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  2. Laws of Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Australian_rules...

    Like many other codes of football, the primary way to score points is to score goals. In Australian football, there are two types of scores: a goal and a behind. There are four posts at each end of the ground, each 6.4m (7yds) apart; the two middle (and taller) posts are the goal posts, and the two outer (and shorter) posts are the behind posts.

  3. Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_rules_football

    The two tall central posts are the goal posts, and the two shorter outer posts are the behind posts. There are two types of scoring shots in Australian football: goals and behinds. A goal is worth six points, and is scored when the football is propelled between the goal posts and across the goal line at any height by way of a kick from the ...

  4. Comparison of Gaelic football and Australian rules football

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Gaelic...

    A goal is worth 3 points in Gaelic football and 6 points in Australian Football. In both games, a point may be awarded for missing the goal. In Gaelic football, this is scored above the crossbar (known simply as a point [32]). In Australian rules, this is scored between the shorter post and the goal post (known as a behind).

  5. History of Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Australian...

    Melbourne Football club rule making meeting of 1865, T. W. Wills made an unsuccessful motion to have a cross bar put between the goal post. It was not passed due to the chairman saying one of the highlights of the game was a goal being scored by a player bringing the ball coming out of a skirmish.

  6. 1967 Tasmanian State Premiership Final - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1967_Tasmanian_State...

    The Tasmanian State Premiership was a competition played most years from 1909 until 1978 between the individual premiers of Tasmania's two or three major football leagues: the Hobart-based Tasmanian Football League (TFL/TANFL); the Launceston-based Northern Tasmanian Football Association (NTFA); and (after 1950) the North West Football Union (NWFU), based on the north-western coast of the state.

  7. Glossary of Australian rules football - Wikipedia

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

    Behind: a score worth one point, earned by putting the ball between a goal post and a behind post, or by the ball hitting a goal post, or by the ball being touched prior to passing between the goalposts. [3] Behind posts: two shorter vertical posts 19.2m apart on the goal line at each end of the ground, centred about the taller goal posts.

  8. Origins of Australian rules football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_of_Australian...

    4. Game played with 200-yard [sic.] [182.9-metre] space, same to be measured equally on each side of a line drawn through the centre of the two goals, and two posts to be called "kick off" posts shall be erected at a distance of 20 yards [1.83 metres] on each side of the goal posts at both ends and in a straight line between them. 5.

  9. Barassi Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barassi_Line

    Two sets of Australian rules football goal posts are aligned diagonally on either side of the road, with a sign located nearby explaining the site. [30] The set of goal posts were installed in 2005 as part of work associated with the Centenary of Federation funded bridge and bypass road, and was opened on 5 April 2005 by the Federal Member for ...

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