These following 10 original rules of AFL was agreed to by the founding fathers at the ‘Jerry Bryant’s Parade Hotel’ in East Melbourne on the night of 17th May 1859.

- The distance between the Goals and the Goal Posts shall be decided upon by the Captains of the sides playing.
- The Captains on each side shall toss for choice of Goal; the side loosing the toss has the Kick off from the centre point between the Goals.
- A Goal must be Kicked fairly between the posts, without touching either of them, or a portion of the person of any player on either side.
- The game shall be played within a space of not more than 200 yards wide, the same to be measured equally on each side of a line drawn through the centres of the two Goals; and two posts to be call the ‘Kick Off’ posts shall be erected at a distance of 20 yards on each side of the Goal posts at both ends, and in a straight line with them.
- In case the Ball is kicked behind Goal, any one of the side behind whose Goal it is kicked may bring it 20 yards in front of any portion of the space between the ‘Kick Off’ posts and shall kick it as nearly as possible in a line with the opposite Goal.
- Any player catching the Ball directly from the foot may call ‘mark’. He then has a free kick; no player from the opposite side being allowed to come inside the spot marked.
- Tripping and pushing are both allowed (but no hacking) when any player is in rapid motion or in possession of the Ball, except in the case provided in rule 6.
- The Ball may be taken in hand only when caught from the foot, or on the hop. In no case shall it be lifted from the ground.
- When a Ball goes out of bounds (the same being indicated by a row of posts) it shall be brought back to the point where it crossed the boundary-line and thrown in at right angles with that line.
- The Ball, while in play, may under no circumstances be thrown.
Kick2Kick has and will continue to release articles on the history of the AFL that can be found via “The Australian Game of Football 1858″ book and other resources. If you have something you would like to see or even add yourself please contact us.


July 24th, 2008 at 9:10 am
Now if only AFL was still this easy to play and understand..
What interested me was that they had the “ball thrown in” rule even back then. Also a question, when did the rule “out of bounds on the full” result in a free kick as back then and up to the 70s (I think) you could kick the ball out of bounds on the full and it would be thrown in.
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