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Swedish Elks travel to Oz

From Floorball to Handball, Sweden is not averse to obscure sports. Yet most Swedes will be bemused to learn they have a national Australian Football team. Nic Townsend meets the Swedish Elks before they travel to Melbourne for the International Cup.

Swedish Elks travel to Oz

Few Swedes have even heard of Australian Football let alone played it. Yet the sport has already outgrown the Australian expatriate community, and increasing numbers of Swedes are playing too. The fact that a national team will be in Australia this August representing Sweden in the International Cup is a measure of how far the game has come.

“It’s a fantastic sport!” says Andreas Svensson, “In Sweden we watch soccer where nothing really happens. But in Aussie Rules things are happening every single minute.”

Svensson is one of Sweden’s veterans, having first played in 1994. Back then Sweden only had one Aussie Rules team but over recent years clubs have formed in towns and cities all over the country. Today over 300 people play the game in Sweden. Around 30 Swedes have pledged to take time off work this August to play for the national side in Australia.

“It’s exciting to represent your country in a sport,” says Joel Språng, “I never thought I’d get to do that.”

The history of Aussie Rules in Sweden started in 1993 when Ingmar “Terry” Lundquist started the country’s first club: the Helsingborg Saints. Lundquist moved to Melbourne at the age of 7 and it took little time for the young Swede to be infected with a typically Melbournian obsession with Aussie Rules.

At 24 Lundquist moved back to Sweden, and soon started experiencing withdrawal symptoms.

“From the moment I moved back to Sweden I hoped Aussie Rules would become popular in Europe,” says Lundquist.

“Imagine the thrill I got when I was at the Australian embassy in Copenhagen and saw that they started a league there.” Thus Lundquist was inspired to set up a team in Sweden.

Being so close to Denmark, Helsingborg were able to join the Danish Australian Football League (DAFL), currently the largest league outside of the English-speaking world.

Until 2002 the Saints remained the only team in Sweden (apart from the short-lived Lund Bulldogs in 1995) and attracted players from all over the country. However since 2002 football clubs have gradually proliferated throughout the rest of Sweden.

Today Skåne hosts a four-team league, as well as two teams in the DAFL. There are clubs in Gothenburg, Karlstad, Falun, Uppsala and three clubs in Stockholm. There are also plans to establish teams in Linköping, Kalmar and Oslo.

Last August the Svenska Australiska Fotbolls Förbundet was established, becoming Sweden’s first national body for Aussie Rules. Creating a national team was the next logical step.

“I’m very exited about the national team and the direction it is going,” says Lundquist today.

“It seems we have good numbers of every region travelling to the International Cup, and if we bring a strong team I think we’ll surprise a few sides.”

Playing Aussie Rules in Sweden entails making a lot of compromises. Ordinarily the game is played on Cricket-oval sized fields with 18 players per side. Here most matches take place on smaller rugby pitches with makeshift posts and teams are often only 10-a-side. There are also quotas limiting the number of Australians on each team.

Naturally starting up a team isn’t easy. Joel Språng has done it twice: first in Gothenburg, and more recently in Karlstad. Språng was introduced to the game through his older brother Martin who in turn discovered it after inadvertently watching it on cable TV.

In 2003 the Gothenburg Berserkers had their first training session with the Språng brothers amongst the first recruits. In the beginning training consisted of only four people, but despite low turnouts they persisted and kept turning up every week.

“You have to be dedicated,” says Språng. “You can never give up.”

Optimism, dogged determination and even a little eccentricity are important qualities. Gradually the Berserkers grew and today they’re even attempting to start a second team.

Cameron Crooks has also undertaken the massive task of starting an Aussie Rules team in Sweden. Three years ago he left Melbourne for Falun in Sweden’s north.

“I thought I had no chance. Falun is just way too small,” states Crooks. “But in many ways its easier here than in the big cities. Everyone knows each other so word spreads a lot quicker.”

Before long training sessions were attracting up to 25 people and within two months the newly established Falun Diggers played their first match against Stockholm.

“I started with two people from work, and it just branched out from there,” claims Crooks. “Friends, friends of friends, just sitting in the local pub talking to people.”

It’s a remarkable achievement considering Crooks started from scratch with absolute beginners, and has had to teach skills like bouncing an oval ball while running.

“Everyone we’ve recruited has come to this club never having even heard of Aussie Rules football,” says Crooks.

“We’ve started with nothing but managed to build a reasonable team.” He will go to Melbourne as one of Sweden’s coaches as Australians are disqualified from playing in the International Cup.

Roger Nilsson is one of the few Swedish footballers with experience playing in Australia. In 2004 he won a scholarship from the DAFL and spent a year in Melbourne playing for amateur side Powerhouse.

“It felt like I’d never even seen a footy before,” says Nilsson, commenting on the sharp contrast in playing standards. By non-Australian standards however, the Elks look promising. Last August they won the EU Cup in Hamburg.

“Skills wise we’re not going to get flogged,” claims Nilsson. “But we’ll probably only have 30 players. We have to play a lot of games in only a few days which will take a lot out of us.”

Under the circumstances however results don’t seem too important. As Cameron Crooks says: “How well we do doesn’t really matter. The achievement will be just getting there.”

The International Cup might not be the highest standard football in Australia this August, but if the Swedish team is any indication, it will include some of the most devoted players of the game in the world. It just proves you don’t have to be Australian to be an Aussie Rules fanatic.

See also: Swedish Elks Photo Gallery

Contact the Swedish Australian Football Association:

Media Liaison – Joel Språng

[email protected]

www.aflsweden.se

Contact the Stockholm Australian Football Association:

www.aussierules.se

Clubs in Stockholm:

Södermalm Blues

Solna Axemen

Bromma Vikings

Clubs in the rest of the country:

Karlstad Dragons

Gothenburg Berserkers

Falun Diggers

Helsingborg West Raptors

Landskrona Bulldozers

Nic Townsend

CRIME

Spain women’s World Cup players demand more heads roll as Rubiales in court

The crisis within Spanish football deepened Friday as the women's World Cup winners demanded more heads roll at its scandal-hit RFEF federation whose disgraced ex-boss appeared in court on sexual assault charges.

Spain women's World Cup players demand more heads roll as Rubiales in court

Just hours after Luis Rubiales was quizzed by a judge for kissing midfielder Jenni Hermoso, all but two of Spain’s 23 World Cup players said they would not don the national shirt without deeper changes within the RFEF, demanding its current interim head also resign.

The statement came as the squad’s new coach Montse Tome was to announce the lineup for two upcoming UEFA Women’s Nations League matches against Sweden and Switzerland, which was promptly postponed, federation sources said.

“The changes put in place are not enough,” said a statement signed by 39 players, among them 21 of the 23 World Cup winners.

Demanding “fundamental changes to the RFEF’s leadership”, they called for the “resignation of the RFEF president” Pedro Rocha, who took over as interim leader when FIFA suspended Rubiales on August 26.

But the federation insisted Rocha would “lead the transition process within the RFEF until the next election”, insisting any changes would be made “gradually”.

A federation source said a leadership election could take place early next year.

“This institution is more important than individuals and it’s crucial it remains strong. We’ll work tirelessly to create stability first in order to progress later,” Rocha said in the statement.

Despite a string of recent changes, the federation remains in the hands of officials appointed by Rubiales, and the players are demanding structural changes “within the office of the president and the secretary general”.

Brought to court by a kiss

The bombshell came after days of optimism within the RFEF that the players would come round after it sacked controversial coach Jorge Vilda, appointed Tome in his stead and pledged further changes, not to mention Rubiales’ long-awaited resignation on Sunday.

On August 25, 81 Spain players, including the 23 world champions, had started a mass strike saying they would not play for the national team without significant changes at the head of the federation.

Earlier on Friday, Rubiales appeared in court where he was quizzed by Judge Francisco de Jorge who is heading up the investigation into the kiss, which sparked international outrage and saw him brought up on sexual assault charges.

At the end of the closed-door hearing, in which Rubiales repeated his claim that the kiss was consensual, the judge ordered him not to come within 200 metres of Hermoso and barred him from any contact with the player.

At the weekend, the 46-year-old had described the kiss as “a spontaneous act, a mutual act, an act that both consented to, which was… 100 percent non-sexual” in an interview with British broadcaster Piers Morgan.

Hermoso, 33, has insisted it was not, describing it as “an impulsive, macho act, out of place and with no type of consent on my part”.

Speaking to reporters outside court, Hermoso’s lawyer Carla Vall said they were “very satisfied” with the hearing.

“Thanks to this video, everyone can see there was no consent whatsoever and that is what we will demonstrate in court.”

Allegations of coercion

Hermoso herself will also testify before the judge at some stage, who will then have to decide whether or not to push ahead with the prosecution. No date has been given for her testimony.

The complaint against Rubiales, which was filed by the public prosecutors’ office, cites alleged offences of sexual assault and coercion.

Under a recent reform of the Spanish penal code, a non-consensual kiss can be considered sexual assault, a category which groups all types of sexual violence.

If found guilty, Rubiales could face anything from a fine to four years in prison, sources at the public prosecutors’ office have said.

In their complaint, prosecutors explained the offence of coercion related to Hermoso’s statement saying she “and those close to her had suffered constant ongoing pressure by Luis Rubiales and his professional entourage to justify and condone” his actions.

At the hearing, Rubiales also denied coercion.

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