Some AFL players wear long sleeves mainly for comfort, protection, and a bit of personality or superstition on the field.

Main reasons players wear long sleeves

  • Cold weather and warmth : Long sleeves help keep muscles warm in cold or wet conditions, which some players feel reduces stiffness and keeps them more comfortable during games.
  • Skin protection : Sleeves can protect from sunburn, windburn, scratches, and minor contact, especially for players with sensitive skin or past injuries like burns or scarring.
  • Grip and moisture control : Modern fabrics wick sweat rather than soak it up, so some players like how sleeves manage moisture and reduce slippery arms during marking or handballing.
  • Tradition and superstition : A few players simply feel they play better in long sleeves and stick with it as a ritual, or copy heroes who wore them in the past.
  • Style and identity : Long sleeves stand out in a league where most guernseys are sleeveless, so for some it becomes a trademark look that fans recognise instantly.

In fan and forum discussions, you’ll often see long sleeves talked about as a mix of practicality (staying warm, protecting skin) and pure vibe (looking good, feeling confident).

Quick forum-style snapshot

  • Some supporters joke that long sleeves are “soft,” others think they look tough and old‑school.
  • Coaches occasionally worry they might be a slightly easier “handle” in tackles, but this is more opinion than proven fact.
  • The look goes in and out of fashion, so every few seasons there’s a fresh wave of discussion about bringing back more long-sleeve guernseys.

TL;DR : They wear them because they’re cold, want protection, like the feel, or just love the look—and once it becomes part of a player’s routine, they often never change it.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.