May 4, 2005 -- The American Football Association (AFA) today unveiled its new blog (http://americanfootballassn.blogspot.com/).
Celebrating its 25th year, the AFA is a 501(c)(3) non-profit tax-exempt corporation that monitors the action of more than 750 senior amateur football teams from coast-to-coast each year.
Dedicated to the advancement of semi-pro/minor league football throughout the United States, they continue to serve as the national organization for non-professional leagues and teams
from coast-to-coast.
For the uninitiated, a weblog or "blog" is a website that contains brief, discrete pieces of information called posts that are arranged in reverse chronological order. A weblog can
contain a wide variety of content including written essays, annotated links, documents, graphics, and multimedia. Originally used by individuals to keep online journals, blogs have
arrived in the business communications mainstream in a big way within the past two years and have proven to be an excellent way to distribute information and engage web users in dialogs.
To that end, the AFA's blog implementation will provide documents, graphics and even multimedia related to semi-pro football around the USA complementing its current set of communications
tools.
This Blog can also be accessed as an Atom formatted XML site feed to be viewed in a Newsreader or syndicated to another site by clicking http://americanfootballassn.blogspot.com/atom.xml