Kick-to-kick

The aftergame kick-to-kick tradition at the Melbourne Cricket Ground is now a rare sight. Follows an AFL match between the Melbourne Demons and the Port Adelaide Power, 16,000 fans are let onto the turf.

Kick-to-kick is a pastime and well-known tradition of Australian rules football fans, and a recognised Australian term for kick and catch type games. It is a casual version of Australian rules (similar to the relationship between backyard/beach cricket and the established forms of cricket).

Although not a sport in itself, the term is used to describe a social exercise played in parks, fields, streets, back yards and also as a playground game that requires at least two people.[1] Kick-to-kick is used as a warm-up exercise of many Australian rules football clubs[2] and has been the beginnings of many clubs in far-flung places.

It has long been a pitch invasion tradition in the breaks immediately after official Australian rules football matches, although as professionalism in the Australian Football League increased, the practice was discontinued at most AFL venues.[3] In recent years, kick-to-kick games have been usually limited to two or three per round, usually between clubs that have friendly relations (that is, not likely to cause conflict if fans from opposing teams meet on the field, such as Collingwood), or those designated "Kids Go Free" games by the home team. Sponsored by McDonalds and labelled as the "fifth quarter", such events are advertised on the AFL website,[4] that week's edition of the AFL Record and is announced via the PA system during the third-quarter time break. Fans are only allowed on following the sounding of a siren, once the centre square has been demarcated and players/media vacating the field, and usually have 15 minutes to roam the field.

  1. ^ Golightly, Earnest (3 April 1987). "Footy gets heavy, but the kick to kick lives on". The Age. pp. 1 & 3. Retrieved 19 October 2009.
  2. ^ AFL Auskick Manual Archived 27 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine; AFL.com.au, p168
  3. ^ "Saturday Arvo Fever". Archived from the original on 22 August 2008. Retrieved 3 January 2009. It is only recently that crowds have been banned from running onto the field after a match for a game of kick-to-kick
  4. ^ "Macca's Kick 2 Kick". afl.com.au. Retrieved 15 July 2024.