Australian media identity David Koch, of Port Adelaide AFL club, said last week: “We are the only western sport in the world to play a game in China and to have this support is so important and significant.”

To test this claim, we asked a local English speaker in Shanghai with his finger on the pulse of the city.

Cameron Wilson has lived in Shanghai for 13 years. He's editor of a local football website and knows the city and people well.

“For somebody like me, based in Shanghai, you could walk down the street and ask 100 local people do you know if an AFL game is on this weekend?," he told FTBL.

“I can tell you, at least 99 perhaps even 100 would have absolutely no idea,” says Scottish-born editor of https://wildeastfootball.net/

“That’s just a laughable thing to say. These guys must live in their own little universe.

“There’s Chinese basketball with guys like Yao Ming, who is a huge name in the NBA [retired now but the Chinese great also played for Shanghai Sharks].

“There are huge European football teams playing games here each off-season, too, like Real Madrid, Bayern, you name it.

“And most importantly, as you guys know, there are A-League teams playing in the Asian Champions League against Chinese clubs for ten bloody years!

“And these AFL guys don’t even know about this?

“It’s really weird.”

This week, two of the biggest and most ambitious clubs in the Chinese Super League - Shanghai SIPG and Guangzhou Evergrande face Sydney FC and Melbourne Victory.

And going back five years, Western Sydney Wanderers famously dispatched Guangzhou in the 2014 ACL, on their way to winning the continent's biggest club trophy.

Wilson added that with the advent of the ACL, A-League teams have the ‘respect’ of Chinese fans because of their attitude and work-rate.

And international football - particularly European clubs such as Manchester United, Liverpool, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, and Real Madrid - all have significant fan bases in China.

As for the claims about AFL’s support in China, Wilson says the country is so vast and varied it’s hard to generalize.

However, he’s certain AFL has virtually no profile at all in his home city.

“What do Chinese people think of the AFL? I live in Shanghai and I didn’t go to the Aussie Rules game here last year.

"But everybody I know and the word on the street in Shanghai was the crowd was basically the local Australian chamber of commerce, Aussie expats and other expat Westerners and a few Chinese.

“This game wasn’t well received.

“I don’t want to disrespect Aussie Rules. I respect whatever sport people choose, that’s up to them.

“I wouldn’t disrespect it for those who are into it.

Ronaldo in China

“But their [AFL] international promotion strategy comes across as very insular and backward.

“Ignoring the fact that football is the world sport and Australian clubs have been representing your country across the entire continent, not just China, for over 10 years.

“Whoever said these things about the AFL are people of some standing, club officials. People who should know better, but obviously they don’t.

“It says a lot about them, they’re not very well informed and there’s no excuse, especially if they want to make Aussie Rules go outside of Australia.”

Wilson added full contact sports like American Football and Aussie Rules are not going to take off in China because of cultural issues.

“Chinese parents are afraid of rain! When it rains they bring their kids in because their children are going to get a cold.

“Full contact sports don’t have any real potential here. At least not in the foreseeable future.”