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- Title
COMPETITIVE ENGINEERING IN JUNIOR AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL: PERCEPTIONS AND EXPERIENCES OF PARENTS, CHILDREN AND COACHES OF 9-A-SIDE FOOTBALL IN AN UNDER-8 COMPETITION.
- Authors
ELLIOTT, Sam; PILL, Shane
- Abstract
Junior Australian Football leagues typically adopt rules and positional arrangements that mimic the adult version of Australian Football. This involves fielding 18 players per team on a full-sized oval. While such competition structures are appropriate for adult competition and elite athletes, modifications to field dimensions and number of players may be more appropriate for junior participants. A trial season of competitively engineered Australian Football was piloted by adopting the Australian Football League's (AFL) 9-a-side concept in an Under-8 competition for the first time. The 9-a-side trial occurred on Friday nights alongside the established Under 8's 18-a-side competition conducted on Sunday mornings. Participants in this study experienced both competition formats. A qualitative evaluation of the perceptions and experiences of parents, players and coaches of competitive engineering in junior Australian Football was done. The results indicate that the AFL 9-a-side concept provided an enhanced game experience emerging from (a) a high level of game engagement, (b) the game as an educative context, and (c) an appropriate developmental step before the introduction of players to 18-a-side Australian Football.
- Subjects
FOOTBALL for children; AUSTRALIAN Football League; ELITE athletes; FOOTBALL coaches; PARENT-adult child relationships; SPORTS competitions; ATTITUDE (Psychology)
- Publication
South African Journal for Research in Sport, Physical Education & Recreation, 2016, Vol 38, Issue 1, p43
- ISSN
0379-9069
- Publication type
Article