Dreading footy season? You’re not alone – 20% of Australians are self-described sport haters


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With the winter AFL and NRL seasons about to start, Australia’s sporting calendar is once again transitioning from its quietest to busiest period.

For many, the return of the AFL and NRL competitions is highly anticipated. But there is one group whose experience is very different: the approximately 20% of Australians who hate sport.



We are currently conducting research to better understand why people feel this way about sport and what their experiences are like living in a nation where sport is so culturally central. We have completed surveys with thousands of Australians and are now beginning to interview those who have described themselves as “sport haters”.

Australia, a ‘sports mad’ nation​


Australia has long been described as a “sports mad nation”, a reasonable assertion given the Melbourne Cup attracted crowds of more than 100,000 people as far back as the 1880s.

Australia’s sport passion is perhaps most evident today from the number of professional teams we support for a nation of 26 million people, one of the highest per capita concentrations in the world.





In addition to our four distinct football codes – Australian rules football, rugby league, rugby union and soccer – we have professional netball, basketball, cricket and tennis. In all, there are more than 130 professional sport teams in Australia today (across both genders).



Australia also hosts – and Australians attend – major sport events at a rate wildly disproportionate to the size of our population and economy. Formula One, the Australian Open, the National Basketball League, the National Rugby League and Matildas have all recently broken attendance or television viewership records.

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Most AFL fans will brave rain, extreme heat or freezing temperatures for the footy. Joel Carrett/AAP​

Why people hate sport​


The ubiquity of sport in our culture, however, conceals the fact that a significant portion of people strongly and actively dislike sport. Recent research by one of the co-authors here (Heath McDonald) has begun to shine light on this cohort, dubbed “sport haters”.

Sport haters account for approximately 20% of the Australian population, according to two surveys we have conducted of nearly 3,500 and more than 27,000 adults. Demographically, this group is significantly more likely to be female, younger and more affluent than other Australians.



Their strong negative sentiments are reflected in the most common word associations study participants used to describe sport. In the case of AFL, these were: “boring”, “overpaid”, “stupid/dumb”, “rough”, “scandal” and “alcohol”.

While the reasons for disliking sport vary from person to person, research shows there are some common themes. The first is in childhood, where negative experiences participating in sport or attending games or matches can lead to a life-long dislike of all sport. As one professed sport hater said in an online forum devoted to men who don’t like sport:



My brother would force me to play soccer against my will all the time as children. I think that is where my resentment for physical sport comes from because the choice was taken away from me by my twat of a brother.​

Sport hatred can also derive from social exclusion or marginalisation. Sport has historically been a male-centric domain that celebrates masculinity and can lead to toxic behaviour, which can exclude many women and some men.



Sport has also had to overcome racism, perhaps most symbolically visible by AFL player Nicky Winmar’s iconic protest in 1993. In addition, individuals with a disability still face barriers that result in lower rates of sport participation.

Here, the current Taylor Swift effect is noteworthy. The singer’s attendance at National Football League games, including the Superbowl, resulted in huge spikes in television viewership. Through her association, Swift helped make the sport more psychologically accessible for many women and girls.



The cultural dominance of sport also fuels its detractors, with many critical of sport’s media saturation and its broader social and even political prioritisation. (The debate in Tasmania over the controversial AFL stadium proposal is a good case in point.)



From a media perspective, Australia’s particularly strict anti-siphoning laws have ensured that sport remains front and centre on free-to-air television programming.

Sport’s cultural dominance also fosters resentment for overshadowing people’s non-sporting passions and pursuits, as well as creating societal out-groups. Journalist Jo Chandler’s 2010 description of moving to Melbourne is no doubt shared by many:



In the workplace, to be unaligned is deeply isolating. Team tribalism infects meetings, especially when overseen by male chiefs. In shameful desperation, I’ve played along.​

In life, it’s fairly easy to avoid most products you might dislike. But given sport’s ubiquity, simply tuning out is sometimes not an option.



The Anti-Football League, a club for haters​


In 1967, two Melbourne journalists, Keith Dunstan and Douglas Wilkie, launched an anti-sport club in response to this growing cultural dominance. In his founding address to the Anti-Football League, Wilkie made clear who the club was for:

All of us who are tired of having football personalities, predictions and post mortems cluttering our newspapers, TV screens and attempts at alternative human converse – from beginning-of-morning prayers to the last trickle of bed time bathwater – should join at once.​



Membership quickly reached the thousands. Soon, a Sydney branch was launched, bringing national membership to a high of around 7,000. According to sport historian Matthew Klugman, members found joy in being “haters”.



...they wanted to find a shared meaning in their suffering, not to extinguish it, but to better enjoy it.​

This led to some curious rituals, with members ceremonially cremating footballs or burying them. An Anti-Football Day was also launched, taking place on the eve of the Victorian Football League Grand Final.

The club would go on to experience periods of both prosperity and hiatus over the years, but has been dormant since Dunstan’s death in 2013.



With eight more years to go in Australia’s so-called “golden decade of sport”, which began with 2022 Women’s Basketball World Cup in Sydney and culminates with the 2032 Brisbane Olympics, it may be time sport haters to start a new support group.

If you consider yourself a sport hater, and are interested in contributing your experience to our ongoing research, please provide your contact information here.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by , Hunter Fujak, Senior Lecturer in Sport Management, Deakin University, Heath McDonald, Dean of Economics, Finance and Marketing and Professor of Marketing, RMIT University

 
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The big problem is that footy doesn’t go away for 6 months anymore. It starts in March and ends in October and is followed by inane commentators who can barely speak English continuing with postmortems on who did what and why and who should have done something else. Then comes the preseason training and reports on that and the dreaded draft, which is nothung more than an extended evening of boozing and food while someone tells them who has been picked by whom and why. They never seem to ask the question of those chosen, if in fact, they want to change clubs. That of course is followed by more postmortems on who picked who and why. It never ends now, but goes all year. That is why I have my own TV in my room where I can watch some non sport or have peace. Once the actual games begin, even trials, the shouting starts from the other end of the house. But like all footy fanatics, no matter how often you tell them that the umpire cannot hear their comments, they just continue to shout at the TV. And then they ring each other and discuss all the terrible decisions that they say were made. When you add in the cricket, be it 20 or 50 Overs or a test match that may actually last more than 2 days because the other team is not quite so inept as the West Indies were, it is starting midweek, and so is over by the time most people are free to attend. Or as usual it has been held in the wet eastern states and the games are a shambles. And then the poor darlings are to tired to play well! That is all they do and are well paid for!
Heaven help those of us who think something bad has happened when there are screams and race down to find our other halves simply yelling at the TV. Please make sport what it used to be. Footy of all stripes played in winter (May- early September) with absolutely no discussion shows in between. And cricket as it used to be. Only in summer. When it was played in whites (without all the advert logos) and by gentlemen, not thugs slanging off at each other. And please stop putting it on so many chanels.
Then those of us with no interest might get to go near the room where the main TV a is. I know my fanatic has the radio on as well as the TV because he doesn’t think much of those commentators. I don’t think much of any of them. The constant “it’s a goal, it’s great, oh no! he missed” is beyond a joke. Commentators used to talk about the play. Now they discuss the latest gossip about players including their love lives. It‘s Disgusting! And totally unacceptable. This is the result of modern social media, where everyone knows what you had for breakfast, and if they don’t they make it up. Just look at the way the Princess of Wales has been treated lately. She was supposedly dead because no one had been able to take a picture of her. Now that they have, the know it alls are trying to say it’s a fake! Are we to be subjected to fake footy as well? It has to end.

GO AWAY all you mind numbingly stupid people. There are so many other things in the world to do than sit watching a screen everyday, then watching the replays because I’m told it shows a different angle of a shot. Shoot the lot and let’s get back to life other than sport. Please! Please! PLEASE!!!!!
 
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Two weeks into this seasons AFL and I’m already over it! my son especially is totally obsessed with it, his life revolves around it. My husband isn’t much better. My family room is a sports free zone and my sanctuary away from football and cricket. As my birthday is during the footy finals I have to take second place. Even milestone birthdays have had to be organised around the footy fixture. And it never ends.
 
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I am on the Rd 6days out of 7 for 50 weeks of the year so I don't get much of a chance to look at tv
 
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The big problem is that footy doesn’t go away for 6 months anymore. It starts in March and ends in October and is followed by inane commentators who can barely speak English continuing with postmortems on who did what and why and who should have done something else. Then comes the preseason training and reports on that and the dreaded draft, which is nothung more than an extended evening of boozing and food while someone tells them who has been picked by whom and why. They never seem to ask the question of those chosen, if in fact, they want to change clubs. That of course is followed by more postmortems on who picked who and why. It never ends now, but goes all year. That is why I have my own TV in my room where I can watch some non sport or have peace. Once the actual games begin, even trials, the shouting starts from the other end of the house. But like all footy fanatics, no matter how often you tell them that the umpire cannot hear their comments, they just continue to shout at the TV. And then they ring each other and discuss all the terrible decisions that they say were made. When you add in the cricket, be it 20 or 50 Overs or a test match that may actually last more than 2 days because the other team is not quite so inept as the West Indies were, it is starting midweek, and so is over by the time most people are free to attend. Or as usual it has been held in the wet eastern states and the games are a shambles. And then the poor darlings are to tired to play well! That is all they do and are well paid for!
Heaven help those of us who think something bad has happened when there are screams and race down to find our other halves simply yelling at the TV. Please make sport what it used to be. Footy of all stripes played in winter (May- early September) with absolutely no discussion shows in between. And cricket as it used to be. Only in summer. When it was played in whites (without all the advert logos) and by gentlemen, not thugs slanging off at each other. And please stop putting it on so many chanels.
Then those of us with no interest might get to go near the room where the main TV a is. I know my fanatic has the radio on as well as the TV because he doesn’t think much of those commentators. I don’t think much of any of them. The constant “it’s a goal, it’s great, oh no! he missed” is beyond a joke. Commentators used to talk about the play. Now they discuss the latest gossip about players including their love lives. It‘s Disgusting! And totally unacceptable. This is the result of modern social media, where everyone knows what you had for breakfast, and if they don’t they make it up. Just look at the way the Princess of Wales has been treated lately. She was supposedly dead because no one had been able to take a picture of her. Now that they have, the know it alls are trying to say it’s a fake! Are we to be subjected to fake footy as well? It has to end.

GO AWAY all you mind numbingly stupid people. There are so many other things in the world to do than sit watching a screen everyday, then watching the replays because I’m told it shows a different angle of a shot. Shoot the lot and let’s get back to life other than sport. Please! Please! PLEASE!!!!!
I’m impressed well said couldn’t agree more.💖
 
I do take some interest in the AFL and other sports like top-level tennis. Free to air TV offerings are so terrible that there's not much else to watch anyway.
My main 'beef' is how the media in particular treat our sportsmen like gods, and maybe some of those who are obsessed as well. Yes they are skilled, but I admire one of the AFL players who said years ago 'we don't save lives'. Exactly. And don't get me started either on the millions some of them get paid or the verbal skills of the commentators!
We're starting to see the light at least, with the well-deserved award to the two melanoma researchers as Australians of the Year But they are just the tip of the iceberg. Let's start celebrating other scientists like them instead.
 
Sport was designed by Emperors to keep the plebeians from watching what politicians are really up to, true story. Starred with Gladiators, Spartans, Lions and exotic animals and men fighting them to the death, now it's just overpaid wankers saying, "look at Me". Especially in the U. S. Millions of dollars per season to throw a ball thru a hoop and Military paid peanuts with crappy weapons defending out country, that's where the money should be spent, on real heroes
 
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I used to love watching the tennis until the ladies all started squealing every time they hit a ball & recently I have noticed that the men have started the same animalistic behaviour. It would be nice to be able to watch the tennis again without all this appalling noise from the players.
 
I used to love watching the tennis until the ladies all started squealing every time they hit a ball & recently I have noticed that the men have started the same animalistic behaviour. It would be nice to be able to watch the tennis again without all this appalling noise from the players.
I agree 100%.
 
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There should be a dedicated tv station for sports., especially here in WA. Because of the time difference we miss out parts of programmes. I seem to think that back in England in the 50's and 60;s they had a station for sport.
 
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I am on the Rd 6days out of 7 for 50 weeks of the year so I don't get much of a chance to look at tv
Consider yourself lucky. You don’t have to listen to a lot of drivel.
I do take some interest in the AFL and other sports like top-level tennis. Free to air TV offerings are so terrible that there's not much else to watch anyway.
My main 'beef' is how the media in particular treat our sportsmen like gods, and maybe some of those who are obsessed as well. Yes they are skilled, but I admire one of the AFL players who said years ago 'we don't save lives'. Exactly. And don't get me started either on the millions some of them get paid or the verbal skills of the commentators!
We're starting to see the light at least, with the well-deserved award to the two melanoma researchers as Australians of the Year But they are just the tip of the iceberg. Let's start celebrating other scientists like them instead.
so very true!
 
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There should be a dedicated tv station for sports., especially here in WA. Because of the time difference we miss out parts of programmes. I seem to think that back in England in the 50's and 60;s they had a station for sport.
There is, it's called Kayo and you pay but it is live without any delay. Only the anti siphoning laws make the commercial free to air the principle broadcaster. More football, cricket, tennis on kayo and only the ratings drawing games are played on free to air.
 
There is, it's called Kayo and you pay but it is live without any delay. Only the anti siphoning laws make the commercial free to air the principle broadcaster. More football, cricket, tennis on kayo and only the ratings drawing games are played on free to air.
I was wondering if 7, 9 or 10 could use their others channels rather than the main one.
 
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While hubby likes to watch a bit of cricket we don’t wish to be inundated with sport on every channel so much of the time. We don’t have pay tv so sometimes there is nothing much on other than sport. Thankfully we have a big dvd and video collection of good old time shows we can put on.
 
For those who don't like sport on television, there are those riveting shows such as Master Chef, The Voice and Married At First Sight to salivate over.

The more I hear about these shows, the more I love my SBS.

With exception of the insomnia negating borefest called the Tour de France.
 
For those who don't like sport on television, there are those riveting shows such as Master Chef, The Voice and Married At First Sight to salivate over.

The more I hear about these shows, the more I love my SBS.

With exception of the insomnia negating borefest called the Tour de France.
World movie channel for me.😊
 
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For those who don't like sport on television, there are those riveting shows such as Master Chef, The Voice and Married At First Sight to salivate over.

The more I hear about these shows, the more I love my SBS.

With exception of the insomnia negating borefest called the Tour de France.
Most of these so called lifestyle shows are worse than some of the sport. Lucky we have such a good collection of videos and dvds to choose from.
 

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