The furthest progressed attempt to develop a universal football code took place in 1914–15. Following two major football events in Sydney during mid-1914 – the
Great Britain Lions rugby league tour and the
1914 Australian rules football interstate carnival – the motivation of the NSWRL and AFC to unify the Australian football codes was heightened. Many administrators from both sports supported an amalgamation. Sportswriters noted that there was a mutual financial benefit to the AFC and the NSWRL, which was considered to be the chief motivation for progressing towards amalgamation: the NSWRL had only one meaningful interstate rival (Queensland), and its tours to England generally lost money, so having more interstate rivals would generate additional interest and gate takings; the AFC also had the opportunity to gain additional interstate and international rivals; Sportswriters were divided on whether or not English administrators would support adopting the changes globally, with the main argument in favour being that English sides had made strong profits when touring Australasia and that they may seek to preserve that capability. • The game would be played on a rectangular field 160 yards long and 100 yards wide, similar in size to an Australian rules football field, and the same shape as but much larger than a rugby league field. There would be a distance of 140 yards between the goal lines, with a 10 yard in-goal area at each end. • The game would be played fifteen players per side – compared with thirteen per side in rugby league and eighteen per side in Australian rules football. • There would be a set of rugby-style goal posts on each goal line, with two uprights 18 feet apart and a crossbar 10 feet high. A goal would have to pass between the uprights and over the crossbar to count. • The game would be played with an oval shaped ball, which was common to both sports. • The methods of scoring, which combined scoring methods from both parent codes, would be: • Grounding the ball in team's attacking in-goal area for a
try – three points plus an attempt at a conversion. • Goal scored from general play – two points. • Goal from a mark or free kick, or a conversion – one point. • Grounding the ball in the team's defensive in-goal area for a "touch-down" or "force" – one point conceded. • The rugby league scrum would be abolished, and play would be restarted by Australian rules football means: a
ball-up, by which the umpire bounces the ball into the air, within the field of play or a boundary throw-in by the umpire from outside the touch line. • A deliberate kick for goal or conversion would be taken by the player who marked the ball or scored the try as in Australian rules, rather than by a designated goalkicker as in rugby league. • Throwing the ball as in rugby league would be permitted. • Forward passes and
knock-ons would not be permitted, as in rugby league. • Tackling between the hips and shoulders would be permitted, as in rugby league. The most significant sticking point to developing the hybrid code, and indeed the most significant difference between rugby and Australian rules gameplay, was
offside – a concept fundamental to rugby league and fundamentally absent from Australian rules football. The conference did not settle on a definitive hybrid solution for the offside issue, but early proposals were for the offside rule to be in effect in the forward quarters of the field, but not in effect elsewhere on the field.
Proposed amalgamation The progress at the conference was strong and amalgamation between the two sports looked likely. The conference concluded that some changes would be made to both codes in 1915 to bring them closer together, with a view to also playing exhibition matches of a fully hybridised code in 1915 with the potential for complete hybridisation as early as 1916. Some observers thought that a gradual hybridisation under which annual rule changes which brought the codes progressively closer together over five to ten years until the two codes were uniform might be a more realistic approach. Over the early months of 1915, the issue was discussed at state league general meetings, with the
South Australian Football League approving in January, the
New South Wales Football League approving in February,
West Australian Football League rejecting the changes in March, and the
Victorian Football League approving in April. At the same time, fighting in
World War I was escalating, and football was increasingly becoming secondary to the war effort. The
Tasmanian Football League, when discussing the rule changes in March 1915, decided against providing any decision on the matter due to the war, and the positions of the
Queensland Football League and the
Goldfields Football League were not reported. The
Queensland Rugby League was not involved in the amalgamation discussions at all, having been neither consulted nor notified by the NSWRL. The war effort ultimately precluded any further meetings of AFC delegates. As such, even though gaining the requisite three-quarters majority support for the new rules appeared at worst to be an even chance, the AFC never had the opportunity to put the rule changes to a formal vote of delegates, and therefore could not approve them; the NSWRL's conditional approval of changes to its rules lapsed, and any efforts towards amalgamation were put on hold indefinitely. This never happened, and the two sports progressed on separate paths thereafter. The proposed amalgamation, however, was to contribute directly to the demise of
Australian rules football in New Zealand with the perception of Rugby League taking over the sport of Australian rules. ==1933 revisit==