Melbourne Victory fans at the Melbourne vs Sydney blockbuster. The Eureka Flag is dead centre. Photo: Brett Robson.
The reputation of Football Federation Australia was hurt again over the weekend by another embarrassing debacle. At the Melbourne Victory – Sydney FC match on Saturday night, which drew the season’s largest attendance so far, Victory supporters were told they would be kicked out of the Telstra Dome if they flew the Eureka Flag.
Melbourne fans have been flying the Eureka Flag since the inception of the A-League in 2005. Why the sudden crack-down on a flag that is considered an “object of state heritage” by the Victorian Heritage Register (Wikipedia)?
Fans were told that the flag was considered inappropriate for its political symbolism. This, a flag used by the University of Ballarat in its official logo, banned for political symbolism?
Come off it, FFA.
The FFA apparently decided that the flag should be banned prior to the season. According to Victory spokesman Trent Jacobs:
“We were advised by the FFA earlier this season that it was to be banned and constituted a political flag.”We at the time expressed our concern about that and to our knowledge it hadn’t been looked at.”Source: The Age
So the FFA chose the Melbourne Victory vs Sydney FC match, traditionally the biggest game in the A-League season, to crack down on supporters flying a flag they’ve flown since the start of the A-League. Bad move.
They seem to have realised it too. Today the FFA denied that it ever meant to ban the flag. Ben Buckley, the FFA chief executive, said:
“It had been caught up in a wider review undertaken prior to the start of the A-League to ensure that national or political flags are not brought into games inappropriately.”In this instance, I believe it’s a case of the interpretation of `political’ going too far and the ban has been an unintended consequence of our spectator code of behaviour.”
And yet, the statement from the Victory indicates that the FFA made a clear decision regarding the flag, and had ignored the club’s concern about the banning. Today’s statement by Ben Buckley appears to be nothing more than a quick band-aid designed to avoid further embarrassment for the FFA, which already alienated fans earlier this season by announcing a restrictive seating policy.


3 comments ↓
The eureka flag is a powerful Australian symbol of the power of the underdog through unity and commitment and I am delighted to see it used by a sporting club.
Another f..k up by the FFA. The Eureka flag is part of Australian iconography and not an “inappropriate” national flag. It’s symbolic of Australia’s fighting spirit. The next idiotic decision from those who this year changed the seating arrangements to try and kill the atmosphere at the goal ends would be to have the Australian National Flag banned from Socceroo matches. Crickey! Watch for future press releases from the FFA.
the Eureka flag before Federation was taken as a symbol of Australian justice so it might be worthwhile looking at the symbolism again.
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