International Rules



         


International Rules Football is a hybrid sport developed in the 1980s as a mixture of Australian rules football and Gaelic football. It was created in order to facilitate international matches between the representative teams of the Australian Football League and the Gaelic Athletic Association, which have been played annually since 1998 but date back to 1984.

The rules are designed to provide a compromise between those of the two codes, with the Irish being advantaged by the use of a round ball and a rectangular field (Australian rules uses an oval ball and field), while the Australians benefit from the opportunity to tackle between the shoulders and thighs, something banned in Gaelic football. The game uses two large posts and two small posts, as in Australian rules, and a goal net as in Gaelic football. Points are scored as follows:

Scores are written so as to clarify how many of each type of score were made; for example, if a team scores one goal, four overs and 10 points, the score is written as 6-12-10.

An international rules match lasts for eighty minutes (divided into four quarters of twenty minutes each), the same duration as an Australian rules match but ten minutes longer than a Gaelic football one. Teams consist of fifteen players, just as in Gaelic football (eighteen are used in Australian rules).

In addition to the annual senior international series, Australia and Ireland play an under-19 contest, and international rules has been played in various locations throughout United States and Europe between fledgling Australian rules and Gaelic football clubs. Since the resumption of the senior international series in 1998, Australia and Ireland have won five matches each with a further two being drawn.

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International Rules Series Results

1984 (in Ireland)

1986 (in Australia)

1987 (in Ireland)

1990 (in Australia)

1998 (in Ireland)

1999 (in Australia)

2000 (in Ireland)

2001 (in Australia)

2002 (in Ireland)

2003 (in Australia)

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