First Establishment: 1904–1911 A request for copies of the
Laws of Australian Football by parties from Canada was noted in the
Sydney Referee newspaper in 1904. A 1906 report of Australian Football's growth internationally made mention of a Canadian Railway Commissioner early in the century who, while working in Victoria, fell in love with the sport and upon returning to Canada began agitating for it to be played there. He was said to have made several subsequent requests to parties in Australia for support introducing the game. The game is believed to have been first introduced to
British Columbia in 1905, when Canadian-born Captain Robert Nelson Davy of the
6th Regiment began training students of the 101st
Canadian Cadet corps in preparation for a planned visit to Australia. The students were from the
Vancouver School Board district and included the Vancouver High School Cadet Corps and
King Edward High School among others. Davy wrote to Australia for assistance. However, by 1906 the game's newly formed governing body, the
Australasian Football Council (AFC) led by the
VFL resolved not to support the game being played outside Australasia and declined any support.
West Australian Football League secretary
John J Simons however pledged his support through the
Young Australia League and began assisting to plan a series of tours between the two countries.
Canada vs the United States: 1912 Canadian Schools had been practicing inter-school competition for around 6 years before the arrival of a touring party from the United States including Sydney schoolboy Eric Cullen-Ward, and San Francisco's Columban Park Boys' School in 1912 (who had successfully started
Australian rules football in the United States as "field ball" in American schools in 1910). The Americans had come to Vancouver to help prepare Davy's cadets to compete against a touring
Young Australia League from
Perth scheduled to arrive that year and ultimately to tour Australia as Canada's first national team. They played the first international match between the two countries in 1912 though few if any details of the match survive.
Young Australia League tour: 1912 A Young Australia League touring party left for Canada from the United States in January 1912. Though the majority of the trip was funded from Western Australia, the
Australasian Football Council pledged £240, with president of the time the
VFL's
Con Hickey making funding conditional on tour organisers promoting
Universal football believing it would have a better chance of catching on in North America. However the West Australians were determined instead that Australian rules be played. The result was that the AFC, led by the VFL withdrew all support for the tour, vowing to ensure that it was not a success. Following the Young Australian tour the Canadian Cadets team prepared a reciprocal tour of Australia to Sydney, Perth, Fremantle, Kalgoorlie, Adelaide, Ballarat, Tasmania and Melbourne. with a contingent of 60 cadets aged 18 to 20. The Canadians left from Vancouver on July 10, 1912.
Controversial Canadian Cadets tour of Australia: 1912–1913 The Canadian Cadets tour was plagued with trouble from the start. Captain Davy had hoped that Australia would extend a similar reception to the one offered the 1909 American Schoolboys team and had intended to play numerous matches across Australia. However, the team was left in the lurch when the AFC refused to recognise the touring party which was not affiliated to it and officially declined participation from Australia's two most powerful leagues, the
Victorian Football League and the
South Australian Football Association. Like the American tour, it was supported only by Western Australia's Young Australia League and the
New South Wales Football Association (NSWAFA).
New South Wales A. E. Nash president of the NSWAFA saw it as an opportunity to promote the idea that the game was spreading abroad. This was something that the NSWAFA in particular believed was important to appeal to the Sydney public which had gained enormous interest in representative rugby. The NSWAFA had invested heavily in a thriving schoolboys competition and sending Sydney schoolboy Eric Cullen-Ward to North America had successfully kick-started the code beyond the league's expectations. The AFC led by the VFL however were convinced that the key to converting Sydneysiders was through its promotion of national competition and as a truly national football code featuring its VFL clubs. Much to the chagrin of the touring Canadians and the NSWAFA, the AFC and VFL scheduled a clashing fixture, featuring the
Geelong Football Club against the New South Wales state team. However the AFC's exhibition match move backfired and the Queensland vs New South Wales rugby match being played that week dominated Sydney's media attention. The Canadian tour, swept up in anti-VFL sentiment, was afforded the barest of mentions by the media. Canadian tour manager E.R McTaggart made an advanced visit to promote the match only to have the matches postponed due to Australian organisers difficulties scheduling the tour. The Cadets arrived on
HMS Zealandia in Sydney on August 4. The Canadians expressed disappointment from the notably cold reception in Sydney, described as "a freezer" and complained to the Sydney papers claiming that they were booed by the Sydney public and had even been discriminated against and abused on public transport purely on the basis of their chosen football code. Organisers claimed that the abuse was so bad that at one point the touring party, mostly self-funded, considered returning home. Captain Davy commented that "the people of Canada won't understand this treatment. They will wonder if there is any thing wrong with the boys or with me. We treated the Australian boys who visited us in a very different fashion". Adding insult to injury the NSWAFA public statement on behalf of the Sydney public placed the blame on the Australasian Football Council and the visiting Canadians. Despite the NSWAFA's "apology" the
Government of New South Wales offered a formal apology and refunded the expenses while visiting the state. Officials from
Newcastle and
Goulburn made a concerted effort to atone for Sydney's hostile reception for the scheduled visits however the matches were abandoned due to state of the football grounds. The Sydney matches themselves were low key events, and were rescheduled several times during and there was much difficulty securing grounds to play from rugby authorities. Reportedly skills, particularly bouncing the ball, let the touring side down, though they were competitive against the Australians.
Victoria In contrast to the New South Wales tour, the cadets received a parade in
Melbourne and a full page welcoming in
The Argus. However they faced a stern lack of support from Victorian football authorities, the cadets who had trained to play in the home of football, instead competed and lost in other sports including lacrosse at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground. A rare exception was during the visit to
Newport a local amateur team agreed to play an unsanctioned match and were completely shocked to have been soundly beaten by the visitors.
Australia declines support and demise of the game: 1914–1919 Upon returning to Vancouver, the game continued be played with the
Vancouver School Board thanking the hospitality of the local leagues in Western Australia, but critical of the
Australasian Football Council who had refused support it, Following the North American tour from and to Australia, the AFC demanded that the West Australian Football Association stop all of its financial subsidies of international football, which it did in 1913. There were reports that despite the failed tour the sport continued to be played in the high schools at least until the war though the Vancouver Board began increasingly playing rugby after the successful 1912 Vancouver rugby tour against
Stanford Rugby in the United States. A proposal was debated by the Australasian Football Council in 1915 of a tour to Canada, with a decision deferred until after the war. Canada was never granted membership to the council and the game appears to have died out there during
World War I.
Exhibition matches and revival: 1987–1989 In the late 1980s,
TSN broadcasts in Canada showed highlights of the
Victorian Football League from Australia. However the league's once lucrative North American broadcast rights dried up and in response it initiated a series of exhibition matches between 1987 and 1989 in an attempt to rebuild its audience. The first major
exhibition matches in Canada attracted three of the largest crowds for the sport in the world, along with much interest. The 1987 game holds the record for a
VFL/AFL match held outside Australia.
Local development and the Canadian Australian Football Association: 1989–1993 The
Canadian Australian Football Association was established in May 1989 when two clubs, the
Mississauga Mustangs and the
Toronto Panthers were formed and played in the inaugural
Conacher Cup game in Toronto, Ontario. Since then, the game of Australian football in Canada has expanded considerably nationwide. In 1990, the Scarborough Rebels, the North York Hawks and the Hamilton Wildcats joined, with the Balmy Beach Saints coming on board in 1992. The North York Hawks later relocated and became known as the Broadview Hawks. The Brampton Wolverines, the league's seventh team, were formed in 1993. The Scarborough Rebels relocated and became the Lawrence Park Rebels.
Canada gains a national team: 1993–2002 in the 2008 International Cup In 1993, a Canadian representative team, known as the
Northwind, beat a British (
BARFL) representative team. In 1994 and 1995, the Canadians again defeated the British at home. In 1995, several local CAFA games were broadcast on a
Hamilton cable television channel. In July 1995, the Hamilton Wildcats played a Canadian All-Star team in front of 21,000 fans during the half-time break at a
Canadian Football League (
gridiron) match. In 1999, the first USA v Canada game was played (
49th Parallel Cup, named after the
49th parallel north). The
Revolution narrowly defeated Team Canada (Northwind). Later matches enforced strict rules based on player origins. The 49th Parallel Cup is held every two years. In 2002, Canada participated in the inaugural
Australian Football International Cup, with Canada represented by the Northwind team consisting purely of Canadian-born players. The Canadian national team has competed in every International Cup since its inception and now competes with its national women's team named the Northern Lights.
Continued grassroots growth and the emergence of AFL Canada: 2003– , 2010 premiers In 2003, the first junior league in Canada, the North Delta Junior Australian Football League, was formed.
AFL Canada was formed as governing body on 30 July 2004, when the Canadian Australian Football League changed its official name. The move corresponded with funding from the
Australian Football League, and a junior participation program was put in place. The clubs were split into two regional leagues, the
Ontario Australian Football League and the North West Pacific Football League. The remaining
Alberta-based clubs participate in AFL Canada organised regional conferences such as the British Columbia Cup. In 2005, the Northwind participated in the 2005 International Cup. In early 2006, AFL Canada sent a small delegation to the AFL exhibition match in Los Angeles. London and Windsor folded due to distance but the new OAFL club, the Central Blues, formed and began competing. In Alberta, the Calgary Bears also formed and the Westcoast challenge commenced. In early 2007, the Ottawa Swans formed, and affiliated with the OAFL, and the Demons relocated from Mississauga to
High Park in Toronto. In late 2007, AFL Canada hosted the Ironbark challenge, including the 49th Parallel Cup between Canada vs United States, including historic first women's and junior (under 17) tests between the two countries. Canada defeated the United States for the first time at both senior and junior level, but were soundly defeated in the women's match. The tournament also included a touring Japanese team and attracted a record attendance of 2,500 at
Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver. == Notable players with connections to Canada ==