Talk:Barassi Line/Archive 1

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Has the Barassi line really blurred? I have often heard that swans players can walk around sydney without attracting much attention, even when the swans are doing well. And the same goes for storm players in melbourne. —Preceding unsigned comment added by UnnamedGent (talkcontribs) 03:02, 15 March 2008 (UTC)

This article really needs to be deleted

It was obviously written by somebody with an AFL bias and is quite ignorant of the position and history of both rugby league and union in Australia. This is beside the fact that it ignores the world game - football (soccer) which undeniably has a strong and growing presence in the football landscape. The term "Barassi Line" has arguably rarely been used and most Australians that do not follow AFL would not even be able to recognise the name Barassi. It is nothing more than somebody's vague theory and some sections of the article are flat-out incorrect. As someone else said "What an unencyclopedic crock". Danausi (talk) 04:33, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

That is an interesting view on the deletion policy, "I don't like it therefore it should be deleted"! If the article has an "AFL bias" (no doubt you are entirely unbiased, of course), it is because the concept of the line came from the 1978 Ron Barassi Memorial Lecture (i.e an Australian Rules themed event). As for the concept rarely being used I would have thought in these post-Karmicheal Hunt days, the geographic cultural division of the nation based on football codes is a constant and enduring theme in Australian discourse, no matter what you call it. While perhaps most non-AFL fans would not recognise the name "Barassi", I doubt most AFL fans would recognise the name "Clive Churchill" but I wouldn't use that as the basis to argue for deletion of the Clive Churchill Medal. "I never heard of it" is a poor argument for deletion. Football (soccer) isn't mentioned because it isn't relevant; there is no geographic divergance in its popularity across the nation, the article isn't (or at least shouldn't) be a general ramble on Australian sport. Cricket, netball and underwater hockey aren't mentioned either. Perhaps, instead of calling others' work "an unencyclopedic crock" and arguing for deletion how about fixing what you don't like through the use of reliable sources. (For the record, I live in NSW and grew up playing RU in Vic.). -- Mattinbgn\talk 05:31, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
Mate the only way to fix what I don't like is to delete the article haha. It may be interesting but its basically pub talk masked by some academic's opinion and not encyclopedic. Danausi (talk) 08:34, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

Which is it ?

The article says that to the left of the line AFL is the "main football code played' but to the right of the line the rugby codes are the "most important codes". The map says that the line separates where the codes "are most popular". Well which is it ? Most important, main code played, most popular ? And don't start me on the likihood of this fuzzy distinction being at all likely to apply as it's set out in Western NSW. What an unencyclopedic crock. -Sticks66 14:27, 20 March 2009 (UTC)

I've added Original research tag, as I believe this is a theory that a couple of people wrote about and I don't think this article constitutes notability. It is a theory, not really mainstream, and is fictional, and theres nothing really about the actual line and how it was figured out. I could have done the same thing.  The Windler talk  01:01, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
And I'm about to remove it, as the theory was derived by a university professor in 1978 (and if they aren't allowed to do OR, then who can?) and was fairly accurate at that time. Do a quick google search and you'll see that the term is still in use, but generally in a sense that it is being broken down, or becoming more permeable. I'll add some more refs, try to make it more historically based and it should be OK to all. And Sticks... I think you are being a bit pedantic about "Most important, main code played, most popular"... but I accept that western NSW is possibly an anomaly to the line... but was it in 1978? By all means stick a fact or OR tag on a particular section, but not on the whole article. The-Pope (talk) 01:35, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
OK, I'm pedantic. But you're happy to assert something without even clarifying what you're asserting. "We're not sure what it's more of... but it's definitely more". "And we reckon that applies in Narrandera, in Hay, in West Wyalong, in Broken Hill, in Wilcannia" "You want facts to prove it ? - well now you're being pedantic".-Sticks66 12:24, 28 March 2009 (UTC)
The removal in other articles to this article is rather unconstructive. This should have been raised with WikiProject Australia, WikiProject Riverina and WikiProject AFL so a wider view and give a consensus on what should happen. Bidgee (talk) 01:39, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
Excuse me, we removed this picture - a stylised depiction of a concept - from the article Sport in Australia. The picture appeared in the lead paragraph ! Not buried in the article, not in the section on AFL or RL but at top of the article. As if it were fact! We're an encyclopedia. -Sticks66 12:34, 28 March 2009 (UTC)

OK, thats fine about this article, if all I have achieved is that refs will be added to this article then that is he point of critisicm. To make it stronger. I can accept this article staying that's fine. I have removed the links to this article which seem to use this as factually true in todays society. That is, this line can no longer be supported as accuarately true. It may have been somewhat true in 1978, but it needs to be made clear in every-single one of those articles that the Barassi line is fictional and not factually true, especially in today's world. Wikipedia is all about factual, and even if this talks about the fact that this line is fictional on this page, it is not implied on those other pages. I still believe there is a lot of OR currently in this article, feel free to remove it, but make sure you fix up the article. Otherwise, it might return, later down the track.  The Windler talk  01:53, 21 March 2009 (UTC)

Well found some possible sources http://arts.monash.edu.au/publications/eras/edition-10/scully-review.pdf and http://www.deakin.edu.au/dro/eserv/DU:30015957/hay-ourwickedgame-2006.pdf > Bidgee (talk) 02:00, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
The line is no more or less factual than the equator. The line is relevant and current because it continues to separate the overall area where Australian rules is more popular / important as opposed to the rugby codes. The perfectly straighht line is less accurate and more stylised but still relevant. A more accurate line would not be straight. What the line does is communicate an idea of cultural separation which certainly does exist in Australia today, and the concepts involved are a good illustraion as to the policies of the major football codes now and in the recent past. Mdw0 (talk) 22:27, 22 March 2009 (UTC)
The Equator may be imaginary but it is the intersection of the earth's surface with the plane perpendicular to the Earth's axis of rotation and containing the Earth's center of mass. The Barassi Line as depicted in the offending drawing is somebody's simplified, stylised depiction of a concept mentioned by somebody in a 1978 lecture. The Equator, the Barrasi Line , just as factual as each other. Yeah, right-Sticks66 13:38, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Future

Why is the sub-head "Future" ? This section doesn't seem to talk about the future.
It says After a period of contraction, its slower approach has seen its two newest clubs on its own side of the line achieve mixed results. Does this mean that the NRL taking a slower approach has caused the the newest clubs to have mixed results ? And by mixed results do we mean they've both been up and down, or do we mean that Souths have been poorly performed and Titans have been well-performed. And in any case what do this have to do with the NRL taking a slower approach. And is it right to call the South Sydney Rabbitohs one of NRL's newest clubs ? 100 years old, new, hmmm.
It says Whereas the success of the Gold Coast Titans has wiped previous poorly-performing clubs on the Gold Coast from the memory of locals and occasionally topped the rankings. What are we saying ? That because the Titans have been successful, no one can remember the Giants, or the Crushers or the Seagulls ? -Sticks66 10:02, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
Then there's the section "Current Situation" which says that the AFL's 2 clubs and RL & RU's 1 each have had "mixed success". Just how successful would the Sydney Swans or the Melbourne Storm need to be to be described as "a unbridled success". Read the articles on these clubs - there's nothing "mixed" about their success. And the Brisbane Lions - three consecutive premierships wasn't it ? -Sticks66 10:23, 30 March 09

I guess if you are counting premierships as a measure of success, then you also need to take into account the salary cap and draft concessions used to get them those premierhips (both NRL and AFL), which ultimately cost heartland clubs. Then when these clubs aren't winning games, it is clear that they are not viable. SO I think Mixed Success is a fair description. --Rulesfan (talk) 13:11, 20 April 2009 (UTC)

Dispute over the line

User:Mdw0 has raised concerns over my deletion of the following paragraph and has reinstated it:

The exact location of the line may be disputed, and the stylised straight line is not particularly accurate. It is yet to be shown that any of Queensland favours Australian football over rugby codes, and in the Riverina area of New South Wales both codes vie for dominance. In the Canberra area there are two professional teams playing rugby codes, the Canberra Raiders and Brumbies, whereas the AFL only plays a few games there each year.

I'm not actually censoring this, my issue with this section is that it is unnecessary for at least a couple of reasons:

a) it contains uncited conjecture and quite possibly POV as well. since when is there a need to clarify the popularity of the game in Queensland when the article makes no claim that Australian football has popularity over other codes there

b) the image is a representation of Professor Ian Turner's version of the concept, as stated in 1978. As such, it is not trying to say that it is the story today. The caption reflects this, all a reader has to do is actually read it. So stating that it may be disputed is irrelevant. Citing counterarguments to Turner's essay could be a good idea, but I haven't yet encountered any. The story today is mentioned in subsequent paragraphs. And if someone wants to have a stab at a more accurate drawing (of Ian Turner's account - not their own) or a graph representing the actual situation today, they are most welcome. If you were being 100% accurate, then the line would cut through the top right corner of South Australia, as Birdsville is slightly west of this. Then the line would miss Canberra and hit the border of NSW and VIC on the south eastern tip.

c) it is unnecessary detail in the opening paragraph of text that is already stated in detail in the article itself. The opening para is a summary.

d) there are plenty of articles which provide a way of clarification if the reader wants to make up their own mind.

Personally I don't think that such a line exists. It is not a state border or anything. Yet it is a eans of conceptual representation of the sporting landscape and probably the most effective one ever put forward.

--Rulesfan (talk) 13:08, 20 April 2009 (UTC)

The straight line indicates certain portions of western Queensland and southern NSW favours Aussie Rules. That, surely is not in doubt, therefore such a claim IS in the article. The inaccuracy was was brought up by certain pedants who are well within their rights to indicate such inaccuracies in the stylised straight line, so this paragraph was added. It is the only indication in the article that the stylised line is not necessarily accurate, merely indicative. The caption does not indicate the line may have changed or that a specifically accurate line would not be straight, merely when it was first suggested. You cant infer from that that there is any change unless its mentioned. The rest of the article details the cultural divide's effects on expansion plans by the various football leagues, not that the straight line is not accurate. A clear qualifier is necessary to counter the inaccuracies of the image, otherwise you'll always have editors trying to add such qualifiers in. If you think its excessively verbose, edit it back a bit.
When you say you doubt such a line exists do you mean you doubt the accuracy of the straight line, or do you think there is no such cultural/sporting separation between the states? Mdw0 (talk) 03:51, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
There is a clear cultural/sporting separation between the states, but it is by no means a straight line. Half the places the line passes through don't even have enough people there to organise or even watch any code of football. However the image is about the concept, so it doesn't matter whether it is factual or if the line ever existed in reality. Who cares if the straight line is accurate, in the end it is just some guy's educated opinion/theory. Perhaps a graph which shows the locations of regular national league matches the "in enemy territory" might balance the article. --Rulesfan (talk) 13:17, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
All true, but as I said, if there's no comment on the inaccuracy of the straight line, you'll always have pedants inserting their two cents. Its better to have a couple of lines regarding the inaccuracy of the straight line at the bottom of the opening section and then get on with the good stuff. I understand the image is about the concept, but images like this are very powerful, and if there's no indication the line only roughly indicates the divide it will be accorded an accuracy it never had. Its up to us as editors to forsee this, and by pointing out an inaccuracy we make our article more accurate. Mdw0 (talk) 23:28, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

Union?

I'm well aware that RU was affected by this, but wasn't Barassi talking about RL? That was been much more popular than union in Australia, even if RU is catching up. The killer blow for RU during pre-war Australia was the defection of a number of Wallabies to the other code.--MacRusgail (talk) 19:48, 19 June 2009 (UTC)

Whether he directly referred to union or not, the phenomonon he named - the cultural divide - still applies to both rugby codes. Mdw0 (talk) 08:31, 22 June 2009 (UTC)

Barassi didn't mention anything. Read the article. HiLo48 (talk) 12:09, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
Whether Turner directly referred to union or not, the phenomonon he named - the cultural divide - still applies to both rugby codes. Mdw0 (talk) 01:47, 22 June 2010 (UTC)
True. HiLo48 (talk) 02:26, 22 June 2010 (UTC)

Surely ?

If the article (and the image) is about a concept presented by Prof Turner in 1978, then by definition the theories about patterns that have emerged since then: discussion about the Brumbies, the Raiders, the Swans, late 80s expansion etc must all be Original Research. So exactly whose work is the discussion in : 3rd paragraph (no citations), 6th paragraph (no citations), 7th paragraph - "Expansion" (no citations), 8th paragraph "Australian rules football" (no citations) and each paragraph thereafter ? None of this theory can be attributed to Turner - he died in 1978 ! Let's not kid ourselves, bloke gives entertaining lecture in 1978 about a interesting concept, thereafter some Wikipedians turn it into an ongoing essay -Sticks66 14:37, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

I'm not exactly sure what your concern is. I agree that large parts of the article are insufficiently referenced, but they are mostly true or at least realistic, and could be sourced. Some of us should simply get should work on that. The article is about the imaginary line, not Turner's speech. The line is an admittedly inaccurate but useful concept to describe an interesting social divide in Australia. HiLo48 (talk) 20:02, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
My concern is that other than that the Professor gave a lecture in 1978 on the topic, most of article is original research.-Sticks66 13:00, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
I don't think so, this article is generally about the divide between different types of football, and most if not all is probably easily sourced. The speech was just where the divides name was given. Speaking of sports and the Barassi line, the Lions have fallen since their glory of the early 2000's. Chipmunkdavis (talk) 13:09, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
Yes, thanks for making my point in tidier language Chipmunkdavis. (My language got messy and my proofreading was terrible!) The divide is real. The line is a useful way of describing it. Our job is to find sources, not just abandon the article. HiLo48 (talk) 20:20, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

I'd also like to thank Chipmunkdavis for perfectly demonstrating what it means to cite things on Wikipedia: write out the text first and then just lazily search for tenuously related articles online. Great job! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 165.123.216.144 (talk) 02:46, 12 January 2011 (UTC)

As far as I can tell, Sticks 66 is saying that a theory postulated by someone cannot be discussed or attributed to anything after that person has introduced the concept. Does this apply to scientific theory as well? Tough to all those who want to apply quantum theory or relativity to any new ideas. Mdw0 (talk) 09:28, 15 March 2013 (UTC)

Actually mdw0 if the only place where new applications of quantum theory get discussed or advanced is on the talk page of the Wikipedia article on quantum theory, by WP editors rather than scientists - which is exactly what seems to have happened here over the last seven years - then I would indeed say that such advancements are ORIGINAL RESEARCH. As I said, a Professor gives an entertaining lecture in 1978; some Wikipedian creates a four sentence article in 2007 about it; by 2014 following much collective original research and postulating it has become a 20 paragraph article with scarce citations (none of which if you click throgh - even the ADB entry on Turner - actually mention the Barassi Line). This article always was and remains an unencyclopedic crock.-Sticks66 15:51, 26 September 2014 (UTC)
Well that's one viewpoint I suppose. I think you might be extrapolating from the title of the article OR that isn't there because rather than just being about the line in Turner's lecture, it is what the Line divides - the dichotomy in Australia's sporting culture - that the article is about. I think Sticks66 is trying to say that the application of any analysis of demand, policy or popularity after the lecture, no matter how well documented, must be Original Research because it is the relevance to the Line and what the Line represents that is questioned. Sticks66 is saying that the Original Research occurs when we say that any of it applies to the article at all, rather than the gathering of the data. I think that is far too limited an outlook to apply to an article which is about Australia's footballing sporting culture and its fundamental division. The Barassi Line is just a good name to describe the overall article, rather than "Differences in popularity of the main football code across Australia." Sticks66 seems to think the article should only describe the Line as Turner described it and shouldn't go into how and why the line exists. This extension of outlook is not Original Research, it is a natural progression of an idea that has turned out to be a bit broader than Sticks66 understood it to be in the beginning.Mdw0 (talk) 01:50, 29 September 2014 (UTC)
Yes well I'll be fascinated to see how more WP editors "progress the idea" further. We'll then have additional opinion masquerading as fact. -Sticks66 15:35, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
There are plenty of recent articles in reliable sources that mention the line by name when discussing expansion plans and activities of the rugby codes and Australian rules football. That shows that this is a living concept that can validly be written about in an encyclopaedic way. There is also a reasonably clear boundary for the topic. Some soccer loving editors added material about their game some time ago, apparently because they thought their game was somehow being ignored, but it was deleted as off-topic. There are no major issues about the definition, currency and scope of this topic. A perfectly reasonable one to have an active article on. HiLo48 (talk) 17:52, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
Of course if there were any glaring opinion masquerading as fact there would be citation needed markers all over the place, which there isn't. So we're not doing too badly. But I think we should make an effort to do a bit of backwards referencing where we relate any of the references we find to the article as it stands.Mdw0 (talk) 01:32, 2 October 2014 (UTC)

Beyond the line or above/below the line

The use of above or below the line doesn't work, because we are talking about a line that is mostly north-south, so talking of AFL being below the line is problematic because Darwin is clearly above the line but is on the AFL side of the line. Beyond is better because it works as a respective 'other' side for all codes. I would also be OK with east/west of the line, because there are no anomalies using this. But beyond is better. Mdw0 (talk) 06:46, 8 September 2013 (UTC)

It's really just silly to say that "above or below" doesn't work. It must be obvious to even the simplest mind what it means. I'll admit that I'm not a total fan though. It depends on a mapping orientation convention that may not always be case. But "beyond" is also inappropriate, because that's describing things from the perspective of someone on the Aussie Rules side of the line. We need a neutral perspective. So, what to say? I can understand that the "above or below" idea came from looking at the major population centres of Sydney and Melbourne being "up" or "down" on a conventional map, but we really do need a way of describing the whole of Australia, and avoiding that mapping convention. I'd be happy with "east or west", although it may confuse some Victorians, who think they're in eastern Australia. Could others cope with "east" and "west"? HiLo48 (talk) 07:37, 8 September 2013 (UTC)
Just adding to the above, the technically correct names for the two sides would of course be "the Rugby League side" and "the Australian Football side". It would be fine to use these, but my less wordy suggestion is east and west. HiLo48 (talk) 03:19, 10 September 2013 (UTC)
It's pretty annoying when someone initiates a discussion, I create a thoughtful reply, and the first editor doesn't return to continue the conversation. There was also an IP editor who changed that part of the article after this conversation, who I invited here to comment. And nothing eventuated. Think I might make my proposed changes myself. HiLo48 (talk) 17:52, 11 September 2013 (UTC)
I dont see how you can say 'beyond' is from an Aussie rules perspective. Beyond the line means the 'other' side, whether your viewpoint is Sydney or Melbourne. But obviously for some people that is confusing. I agree that naming each side the Aussie Rules and Rugby League/Union side would be technically correct, but its a bit unwieldly. I think east and west is a decent compromise. And I dont think there is any significant population of readers in Victoria who is unaware that although they are an 'eastern' state, that they to the west of Cape Howe where the line goes. And excuse me for not logging on to Wikipedia for a couple of days to read your so-called 'thoughtful' reply, it was not to spite you I promise. If you're annoyed by that you must completely blow your lid when something truly provocative happens... Mdw0 (talk) 06:13, 13 September 2013 (UTC)

There is little value to this article

Ron Barrassi has limited notability outside of the AFL community in this country and this article fails to meet NPOV in many instances. This article needs to be cleaned up, or deleted. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.228.201.23 (talk) 06:18, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

These are completely erroneous opinions and you have clearly missed the significance of the article. It is not an article about Ron Barrassi himself but about the historical geographical divisions where Australian football has been the dominant code which has been called the "Barrassi Line". Whatever issues the article might have it is still on a topic of notability. The only person with an obvious POV on this is yourself. Afterwriting (talk) 09:01, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks for suggesting someone else do all the work. If you can't fix the problems yourself, at least have a go at outlining what the problems actually are, and where NPOV is failing, rather than leaving it to guesswork. Strange that your point of view about Barassi's notability is OK to express, and yet the points of view you accuse the article of having are absent. Whatever value the article has or hasn't, unsupported demands to 'clean up or delete' have precisely nil.Mdw0 (talk) 08:15, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

I have made an attempt to cleanup this article but frankly it's a useless article for pro AFL supporters, for whatever success the AFL has had in expanding they've also had teams like the Brisbane Bears, Western Sydney Giants and the Gold Coast Suns. As far as I can see the success of all of this has been about 60/40. Rugby League has successfully expanded into Canberra and Melbourne whilst also creating the Brisbane Broncos, where the AFL have only really had any success in expanding into Rugby League territory with the Sydney Swans and Brisbane Lions despite throwing money at the Western Sydney Giants, who failed to compete with the Western Sydney Wanderers in Football (soccer) and the Gold Coast Suns who have failed to do little more than nothing. --60.228.201.23 (talk) 08:23, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

I think you're trying to say that both codes have had 'mixed results' when it comes to their teams on the other side of the line. I agree that this should be mentioned in the AFL section as well as the rugby league section. I added in a paragraph, but its pretty bad. Edits on that are welcome. I don't think the history of the Raiders illustrates the nature of the line. Although Canberra wasn't expanded into by the NRL until 1982, it has always had a strong rugby and rugby league culture. The fact is that like most of the Riverina, there has also always been an Aussie Rules presence stronger than in the rest of NSW. This hasn't changed much since the introduction of the Raiders, but I do believe that the commitment of the rugby codes to a presence in Canberra has meant a return commitment from Canberrans that has kept professional AFL in Canberra at bay. But this battle of the codes for the soul of Canberrans has little to do with the nature of the Barassi line and the national forces involved. League's success with the Storm was tarnished by the Storm's cheating of the salary cap, and by the demise of the Reds and the Rams. The point of these sections is not to pit the codes against each other by saying the AFL has had more 'success' in putting teams across the line because it has 4 teams versus 1. It is to illustrate the policies of the codes and show difficulties in combating the social constructs that created and enforced the line for so long. Other than the lack of mentioning that the AFL had had mixed success like the rugby codes, what else makes you think the article is pro-AFL? It cant be because the line was named after Barassi? Mdw0 (talk) 08:58, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
The article is not about which code is better or more successful. It's about a very real divide in the popularity of football codes in Australia, one that involves major language and cultural differences as well. It's an article worth having, but could always do with improvement. HiLo48 (talk) 09:04, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

The article as it was read that the AFL had, had "success" whatever that means by any account in terms of neutrality, while other codes have not had success in crossing the Barassi line. Conceded point that the AFL has never been as "successful" in the ACT as it would like to be, however the general claim by those who would support the AFL is that they would like to claim the ACT as AFL territory. While this article is not about expansion directly, it is indirectly and neglecting to incorporate Rugby League expansion at the same time heavily weighs the article in favour of AFL supporters and would appear to make the article biased.

I would personally remove this article, or talk about it indirectly in terms of AFL and Rugby League expansion, it has little merit on its own other than for the purposes of trolling --60.228.201.23 (talk) 09:10, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

Just a couple of tips - See how the posts of others here are indented to show who they are replying to? That's achieved by using the : (colon) symbol as many times as the number of spaces you want to indent. It makes conversations easier to follow. And can you please "sign" your posts by typing ~~~~ at the end? HiLo48 (talk) 09:18, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
The line exists. It illustrates an interesting and important divide in Australian sporting culture, and one which is very rare in the sporting world. Only the rugby league/union divide in Britain has a comparable geographical split inside a national boundary. The Barassi Line's noteworthiness should put talk of removing of the article to rest.
There was a point made that the AFL bits failed to mention that the AFL met with 'mixed success.' This failure to ensure an overall NPOV is a fair call. It needs to be said that the Swans and Lions were below AFL standard for a long, long time and required significant help from the central body before they were competitive. The Suns and Giants are currently well below standard and have also required financial and other assistance from the AFL to survive. Whether the new clubs can repeat the same success as the Swans and Lions in the near future or even at all is still up for question, there is no doubt about that.
However, it does not diminish the fact that the edits regarding rugby league expansion teams in Canberra, Wollongong and Brisbane are irrelevant to an article about the Barassi Line, as would be exhaustive detail about the Eagles, Crows, Power and Dockers. I don't understand the insistence of this irrelevant material going in, when the editor says the whole article is no good anyway. Why would someone care about the edits in an article they want deleted? Mdw0 (talk) 09:47, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
I think it's in the best interests of everyone if this article is just cleaned up to a standard that it meets a NPOV as clearly in its current/previous shape it has issues. I have added citation tags for some of the claims that need verification rather than removing them at this stage. Please see Wikipedia:Citation_needed, Wikipedia:No original research and Wikipedia:SOURCES#Reliable_sourcesbefore adding any more unverifiable claims. --Orestes1984 (talk) 11:57, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
I've removed the citation tag for the statement from the statement that the AFL has created the Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney clubs. It's obvious. It's very public knowledge. Policy says that citing such statements is unnecessary. Your other citation tags are in the Future section. I think we should remove that whole section. Anything there is almost certain to be WP:SPECULATION or WP:POV, neither of which is acceptable. Thanks for drawing our attention to it. HiLo48 (talk) 20:47, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
The AFL know they will have to prop up the Gold Coast Suns and GWS for some time before the clubs are viable. From last I remember, Brisbane is still propped up by salary cap concessions in the AFL, to say "development is completed" isn't really correct, or a fact. If the development was completed then these clubs would not continuously need to be propped up by the AFL. I think it's a valid citation tag --Orestes1984 (talk) 03:40, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
The big leagues are always propping up less successful clubs, in all professional football codes in Australia. The AFL right now is propping up a couple of Melbourne based clubs too. It's not really an issue. The Brisbane and Sydney clubs exist. I think we can accept that. But anyway, to me it's not the most important aspect of this article. As you say, it could be seen as claiming that one sport is better than the other, and that's not the point of the article. It is that the line exists. It's real. It's a sporting, cultural and linguistic divide. They're the bits that matter the most. Would you be happy to see the Future section gone? HiLo48 (talk) 04:02, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
I don't see how a future section could be much more than speculation, so yes --Orestes1984 (talk) 04:29, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
Done. HiLo48 (talk) 05:05, 15 December 2013 (UTC)

Soccer

The new map

stats and other tidbits

Migration

Is this relevant?

The Barassi Line as a language divide

Inclusion of "Language" section

User:Mdw0's misuse of semicolon

A detailed reference

Contested deletion

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