Welcome to dextri.com on July 9 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Australian Football International Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from International Cup)
Jump to: navigation, search
Australian Football International Cup
Current season or competition:
2008 Australian Football International Cup
2005 Tournament logo
Sport Australian rules football
Founded 2002
No. of teams 16
Continent International (AFL)
Most recent
champion(s)
 Papua New Guinea

The Australian Football International Cup (also known as the AFL International Cup) is an International sport competition in Australian rules football. It is currently co-ordinated by the Australian Football League's game development arm and run every 3 years since 2002.

The tournament is the largest international Australian rules football event and the only one that is open to worldwide senior competition, although Australia (the home and world's strongest nation in the game) does not participate (as it would most likely dominate the competition). Melbourne, Australia has hosted both the 2002 and 2005 tournaments, along with some games in Wangaratta in 2005 and Geelong in 2002. Matches in the 2008 tournament were played in Melbourne, Geelong and Warrnambool.

The inaugural tournament was the 2002 Australian Football International Cup run by the International Australian Football Council under the auspices of the Australian Football League.

The most recent tournament, the 2008 Australian Football International Cup was held in Melbourne, Geelong and Warrnambool in September 2008 with 16 nations competing. After 2008 the AFL intends to resume competition every 4 years.

The Grand Final of each tournament has been held as a curtain raiser to a home-and-away match of the AFL Premiership Season.

Australia is not represented in the tournament; as the only nation where the sport is played professionally, the difference in skill level between an Australian national team and the nearest competitor is currently far too large for any contest to be worthwhile. As such, the tournament is geared towards development of the sport outside Australia and expatriate Australians may not compete.

Contents

[edit] History of the Cup

When the International Australian Football Council was formed in 1995 one of its aims was to 'establish and promote an official World Cup of Australian Football.' At the time it was thought that 2008, being the 150th anniversary of the game, was the appropriate date.

However, in 1999 a proposal was received from the New Zealand Australian Football League (NZAFL), suggesting that the World Cup be brought forward to 2002. This was accepted by the Council and, following visits to many countries, Brian Clarke drafted a discussion paper and draft regulations for circulation to the various national bodies.

An approach was then made to the AFL, asking for their support in staging the event. The AFL agreed on the basis that the event was renamed the "International Cup". An Organising Committee, chaired by Ed Biggs and including AFL and IAFC representatives, was then appointed.

The inaugural competition was held between August 14 and August 23, 2002 (in conjunction with the International Australian Football Council), with 11 countries competing including Canada, Great Britain, Denmark, Ireland, South Africa, Japan, New Zealand, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and the United States. Ireland defeated Papua New Guinea in the final.

The second Cup was held between August 3 and August 13, 2005 in Australia. Canada, Great Britain, Ireland, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Japan, Samoa, South Africa, Spain and the United States competed. Denmark and Nauru competed in 2002 but withdrew from the 2005 tournament for financial reasons. Papua New Guinea were again runners up, this time defeated by New Zealand by 7.8 (50) to 5.2 (32).

The third Cup was held in August and September, 2008. Sixteen nations competed; all teams from the 2002 competition returned, joined by debutants China, India, Sweden, Finland and the Peres Peace Team (Israel-Palestine). Tonga competed as a seventeenth team, as they were unable to commit to the full draw they played a series of matches against Team Asia and Team Africa, sides drawn from Melbourne's migrant communities.

[edit] Results

Year Host Final Third place match
Winner Score Runner-up 3rd place Score 4th place
2002
Details
Melbourne
Ireland
7.9 (51) - 2.7 (19)
Papua New Guinea

New Zealand
3.7 (25) - 2.4 (16)
Denmark
2005
Details
Melbourne, Wangaratta
New Zealand
7.8 (50) - 5.2 (32)
Papua New Guinea

United States
10.5 (65) - 4.6 (30)
Ireland
2008
Details
Melbourne, Warrnambool
Papua New Guinea
7.12 (54) - 7.4 (46)
New Zealand

South Africa
4.9 (33) - 5.2 (32)
Ireland

[edit] Competing Teams , Nicknames & Placings

Flag Nation Rep team 2002 (11) 2005 (10) 2008 (16)
Flag of Canada Canada Northwind 9th 7th 6th
Flag of the People's Republic of China China Red Demons - - 15th
Flag of Denmark Denmark Vikings 4th - 11th
Flag of Finland Finland Icebreakers - - 14th
Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain Bulldogs 6th 6th 9th
Flag of India India Tigers - - 16th
Flag of Ireland Ireland Warriors 1st 4th 4th
Flag of IsraelPalestinian flag Israel-Palestinian Territories Peres Team for Peace - - 13th
Flag of Japan Japan Samurais 10th 9th 8th
Flag of New Zealand New Zealand Falcons 3rd 1st 2nd
Flag of Nauru Nauru Chiefs 8th - 5th
Flag of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea Mosquitos 2nd 2nd 1st
Flag of Samoa Samoa Kangaroos 7th 5th 10th
Flag of South Africa South Africa Lions 11th 8th 3rd
Flag of Spain Spain Bulls - 10th -
Flag of Sweden Sweden Elks - - 12th
Flag of the United States United States Revolution 5th 3rd 7th

[edit] Overall Tournament Ranking & Statistics

Ranking Country #Played #Won  %Won #Lost  %Lost #Drawn  %Drawn
1 Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 17 15 2 0 0%
2 Flag of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea 16 14 2 0 0%
3 Flag of Ireland Ireland 17 12 5 0 0%
4 Flag of the United States United States of America 17 11 6 0 0%
5 Flag of Samoa Samoa 17 9 8 0 0%
6 Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain 16 7 9 0 0%
7 Flag of Canada Canada 16 6 10 0 0%
7 Flag of South Africa South Africa 16 6 10 0 0%
9 Flag of Nauru Nauru 10 5 5 0 0%
9 Flag of Denmark Denmark 10 5 5 0 0%
11 Flag of Japan Japan 16 4 12 0 0%
12 Flag of IsraelPalestinian flag Israel-Palestinian Territories 5 2 3 0 0%
13 Flag of Sweden Sweden 5 1 4 0 0%
13 Flag of Finland Finland 5 1 4 0 0%
13 Flag of the People's Republic of China China 5 1 4 0 0%
16 Flag of Spain Spain 5 0 5 0 0%
16 Flag of India India 5 0 5 0 0%

[edit] Placing Rankings

Pos. Team 1Image:gold medal icon.svg Gold 2Image:silver medal icon.svg Silver 3Image:bronze medal icon.svg Bronze
1st Papua New Guinea 1 (2008) 2 (2002, 2005)
2nd New Zealand 1 (2005) 1 (2008) 1 (2002)
3rd Ireland 1 (2002)
4th United States 1 (2005)
5th South Africa 1 (2008)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Video Content

Personal tools
Languages

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs