Before The Game is an Australian rules football/comedy television show in Australia on Network Ten.
The show is hosted by Andrew Maher, with regular panelists including Mick Molloy, Dave Hughes, Sam Lane, and Lehmo. The format of the show is a light-hearted discussion of issues relating to the weekend's matches played so far in the Australian Football League. Maher and Molloy replaced co-hosts Anthony Hudson and Peter Helliar at the end of 2005 and 2007 respectively.[1]
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Before the Game first aired during 2003 as After the Game. Originally, it was a half-hour broadcast following the Saturday night AFL match, aired at either 10.30 pm or 11.00 pm (depending on whether the televised match was live or delayed). During the existence of After the Game, the show was rated M and contained occasional coarse language. The show was a cult hit. One notable act was when the After the Game team shave Fraser Gehrig's mullet off at the end of the 2003 Season.
Following the show's success in its late timeslot, it was moved to a 6.30 pm time slot in 2004. When it moved to the primetime slot, to make it more 'family friendly', it was given a PG rating (but this had little effect on its comedy).
The show airs in between the Saturday afternoon and Saturday night matches. It usually goes for one hour, but sometimes it is a shorter half-hour version, if the AFL match to follow is live at 7:00pm (it is delayed in Sydney often after midnight but is shown at the earlier time on Ten's HD channel). A post-match show called The Fifth Quarter is screened after the match.
Before the Game can be heard through simulcast on Nova 100.
When the show started there was a segment called The Game's Not Over Until the Fat Lady Sings, where an overweight lady would go to a game and sing when she thought that the Game was over. This segment was scrapped due to the fat lady being fired for singing after the siren had gone.
Another segment that was on the earlier program was Diary of a Footballer, a segment in which a well known footballer would read out a page of their diary.
Sponsored by Aquamax, a company that produces water heating units, a football player has to answer ten questions about the history of their football club. The junior football club of the player with the highest score at the end of the year would receive a hot water system.
| Year | Winner | AFL Club | Score | Junior Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | David Wirrpanda | West Coast Eagles | 9/10 | Healesville Football Club |
The segment was replaced by Inside 60 in 2007, which has appeared on the show in much earlier seasons.
In the current program, the Banners segment still exists, where each comedic panelist creates a banner for a specific football club, often to reflect events scrutinized by the media.
A regular segment on the show follows talentless, egotistical, blonde, overweight youngster Bryan Strauchan (played by Peter Helliar) as he tries to make a career for himself at the Collingwood Football Club. The segments are presented as a mockumentary and features similar comedy stylings to The Office and similar shows. He also uses the catchphrase "Strauchanie" usually when he is referring to himself.
Bryan Strauchan is also known as Bryan Superstar Strauchan and Strauchanie. On the 2006 Grand Final episode of Before the Game he was involved in a Wayne Carey like incident, and this has forced him to leave the Collingwood Football Club and look for a new home in 2007. Strauchanie has expressed an interest in the Western Bulldogs but he would not rule out a move to the Kangaroos. Strauchanie looks far from making his AFL debut match, but he will not give up the hard work he has shown at Collingwood Football Club. Bryan Strauchan's overwhelming success on this show has led to him releasing his new DVD: "Strauchanie: Pure BS".
Newspaper Headlines
Each week, now scrapping the Banners, each host takes a turn at reading out a headline that relates to the up and coming and new news. This invloves the Australia, Age and Herald Sun, and are Totally Fictional.
Inside 60 with Dave Hughes
This involves Dave asking questions to a football player from any team, most of them being funny and hilarious, in which many players continually laugh. It lasts 60 seconds, finishing with a siren.
The Tool of the Week, the most popular segment of the show, is an award given by Dave Hughes and sponsored by Home Hardware. The award is given to a particularly embarrassing performance by somebody related to the AFL, either on or off the field. The "best" or most memorable of these tools is given the "Tool of the Year".
| Year | Winner(s) | AFL Club(s) | Offence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Dale Thomas | Collingwood Football Club | Filming his video blog while in the shower. |
| 2007 | Robert Copeland | Brisbane Football Club | Wearing a "man-bra" before a football match. |
| 2006 | Nick Dal Santo | St Kilda Football Club | Wearing rather inappropriately coloured bathers to the beach. |
| 2005 | Tony Pasquale (non-AFL player) | Subiaco Grounds Manager | Pestering umpires and players on match day in numerous occasions. |
| 2004 | Brett Voss | St Kilda Football Club | Publicly changing his bathers in front of the camera. |
| 2003 | Shane Wakelin, Shane Woewodin, Alan Didak, Matthew Lokan, | Collingwood Football Club | Participation in SunSilk shampoo advertisement: Very poor acting. |
In this segment Lehmo talks about a particular football skill, then shows footage of a player embarrassingly stuffing it up.
Ryan Fitzgerald goes to a child's house as a surprise. Fitzy takes them to their supported clubs and/or to meet their favourite player(s). Footballers involved have included Bryan Strauchan, Brendan Fevola, Scott West and Adam Selwood.
Before the Game is produced by Roving Enterprises, the TV production company owned by Rove McManus, an Australian television personality who appears on his own comedy/interview show Rove, formerly known as Rove Live. Peter Helliar and Dave Hughes are also regulars on the show.
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