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  2. Australian football tactics and skills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_football...

    A player who catches the ball (called taking a mark) gets a short time period where they can kick the ball without being tackled or interfered with. Teams will sometimes kick backwards to allow a teammate to take a mark. This prevents the team losing possession. The AFL has experimented with rules in the NAB Cup to prevent this anti-competitive ...

  3. Glossary of Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Australian...

    1–2: (pronounced one-two) an action where a player handpasses to a teammate, who immediately handpasses back.; 6–6–6 rule: a rule introduced in the AFL from 2019 to reduce flooding that says that at centre bounces each team must have six players in their forward-50 arc, six players in their defensive-50 arc, and six players between the arcs.

  4. Time on - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_on

    From 1994, the AFL Commission adopted the shorter 20 minute quarter, and introduced time-on for many other stoppages, including a ball-up or boundary throw-in. The timekeeper's twenty-minute count-down clock is not displayed at a football game. Rather, a count-up clock is displayed, which is not stopped when the umpire blows time off.

  5. Flooding (Australian football) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flooding_(Australian_football)

    When Australian Football took to the parks around the colony of Victoria in 1858, there were no rules regarding player positions. [citation needed] Even today the rules only declare that a maximum of four per side is allowed in the centre square at the ball-up (ruck, rover, ruck-rover and centre) and 6 must start within each 50m arc, while during general play, all players are free to position ...

  6. Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_rules_football

    The AFL, currently with 18 member clubs, is the sport's elite competition and most powerful body. Following the emergence of the AFL, state leagues were quickly relegated to a second-tier status. The VFA merged with the former VFL reserves competition in 1998, adopting the VFL name.

  7. Ruck (Australian rules football) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruck_(Australian_rules...

    A ruck contest from an AFL match in 2018. Andrew Phillips (left) and Nic Naitanui (right) contest a ball up from the umpire (in green) while players below await the tap.. In Australian rules football, the ruck is the name given to both the contests for the ball initiated by a field umpire to commence play, and to the players' specialist position who nominate to contest them (sometimes gendered ...

  8. 'Stay off my lawn!': College Football Playoff arguments are ...

    www.aol.com/sports/stay-off-lawn-college...

    College football has never been safe for the sane of mind, but the 12-team playoff seems to have sent it over the cliff.

  9. Follower (Australian rules football) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Follower_(Australian_rules...

    The ruck-rover's job is to be directly beneath the flight of the ball when a ruckman taps the ball down, allowing an easy take away, or clearance, from a stoppage. Typically, players are not as tall as the ruckman, typically ranging from 170–190 cm in height. Notable followers and ruck-rovers in Australian football over the years include: