how does afl work
AFL (Australian Football League) is the top professional competition for Australian rules football, built around a long regular season, a points ladder, and a finals series that leads to one champion each year.
Big-picture: What AFL actually is
- The AFL is the pre‑eminent professional league for Australian rules football, originally founded as the Victorian Football League (VFL) in 1896 and renamed AFL in 1990 as it expanded nationally.
- It currently has 18 clubs across Australia’s mainland states, with a 19th team from Tasmania scheduled to join in 2028.
- The sport is its own code: it looks a bit like a mix of rugby and American football but with continuous play, 360‑degree tackling, and kicking the ball to advance it.
Think of the AFL as Australia’s equivalent of the NFL or Premier League: one national league running the elite version of a uniquely local sport.
Season structure and ladder
- The main part of the year is the “home‑and‑away” or “premiership” season, running roughly from March to September.
- Each team plays 23 matches over about 24–25 weeks, with one bye (week off) built into the schedule.
- Wins and draws give you ladder points: 4 points for a win and 2 for a draw; losses give 0.
- If teams are equal on ladder points, they’re separated by “percentage,” which is essentially how many points they’ve scored versus how many they’ve conceded across the season.
How the finals and premiership work
- After the regular season, the top teams qualify for the finals; in recent formats this has involved a multi‑week knockout-style series, culminating in the AFL Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
- The team with the best record after the home‑and‑away season wins the “minor premiership,” while the Grand Final winner is crowned the “premier” (the main champion).
- The Grand Final is one of the biggest events in Australian sport, regularly drawing crowds of around or above 100,000.
How an actual game works
Basic match setup
- A match is played between two teams of 18 players on the field, plus interchange players on the bench.
- The game is played on a large oval field, often a modified cricket ground, with four tall posts at each end: two central goal posts and two shorter behind posts.
- A standard game is divided into four quarters of about 20 minutes of playing time, plus added time (“time on”) for stoppages.
Scoring
You score by kicking the ball between the posts at either end:
- A goal (worth 6 points) is when the ball is kicked between the two central posts without being touched.
- A behind (worth 1 point) is when the ball passes between a central and an outer post, or hits a post, or is touched before going between the main goal posts.
- Match scores look like: Goals.Behinds (Total points) – for example, 12.8 (80) means 12×6 + 8×1 = 80 points.
The team with the higher total score at the end of four quarters wins; if scores are equal, it’s a draw in the regular season.
Flow of play and basic rules
- The ball can be moved by kicking , handballing (punching the ball from one hand with the other fist), or running with it, but if you run more than about 15 metres you must bounce or touch it on the ground.
- Players can tackle opponents who have the ball, but only between the shoulders and knees, and not in the back; illegal contact gives away a free kick.
- A key feature is the mark : if a player catches a kicked ball that has travelled at least 15 metres without being touched, they get a free, unpressured kick from that spot.
- Play restarts from the centre after each goal with a bounce or toss‑up; there are also boundary throw‑ins when the ball goes out of play.
League systems: equalisation and off‑field setup
- The AFL operates with a commission structure (a group of commissioners rather than one all‑powerful commissioner) overseeing the league’s governance and strategy.
- A salary cap and a draft system are used to maintain competitive balance so weaker clubs get earlier access to new talent.
- In the national draft, the lowest‑ranked teams from the previous season typically get the highest picks (e.g., pick 1), while the premiers pick later in each round, helping to distribute young talent more evenly.
| Aspect | How it works in the AFL |
|---|---|
| Competition | 18 professional clubs across Australia; Tasmania 19th team from 2028. | [3]
| Season timing | Home-and-away season from March to September, plus finals. | [3][1]
| Matches per team | 23 games per team with one bye week. | [3][1]
| Ladder system | 4 points for a win, 2 for a draw; percentage as tiebreaker. | [1]
| Finals | Top teams play a multi-week finals series leading to the Grand Final. | [3][7]
| Match length | Four quarters of about 20 minutes of playing time plus time-on. | [5]
| Scoring | Goal = 6 points, behind = 1 point, total shown as goals.behinds (points). | [7]
| Key skills | Kicking, handballing, marking, 360-degree tackling within legal contact rules. | [7]
| Equalisation tools | Salary cap and national draft; weaker clubs receive earlier draft picks. | [9][1]
Where “latest news” and forum discussion fit in
- As of the mid‑2020s, ongoing talking points around “how AFL works” in fan forums include tweaks to rules (like positioning rules at centre bounces), the fairness of the fixture, and whether the draft and salary cap truly keep the competition even.
- Online communities frequently debate umpiring interpretations, match‑review and tribunal decisions, and the impact of technology and AI on coverage, apps, and commentary, reflecting broader sports‑tech trends.
- Expansion topics, especially how the future Tasmanian club will integrate into the fixture and equalisation systems, are a recurring theme in recent discussion and news about the league’s structure.
If you tell me whether you care more about the rules on the field, the finals system, or off‑field things like the draft and salary cap, I can zoom in and explain that piece in even simpler, step‑by‑step terms.