AFL financial reports highlight wealth divide

By The_Wookie / Roar Guru

Its finance reporting season for AFL clubs and the annual reports are in for all but St Kilda, and so we gain an excellent snap shot of the current economic climate amongst Victorian clubs.

We can’t produce the same across non-Victorian clubs due to the way those clubs are operated. Adelaide, Port and Brisbane (and I believe Sydney) do produce individual annual reports, but the WA clubs, and the new boys on the Gold Coast certainly dont at this time. Further, St Kilda haven’t supplied an annual report yet.

Memberships were up across Melbourne, with 25,000 members added to the 2010 tally taking numbers to 425,756. Seven out of ten Victorian clubs recorded increases, with Collingwood taking out top spot with an increase of more than 17,000.

At the bottom of the ladder, the Saints dropped more than 6,000 members. Collingwood, Hawthorn, Carlton, Essendon and Richmond round out the top five clubs for membership – all with more than 40,000 members.

To attendances, and these were also up across Melbourne with 25,000 more people going through the gates than in 2010 and total attendances in Melbourne and Geelong exceeding 4.3 million.

The big movers in 2011 were Richmond, Carlton and Essendon recording net gate increase of more than 50,000 attendees.

Collingwood still reigned supreme almost 90,000 clear of the Blues in second place. Bringing up the rear Melbourne dropped 70,000 at home, but the spoon goes to the Bulldogs and North, both under 300,000 attendees.

To revenue, and its Collingwood and daylight. The Pies turning over 75 million this year, more than 24 million clear of the second-placed Bombers. Hawthorn and Geelong round out the top 4 there.

North Melbourne haplessly bring up the rear on 26 million, 12 million below the league average (38 million for vic clubs). Victorian clubs raised more than $400 million in revenue in 2011.

Its been widely reported than nine AFL clubs have made a loss this year, but in terms of operations only two Melbourne clubs (North and St Kilda lost money). Four clubs made profits of more than a million dollars. (Collingwood made more than $2 million).

When write offs and depreciation are factored in, three clubs made a loss, including Hawthorn (albeit narrowly). The addition of AFL and Australian Sporting Foundation Grants almost certainly means two more clubs made a loss when these are taken out.

Total profit for the Melbourne clubs is more than $7 million, and more than $12 million after consolidation.

In marketing and sponsorship revenue, Collingwood remain top earning $22 million, Richmond, Essendon and Geelong on around $15 million.

Melbourne, North Melbourne and the Bulldogs fall way down on $8 million each. More than $123 million in sponsorship was raised in Melbourne across 10 clubs with an average of more than 12 million.

Revenue from Membership and gate receipts topped $100 million, Collingwood clear winners as expected with more than $16 million from members alone. Geelong, Richmond, Carlton and Essendon rounding out the top end, while North struggled with less than $6 million. The league average in Melbourne was over 10 million.

Gaming revenue is a tricky one, and most clubs include this with their social club takings – including hospitality and beverages. Most clubs in Melbourne average $3-4 million in gaming revenue.

Ironically, the biggest gaming beneficiary is Brisbane taking more than $12 million from pokies in 2011. North has no gaming revenue at all.

Melbourne clubs spent more than 170 million on their football departments in 2011, and even North managed to spend 15 million on theirs in 2011. Collingwood way out in front at 19 million, Geelong, Essendon and Carlton not far behind.

Theres a lot of positives in the annual reports for clubs. Some have debts, but they appear to be entirely manageable, and for the foreseeable future the clubs finances are backed by the AFL.

North and the Bulldogs remain causes for concern, they just appear to have no strong support either in the crowd or corporate sectors. As long as this remains the case, their future will be called into question by the waiting vultures, equalisation fund be damned.

On the flip side, that Collingwood benefits from the fixture more than any other club cannot really be a question any more.

Not that it’s Collingwoods fault – every club wants to play them and theres only a certain number of AFL games that melbourne clubs can play interstate, for which the Pies generally do meet the average.

Hawthorn continues to be a financial powerhouse, with a reported $20 million sitting in the bank, developments in Tasmania and New Zealand, and a feisty board.

I don’t think theres any coincidence that guys like Eddie McGuire and Jeff Kennett are – or were in Jeff’s case – at the helms of two of Australias most prosperous football clubs.

Carlton, Essendon and Richmond are begining to perk up again, and this is reflected in their memberships and astonishing increases in crowds.

Essendon and Carlton in particular will be wondering if they can the MCG for home matches when their current deals expire. Carlton are already selling out Docklands for matches against non victorian clubs.

The Crowd Says:

2012-10-18T03:08:35+00:00

Max

Guest


It's not true that "every side wants to play Collingwood". In some case it's the AFL that wants the big games at the expense of the clubs. Geelong for example makes more money playing the Suns at Kardinia Park than playing a home game against Collingwood at the G. Unfortunately for Geelong they only get 7 real home games per year. It's also not true that Collingwood do their share of interstate travel - they play less interstate football than any one else.

2012-01-27T00:21:23+00:00

Beny Iniesta

Guest


Their sustained period of success has (as it does for all clubs) translated into increased adult memberships 10-20 years down the line. Its no surprise that Hawthorn has experienced a resurgence since the dark days of 1996, a young army of Hawks fans is now buying adult memberships in droves that they weren't before.

2012-01-23T23:53:04+00:00

JVGO

Guest


Wookie , it is not the AFL's money. The money is entirely leveraged from the virtual monopoly AFL enjoys in the southern states and it is hence the supporters in the traditional heartlands money paid for by memberships, sponsorship, subscriptions and on their weekly trip to Woollies. For some reason these AFL supporters would prefer to see Australia emasculated as an international sporting force and the rest of Australia to suffer the same pointless obsession with a suburban football comp that Melbourne does. I cannot see why anyone thinks this is a good outcome, particularly supporters of the majority of traditional AFL clubs who have no chance of sighting a premiership in the next 50 years.

2012-01-23T01:59:14+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


You're way out of line here ICS - this article is about the big, bad, mean AFL - the fact that less than 1% of all pokies are in Victoria has nothing to do with nothing!! oops - I'm on the wrong thread!! sorry!

2012-01-23T01:53:41+00:00

it's called soccer

Guest


I note the main article on page 1 of today's SMH. Eastern Suburbs Leagues Club poised to build a $14 mill "country cub" in Narellan, thanks to changes in pokies law by Govt. I note the club's board is dominated by NRL people. Rugby League in NSW gave Australia the curse of pokies decades ago. Now the powerful Clubs lobby, based in NSW, is doing its utmost to prevent gambling reform. AFL is small-fry compared to this - but at least the money goes directly to the football clubs.

2012-01-19T05:14:20+00:00

TW

Guest


Well it looks like someone at the North Melbourne Kangas reads the AFL section on The Roar.(Just joking) The club has dampened down any speculation for the time being that the club will eventually end up in Hobart. Apparently they will receive about $900,000 for each game played down there in their current 2 games a year 3 year deal 2012- 2014. They "may" increase it to 4 games a year from 2015. Ballarat and surrounds in country Victoria appears to be their main target and according to their figures has a population of about 200,000 incl Bendigo. So a twin attack development wise outside of Melbourne has been adopted - Well at least they are trying. They are only guaranteed AFL funding until 2016 - Will they be be solid enough by then in an increasingly crowded sporting Melb. Read on --- http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/roos-sign-deal-in-hobart-rule-out-relocation-20120117-1q4pb.html

2012-01-18T20:50:15+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


Hmmm... Ch 7 refusing to go live as cost them ratings no doubt. people will find a way. Will they come back?

AUTHOR

2012-01-18T20:38:32+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


lets just say there are other ways of obtaining that.

2012-01-18T20:33:56+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


If you have a choice between FTA and Foxtel you'd pick Foxtel yes? HD & no commercials. Fox Footy is not just the games the return of AFL360,etc will be great.

AUTHOR

2012-01-18T10:52:36+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


ive got the Blues in Adelaide on one of their rare travel occasions. Cant wait to watch us beat the locals. With 17 FTA games thuis year, carlton supporters wont really need Fox to see games lol.

2012-01-18T06:36:31+00:00

Tony

Guest


A-league "clubs" have a membership of 1.......their owners. So do half the NRL "clubs". Have to be a real culture change if they are ever to be really Australian Football clubs.

2012-01-18T04:54:19+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


When the test cricket is done it will be time to look to the NAB Cup, at the rookies coming through,etc. Essendon plays its triple header in Perth so its TV for me. Feb 17 Fox Footy kicks off as well. Gotta love it.

2012-01-18T04:13:33+00:00

Jaceman

Guest


Over 400K if you throw in Freo - anyone heard the GWS club song or Freos new one?? Is there a new one for freo??

AUTHOR

2012-01-18T03:46:37+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


It seems that everybody is lately. I reckon theres actually been an increase in offseason fluff pieces this year. Training the house down, bulking up, getting fit, keen to face the new season. Its just 30 days to the start of the NAB Cup.

2012-01-18T03:18:43+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


Tony I would hope that doesn't happen. I would prefer to extend an olive branch to our Northern cousins and explain to them that this great culture we have of buying memberships is good for sport generally, and good for the nation, after all, it's expenditure that remains 100% within the nation, so the economy benefits, and everyone is happy. I hope they understand.

2012-01-18T03:17:51+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


The A League tax we pay to keep your competition going ICF.

2012-01-18T03:05:54+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


Both!!

2012-01-18T02:57:24+00:00

Tony

Guest


Patiently waiting for the AFL-haters to attack these membership figures. Of course membership is not part of the so-called traditional sporting culture of NSW & Qld.

2012-01-18T02:54:32+00:00

Tony

Guest


Who - Richmond or C/wood?

2012-01-17T23:30:07+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


Did you boo?

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