006, 10:28 PM #18Originally Posted by boban
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13th June 2006, 10:40 PM #19.
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Originally Posted by boban
I actually was under the impression fishing was the number one participation sport followed by netball then soccer
Originally Posted by boban
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13th June 2006, 10:45 PM #20
Wow! That excerpt is an honest, well-written piece of research. I played AR for Assumption and RU for Nudgee and found both games interesting - wasn't very good unfortunately.
What most Aussies don't understand is that football in Europe and from the Mexican border down to the Antarctic, is not a game - it's a religion! The best players are honoured like gods - and paid twice as much. The advertising - be it Coke, Addidas, or Mercedes, streches into the 9 digit range.
Now don't get me wrong, I love watching a game of Aussi Rules or Union, but it's small fries. The stadiums here seat up to 60,000 people, and they're all over the place...
And when mum's little precious takes to the field, you can bet that 9 out of ten are happy the opposition is more interested in kicking the ball than pole-driving Thommy's head into the ground...
If Australia does well in the World Cup, even the little ruffians will show interest in the game. Might be time to get into the sports field modification business...
DamienIs it wrong to be in love with a sawbench?
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13th June 2006, 11:01 PM #21.
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Originally Posted by boban
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13th June 2006, 11:03 PM #22Originally Posted by Lignum
Originally Posted by Lignum
BTW AFL is big in three states only. It will never be the number one sport in NSW and Qld.
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13th June 2006, 11:05 PM #23Originally Posted by Lignum
The role of the International Australian Football Council (IAFC) is to promote and develop Australian Rules football internationally.
That's where that article comes from.
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13th June 2006, 11:48 PM #24
I love it when the football crowd turns violent!
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13th June 2006, 11:57 PM #25Originally Posted by bitingmidge
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13th June 2006, 11:58 PM #26Originally Posted by boban
We're having 70's flashbacks now???
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14th June 2006, 12:04 AM #27
Funny you say that, it looks to me like the 70's fashions are back again. Did anyone see Nerds FC tonight.
Time to raid the old man's wardrobe. NOT.
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14th June 2006, 12:12 AM #28
OK you bunch of recidivists...who put the sex option in MY poll....:mad:
If you never made a mistake, you never made anything!
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14th June 2006, 09:28 AM #29
I reckon Australia has the ability to win against Brazil, but I'd much prefer , in this round, a 1-1 draw. That would almost certainly have the team go to the next round (by finishing 2nd in the Group).
Who know what they might then encounter - beating Brazil this time would have EVERY potential game played in a brutal manner to (ahem, ligitimately) "damage" the team.
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14th June 2006, 10:25 AM #30
Us beating Brazil would be the worst thing for whoever winds up against them in the final - methinks da Brazilians would be a tad annoyed by being beaten by a team, to quote the seppos, that is 'only there to make up the numbers'. Ah well, I didn't notice said seppos having a successful start (ahh, poetic justice). Japan are the Asian champions - our giving them a hiding will open a few eyes.
Now, imagine this.
The socceroos, on a high after taking out the Japs, go on to beat Brazil.
Japan, rather irritated by being beaten by the socceroos, beat Brazil.
Croatia manage a draw against Brazil.
all of a sudden, Brazil's out of the first round ... and it's all our fault
Richard
hey, I've got all this week to dream, don't spoil it for me
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