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The National Touch League was created to replace the 'Australian Nationals' which featured the seven Australian states. The finals of this competition were traditionally played between Queensland and New South Wales, the two most dominant touch playing states, with the Australian Capital Territory also performing strongly.
A partial view of the Green Monster at Fenway Park, with standings for the American League East division at the end of the 2007 Major League Baseball season. In sports, standings, rankings, or league tables group teams of a particular league, conference, or division in a chart based on how well each is doing in a particular season of a sports league or competition.
The National Touch League is the peak domestic competition for the sport of Touch Football in Australia. At the completion of each competition, a Player of the Series and Player of the Final is named.
The Australian Touch Association (ATA) was founded in 1978, following the formation of several state-level organisations, as the national governing body of the sport. The ATA was responsible for the coordination of the sport at a national level, which included the creation of a national championships and the release of the first official rule book, in 1980.
Indoor Football League, 1999–2000 (Bought out by Af2 in 2001;not related to the Indoor Football League that began play in 2009) Indoor Professional Football League, 1999–2001; Arenafootball2 (af2), 2000–2009 (assets acquired in the same transaction as that noted above for Arena Football League) National Indoor Football League, 2001–2007
The Brisbane City Cobras are one of 13 Touch Football permits within Australia.Covering metropolitan Brisbane, the region is covers only a relatively small number of local associations, but has performed strongly at national events, in particular the Australian National Touch League.
Although informally talked about for many years, momentum for the idea of a national second division increased in October 2016. [2] In March 2017 "The Association of Australian Football Clubs (AAFC) Limited" was established, with the goal of opening dialogue with Football Federation Australia (FFA) and various other stakeholders about establishing a national second division. [3]
Touch rugby, other games derived from rugby football in which players touch rather than tackle opponents; Touch (sport), a variant of rugby league football in which players touch rather than tackle opponents Federation of International Touch, the worldwide governing body for touch football