
Football is one of the sports that is deemed significant in multiple countries, including Australia. The sport isn’t only big, it has influenced the country’s national identity alongside its entertainment sector. How far has football shaped Australia and its current identity?
Football As A Way To Unite Diversity
In this era, football is a sport loved globally, including in Australia. Soccer betting has even become a part of fans’ matchday ritual to support their favourite team. The internet has made it easier for fans to enjoy the matches they’ve been anticipating.
Clips and live streams are highly accessible, with online sports betting sites like Sportsbet allowing fans to wager on their favorite team or player anytime. However, long before this popularity, football started as a way for people to unite and build communities.
The Wanderers was Australia’s first football club, formed in 1880 in Sydney. Although football had already been a big sport in the country, it wasn’t significant until the 50s. After World War II, football became a unifying sport for Australia. This is especially true for Southern European and British migrants who came with a love for the sport.
These new arrivals found a way to bond and communicate through football. They connected while building communities that slowly became a part of Australian life. Clubs would form around ethnic identities, building communities based on the players’ upbringing.
By this point, football was still seen as a foreign sport. As decades passed, authorities started to broaden the sport’s appeal. Clubs started changing their names to ‘de-ethnicise’. These include Preston Makedonia, which changed to Preston Lions FC, and South Melbourne Hellas, which later became South Melbourne FC.
This change helped the sport grow, but 2006 was a big year for Australia. The Socceroos made a mark in history as the team competed in the FIFA World Cup. By 2017, there were over 1.1 million Australians playing football, making it the most-played sport in the country.
Football As An Expression of Australian Nationalism
Decades following the Second World War, Australia grew to become a multicultural country. It was a struggle to sustain a home-country bond with newly arrived immigrants coming from various countries. Like before, football once again became a way for new Australians to unite. Yet, there’s still a wall separating these new Australians from those ‘real’ Australians.
Football slowly gained even more popularity. Participation rates jumped much higher, and girl players grew in number as the sport was deemed ‘safer’ to play. Schools have also started to promote the sport. In the same year the Socceroos made their first World Cup appearance (1974), the Australian Women’s Soccer Federation was formed.
From that point on, the sport had built a firm root in Australian culture. Anticipation grew deeper as the era approached the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Money was raised to help the women’s team. Meanwhile, the Soccerros became the country’s pride after their 2006 World Cup qualification. With the A-League established in 2006 and the W-League formed in 2008, systems for football had fully formed in the country.
How Football Unified Australia
Australians can really feel how football united the country, especially in 2023. The Matildas are another Australian football team that is significant in Australia’s football history. As they ended their match during the FIFA Women’s World Cup, Australians can see how far they’ve come with football, despite the team not coming back with a trophy.
The sport has been tangled in many issues, be it economic, racial, cultural, or political. Still, the sport has always been central to Australia’s identity. It has never been just a sport done for fun, but it has shaped Australia internationally and internally.
With four football codes, Australian rules, rugby league, rugby union, and soccer, the sport was one of the keys that shifted their society from monocultural to multicultural. There’s no longer division, but everyone is united through football.
The Matildas were the focus this time as football started as a male-only team. Seeing the Matildas’ success was a sign of how far the sport had evolved and how big its role is in unifying the diversity of the Australian society.
Reclink Community Cup
Football is still seen as a game that unites people, where people can build communities and bond over their passion for the sport. However, there’s one event standing out for uniquely merging music and football.
The Reclink Community Cup started in 1993, pitting musicians and entertainers in a game of Aussie Rules. In Melbourne, there are the Rockdogs, which consist of musicians, and the Megahertz, consisting of people from radio stations. The two have built a sense of rivalry as they’ve been facing each other since the beginning of the Community Cup.
However, as the event grew and garnered more attention, the opportunity extended to other personalities. Now, umpires, commentators, comedians, or other personalities can join the face-offs. Big names have appeared in the Reclink Community Cup, such as Tex Perkins, Paul Kelly, and Courtney Barnett, showing how much the event has grown.
Although it only started as a small charity football event, Reclink is now a considerable event that has become a massive community sport festival. In Melbourne alone, the event had been attracting over 12,000 fans. It raises over $200,000 annually for Reclink Australia to support disadvantaged Australians.
Melbourne isn’t the only city where the Reclink Community Cup takes place. The event had spread to multiple other cities, such as Canberra, Fremantle, Adelaide, Sydney, Hobart, and Brisbane.
Theatre
Australia’s love for football can be seen through theatre plays, too. Multiple players have used football as their theme. Some took inspiration from football history, while others used it as a theme to connect to the audience. Some of them are:
37 (Melbourne Theatre Company)
The Melbourne Theatre Company had decided to use football as a theme through its ‘37’ production. The story is set during the Sydney Great War Cry era, following the experience of a country football team that had just accepted two indigenous players. The players on the team are talented, yet they’ll face a complex racial reckoning.
Adam Goodes would be involved as the story itself is taken from his story, and the cast came in with a deep love for football. The team behind the production felt like there were many similarities between the sport and theatre.
Like football, delivering a perfect theatre play requires hard work and passion. The director has similar tasks as coaches do, where they need to evaluate the different dynamics between players and ensure the team is on the same page.
Syd Brisbane would play as the team’s coach, and the role is perfect for him, who has been an AFL member since 1998. Everyone behind the production is well-versed in football, guaranteeing they can bring the passion of the sport correctly on stage.
Passion and love for football aren’t the only things that they want to deliver as this play takes the stage. The production wanted to ask the audience about where they stand on the division that used to exist in football. The coach character would be the key point in delivering this question. He’ll face a moral dilemma where he’ll have to question how far he is willing to go to get to the grand final.
Not only does the theme want to question the audience’s morals regarding the sport’s history and its division, but the production also aimed to raise a wider moral question. It can apply to the wider society and everything that’s going on in Australia currently. It’ll encourage the audience to think deeply about the consequences of their choices and see the bigger picture.
FootyBoy (FringeWorld 2025)
If ‘37’ wanted the audience to go home with a message, FootyBoy shows how football is used for a more general theatre theme. It follows the story of four players of a mixed-gender football team called the Dolphins. The audience will then follow their journey as they started on the bottom and fight their way back to the top.
The story overall talked about interpersonal relationships and people’s views of failure and success. What makes FootyBoy extremely appealing is the physical actions of the players, which were choreographed brilliantly and delivered impressively.
The audience would mostly follow the story of James, the main character, who, despite being highly talented, hits a massive slump. The audience will be shown how James grew up with an abusive father who was also a former legendary player.
It’s comedic, yet impressive. The actors are highly capable of executing the remarkably athletic moves that would easily awe the audience. The show would truly make the audience see the beauty of the sport while getting a heartwarming message from the story.
