The year the SANFL found its place

WHILE many will look back on the 2008 SANFL season and think of Central District's defeat of Glenelg in the grand final, many who have an affinity with the competition may look at it in another way.
Is it the year that the SANFL competition, its clubs and supporters recognised the SANFL's place in the overall scheme of the football world?
After the code changing entry of Adelaide and then Port Adelaide into the AFL in the 1990s and the evolution of that competition into the successful corporate giant it is today, it was always going to take some time for the local league to find its place again.
Fans left the SANFL in droves through that period heading to what was regarded by many as a superior product, a league where the best of the best battled in gladiatorial fashion every weekend across the nation.
As part of that development, the AFL has tinkered with its product continually in order to attract as many fans as possible through the gates as it strived to claim the title of premier football code in Australia.
With the obvious changes caused to the grassroots landscape due to the AFL expansion, many people unfairly compared the state leagues, deriding them as past their use by date.
They became regarded as a dumping ground for talentless hacks, playing a slower and clumsier brand of football.
That unfair assumption proved a handicap for people promoting the game in those leagues, seeing crowds reduced.
But by 2008 all of that has changed, in South Australia at least.
Crowds this year increased, highlighted by that massive day at the Bay when Glenelg took on Sturt (an expected preview of this season's grand final), and media attention grew.
It wasn't just the traditional media that provided this boost either. Online websites, such as SAFooty and club run forums, provided a place for fans of the SANFL to congregate and show their support of the competition, while the continued publication of the SA Football Media Guide has also provided a boost.
Like them or not, Central District pair Chris and James Gowans have in their own way become the face of SANFL football, being (not surprisingly) always available to provide a quote for the media to promote the SANFL and their club.
A viable competition needs big personalities, heroes and villains to survive and these guys provide all three of those factors.
As a result of these combined factors, fans have returned in droves, with young children keen to look at the football that their fathers and grandfathers grew up with.
The family feeling at games that includes access to the huddles during breaks, having a kick on the oval and the ability to stand on the terraces rather than sterile plastic seating have also been part of the revival.
It all spells good news for the SANFL (and ultimately the AFL which needs grassroots footy to survive if it is to prosper) with a new audience set to keep the flame alive.
Association football in Britain and other parts of Europe has shown that there is room for players and spectators to enjoy their sport at levels below the premier grades and now the SANFL and the South Australian public have embraced this fact.
No longer should it worry about those who would view its place in the football world negatively.
Is it the year that the SANFL competition, its clubs and supporters recognised the SANFL's place in the overall scheme of the football world?
After the code changing entry of Adelaide and then Port Adelaide into the AFL in the 1990s and the evolution of that competition into the successful corporate giant it is today, it was always going to take some time for the local league to find its place again.
Fans left the SANFL in droves through that period heading to what was regarded by many as a superior product, a league where the best of the best battled in gladiatorial fashion every weekend across the nation.
As part of that development, the AFL has tinkered with its product continually in order to attract as many fans as possible through the gates as it strived to claim the title of premier football code in Australia.
With the obvious changes caused to the grassroots landscape due to the AFL expansion, many people unfairly compared the state leagues, deriding them as past their use by date.
They became regarded as a dumping ground for talentless hacks, playing a slower and clumsier brand of football.
That unfair assumption proved a handicap for people promoting the game in those leagues, seeing crowds reduced.
But by 2008 all of that has changed, in South Australia at least.
Crowds this year increased, highlighted by that massive day at the Bay when Glenelg took on Sturt (an expected preview of this season's grand final), and media attention grew.
It wasn't just the traditional media that provided this boost either. Online websites, such as SAFooty and club run forums, provided a place for fans of the SANFL to congregate and show their support of the competition, while the continued publication of the SA Football Media Guide has also provided a boost.
Like them or not, Central District pair Chris and James Gowans have in their own way become the face of SANFL football, being (not surprisingly) always available to provide a quote for the media to promote the SANFL and their club.
A viable competition needs big personalities, heroes and villains to survive and these guys provide all three of those factors.
As a result of these combined factors, fans have returned in droves, with young children keen to look at the football that their fathers and grandfathers grew up with.
The family feeling at games that includes access to the huddles during breaks, having a kick on the oval and the ability to stand on the terraces rather than sterile plastic seating have also been part of the revival.
It all spells good news for the SANFL (and ultimately the AFL which needs grassroots footy to survive if it is to prosper) with a new audience set to keep the flame alive.
Association football in Britain and other parts of Europe has shown that there is room for players and spectators to enjoy their sport at levels below the premier grades and now the SANFL and the South Australian public have embraced this fact.
No longer should it worry about those who would view its place in the football world negatively.