AFL 360 is an Australian television talk show that covers current issues in the Australian Football League (AFL). It airs on Fox Footy at 7:30 pm Mondays to Wednesdays during the AFL season. It is hosted by Gerard Whateley and Mark Robinson, and features players, coaches and experts as regular guests.

AFL 360
GenreAFL program
Presented by
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons15
No. of episodes1,000+
Production
Executive producerTim Hodges
Production locationsMelbourne, Australia
Running time60 minutes
Original release
NetworkFox Sports (2010-2011)
Fox Footy (2012-)
Release7 July 2010 (2010-07-07) –
present

History

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AFL 360 was launched as a weekly show on Fox Sports in 2010, airing on Wednesday nights, and continued as such in 2011. In 2012, the show moved to the re-launched Fox Footy channel, a sister channel to Fox Sports dedicated to AFL.

From 2012 to the beginning of the 2020 season, the show's regular schedule was each Monday to Thursday evening during the AFL season, except for Thursday nights on which an AFL match was played.

For the 2020 AFL season, when the AFL season recommenced after being suspended due to the due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the show's schedule became more flexible to fit in with the condensed AFL season, in which matches were played most nights each week but with varying start times.

Since the beginning of the 2021 regular season, the show has moved to a consistent Monday to Wednesday 7.30pm schedule, with Thursday night AFL matches becoming a more frequent fixture throughout the season.[1] It returned to a Monday to Thursday schedule for the 2021 finals series.[2]

Each year there is a special edition on the Thursday or Friday before the AFL Grand Final, and a final episode of the season on the Monday after the Grand Final.

The show has also aired additional episodes during the season under the AFL 360 banner, such as an extended interview between Whateley and Mick Malthouse in 2015, just days after he was sacked as Carlton coach. On select occasions, the show has returned to air in the off-season to cover major breaking news in AFL. This has included in October 2013 to cover Lance Franklin’s nine-year deal with the Sydney Swans, and in January 2016 following the final Court of Arbitration for Sport judgement in the Essendon Football Club supplements controversy. The show also aired a special Friday night edition on 3 July 2015 to cover the death of Adelaide Crows coach Phil Walsh.[3]

In July 2018, regular Tuesday guests Jack Riewoldt and Jordan Lewis hosted an episode of the show as part of a "player takeover" promotion across various Fox Footy shows.[4]

A special Sunday night edition aired on 22 March 2020, following the decision to suspend the 2020 AFL season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The show celebrated its 1,000th episode on 16 September 2020.[3]

In July 2021, Mark Robinson took medical leave from the program, along with all other media roles, and did not return as co-host for the rest of the season. The details of his medical condition were not publicised at the time. His co-hosting position was filled by a rotating roster of Fox Footy personalities. In the final episode of the year he appeared via video call and revealed that he had undergone emergency open heart surgery.[5] He returned to his co-hosting role at the beginning of the 2022 season.

In April 2022, on the first Thursday night since the start of the season to not feature an AFL match, a new edition of the program called AFL 360 Extra was screened. This first edition was hosted by Kath Loughnan and co-hosted by Nick Riewoldt and Jack Riewoldt.[6] This edition would later be called AFL 360 Plus.

Current Hosts

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Former Hosts

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Regular fill-in hosts

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For Whateley

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For Robinson

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Former fill-in hosts

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Regular guests

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Monday
"Coaches Night (2012-)"
Tuesday
"Players Night (2012-)"
Wednesday
"Heritage Night (2012-14)"
"Legends Night (2015-2020)"
"Old Mates (2020-)"
"Wednesday Watchlist (2021-)"
Thursday
"Fight Night" (2012–15)"
"Weekend Countdown (2016-2019)"
2010 Mark Maclure David King
2011
2012 Mark Thompson Rodney Eade Robert Murphy Brad Sewell Barry Hall Cameron Mooney
2013
2014 Paul Roos Jordan Lewis
2015 Nathan Buckley Brendon Goddard Mark Thompson
2016 Chris Scott Jack Riewoldt Dyson Heppell Brian Lake
2017 Alan Richardson Nick Dal Santo
2018 Robert Murphy Nick Riewoldt Jason Dunstall Dermott Brereton
2019 Rotating Coaches Adam Treloar
2020 Max Gawn Jordan Lewis Jarryd Roughead No regular Thursday episodes
2021 Christian Petracca Mark Maclure Leigh Montagna
2022 Rotating Players including Jack Riewoldt, Christian Petracca, Tom Hawkins, Zach Merrett, Adam Treloar & Lachie Neale Eddie Betts

Segments

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Regular

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  • Monday hero (briefly Monday champion, when sponsored by McDonald's) - The hosts give their opinions on who were the heroes from the previous weekend's round of football.
  • Two minute scramble - The hosts give answers to several questions over two minutes
  • Tuesday matinee - The hosts select a non-football story that they enjoyed from the weekend
  • The Furnace (real or overreaction?) - The hosts decide whether a particular statement is real or an overreaction
  • Rascal of the Week - Robert Murphy bestows "Rascal" status on a person guilty of mischievous behaviour. In 2017, this segment was taken over by Jack Riewoldt.
  • Wednesday love - The hosts select a person/club/event that they loved from the weekend
  • Looking forward to? - The hosts give their opinions on what they are looking forward to on the weekend
  • Weekend Forecast - The hosts suggest likely events/results that will occur over the weekend ("Sure Thing") and give scenarios that could happen on the weekend that would bring trouble or scrutiny onto a club or person ("Most at Stake" and "Doomsday Scenario"). Special guests often contribute to this segment.

Previous

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  • Who would you rather be? - The hosts select two names each that have been in the news that week (for good or bad reasons) and pose the question "Who would you rather be?"
  • 360 seconds - The hosts give answers to several questions over six minutes
  • The Bomber Diaries - Mark Thompson, in press conference style, takes questions from the hosts and viewers

Rascal of the Year

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While Robert Murphy's Rascal of the Week concluded in 2014, he continued to present a Rascal of the Year award in grand final week until 2016. From 2017, Jack Riewoldt took over hosting the award. The winners are listed below.

Year Winner
2012 Steve Johnson
2013 Luke Hodge
2014 Mark Robinson
2015 Ross Lyon
2016 Cooper Woods1
2017 Peter Steven
2018 Heidi Schwegler
2019 Stuart Dew
Notes
  • ^1 Woods won the award as an Auskick player featured on a half-time broadcast

Awards and nominations

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Year Award Category Result
2012 Australian Football Media Awards Most Outstanding Television Program Won
2013 Australian Football Media Awards Most Outstanding Television Program Won[7]
2014 ASTRA Awards Most Outstanding Sports Entertainment Program Nominated
2015 Australian Football Media Awards Most Outstanding Television Program Won
2016 Logie Awards Best Sports Program Nominated
2016 Australian Football Media Awards Most Outstanding Television Program Won[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ {{cite. In 2024 times moved to a 6.30 pm start. web|url=https://www.afl.com.au/matches/broadcast-guide/television-programs/fox-footy%7Ctitle=Fox Footy Weekly Schedle|access-date=2021-07-22}}
  2. ^ "Twitter - FoxFooty". Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b Hodges, Tim (15 September 2020). "AFL 360, Fox Footy show episode 1000: Gerard and Robbo, behind the scenes, tribute from producer Tim Hodges". Fox Sports. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Players Invade Fox Footy Studios For Player Takeover Round". Fox Sports Australia. 4 July 2018. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  5. ^ "'Coming out the other side': Robbo opens up on 'scary' health battle in heartfelt AFL 360 return". Fox Sports Australia. 27 September 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  6. ^ "Twitter - FoxFooty". Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  7. ^ Fox Footy scores at Australian Football Media Awards
  8. ^ FOX Footy wins at AFL Media Awards
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