Home Latest Australia FIFO footballers keep clubs in mining communities alive

FIFO footballers keep clubs in mining communities alive

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Source : ABC NEWS

Local football leagues in Western Australia’s Pilbara are thriving thanks to fly-in, fly-out (FIFO) workers who, in turn, are reaping the physical and mental benefits of team sport in the remote region.

Leagues in Karratha and Newman, 1,200 kilometres north of Perth, offer a FIFO permit, which allows players such as the Karratha Falcons’ Cody Rodgers to play in local competitions while away on shift.

Back home, the 24-year-old plays with the Augusta-Margaret River Hawks.

“I thought it would make being away from home doing FIFO a bit more enjoyable … play some footy and make some new mates,” he said.

Hopefully [I can] win two grand finals.

dozens of men and women in red and blue on a footy oval

The North Pilbara Football League says team numbers fluctuate due to the transient workforce in the Pilbara. (ABC Pilbara: Kelsey Reid)

Regular training gives FIFO workers a break from long shifts in the scorching heat, and a chance to be part of a community. It also helps maintain their physical fitness.

The North Pilbara Football League estimates 60 to 70 men and women will utilise the FIFO permit across the league’s six teams.

Man in footy jumper with wife and child at a green oval

Jesse Mason celebrates a Newman Tigers premiership with his partner and son. (Supplied: Jesse Mason)

Two leagues, one season

Jesse Mason was quickly snapped up by a local team soon after starting work at Newman, a remote iron ore town of about 7,000 people in the East Pilbara. 

“One of the fellas there caught wind that I’ve played a bit of footy in Perth so he was pretty quick in putting a Tigers polo shirt on my desk and getting me down to training,” the 26-year-old construction manager said.

Mason said joining the Newman Tigers allowed him to stay fit so he could play for his home team, Roleystone Football Club, when he was back in Perth.

A group of men in black sporting outfits in a huddle on an oval

Newman National Football League is made up of the Tigers, Centrals, Pioneers and Saints. (Supplied: Newman Tigers)

“They’re pretty good with cutting the fees down for FIFO players because they want more and more players to actually join the community and play in Newman as well,” he said.

It sometimes feels like you’re not just trapped at work, you actually get to do stuff and enjoy another little life while you’re away.

People walk off a plane in fluorescent work clothes

Thousands of men and women fly in and out of the Pilbara each week. (ABC News: Cody Fenner)

Propping up leagues

While it is hard to pin down exact numbers, the Pilbara Development Commission estimates there are 25,000 FIFO workers in the region at any one time.

Football WA’s executive manager of country football Brent Hedley said the FIFO permit had been best utilised in mining regions across the Pilbara and Goldfields. 

A red dirt town of many houses taken from a high vantage point.

Friday night sport is popular in Newman, with cricket in summer and football in winter. (ABC Pilbara: Jane Murphy)

“We know that participation from a mental health and wellbeing perspective is enormous in terms of what it provides for those participants,” Mr Hedley said.

“Obviously it’s great for the community, it’s great for the individuals involved and we really want to support regional leagues.”

orange sunset over palm trees at a footy oval

WA Football says the FIFO permit is best utilised in the Pilbara and Goldfields regions. (ABC Pilbara: Kelsey Reid)

In Newman, the local footy league is made up of four senior men’s teams, a number that would not be possible without FIFO workers, according to Newman National Football League president Kallan Hutchinson.

“I think at each football club, you probably just about turn over half your list every year just because it’s just the way the community is,” Mr Hutchinson said.

“It’s the camaraderie and the friendship that people make while they’re in the community in a town like this, especially in a remote town.

“It gives everyone a bit of an outlet to go out and have fun and be around their mates.”