The AFL grows, but at what cost?

By J.Schanssema / Roar Rookie

The financial health of our beloved sporting code has never been better. Record crowd attendances, TV audiences, memberships and a bumper TV rights deal.

But there has been a negative side effect to the way the AFL has managed and built the game: the loss of club culture.

Club culture has been slowly eroded over the last 25 years as the top brass in the AFL has reshaped and remodelled our clubs’ identities.

We have seen it all before in American and European sporting codes and leagues. We have seen the way money has changed the representation and essence of sporting clubs to resemble something more of a brand or a fashion label.

Barcelona FC, The Los Angeles Lakers, Manchester United. All these powerhouse sporting clubs have the same hallmarks of universal branding, marketing and the creation of an icon. But for all the bravado, show pony and elitism that these clubs ooze, there is still something that keeps these clubs a club.

Their home ground.

As massive as the Manchester United brand has become, each time we tune into them playing a home game at the “Theatre of Dreams” with their loyal members, we are reminded that this iconic sporting label is still a football club at its heart.

The club pays homage to its sons of old and past glories every time the players step onto the famous turf. For all the politics, the buyouts, the multi-million dollar deals, the Red Devils still do their dirty work at their old happy hunting ground in front their fan-base.

The LA Lakers still get to step onto the famous checkered floor of Boston Garden to play their old rivals. The Yankees host the Mets and the Bulls visit Madison Square Garden. In our own city, the home of AFL footy, the Melbourne Heart and Melbourne Victory, with barely 10 years history between them, enjoy a cross town rivalry between their two respective home grounds.

But in the AFL, Essendon, a 141-year old club with the most premierships in AFL history plays its home games in a 12-year-old ‘multi purpose’ stadium in a suburb known as Docklands.

The ground is shared between four other rival clubs, including arch rival Carlton.

To the east, the most supported club in the league, Collingwood, has its training facility in East Melbourne which is branded the Westpac centre.

The club’s spiritual home, Vic Park, has been almost completely bulldozed.

When you rob a sporting club of its home ground, you take away a part of who and what that club is.

The AFL has moved with great haste to create a professional, state-of-the-art round robin competition, using famous, fiercely supported and proud football clubs as its springboard.

We travel to the multi-purpose stadium with its roof closed to watch a sport played outdoors at every other venue.

We turn on Friday night footy wondering which is the home team. We see a game switched to an alternate venue which is the ‘home’ ground for the away team.

The R.S Reynolds and Allan Hird stands have been replaced at Essendon home games with a makeshift placard at the multi purpose stadium saying Lloyd End and Fletcher End. Which in itself, is a mockery of the actual names given to each end, Lockett and Coventry.

We debate away-strips and clash guernseys with such passion and gusto, but barely a cursory mention is made of the demise of Windy Hill, Victoria Park, Princess Park, or even Waverley.

In this day and age, where the almighty dollar rules all, we need to be careful just how far we want to make this sport about money, and not about passion.

When you focus on branding and marketing, you expand the club as a viable entity. But when its home is lost, a large piece of what that club is goes with it.

Now I’m not saying we should build 10 Etihad Stadiums. God forbid.

But instead of spending $460 million back in 2000 to build ES, we could have invested $100 million dollars or so at four or five suburban grounds. We could have invested the money back in the clubs. \

Instead we put all our eggs into one odd, awkward multi-purpose basket where clubs share tenancy like a boarding house.

Imagine Collingwood being able to host Port, North, St Kilda and the interstate clubs for true home games at a 45,000 seat capacity Vic Park, or Essendon doing similar at Windy Hill and Carlton at Princess Park.

Imagine a league where gate receipts were returned to the clubs in their entirety, instead of being divided up among the corporates and the AFL honchos.

Imagine giving the Victorian clubs the opportunity for a bit more business sense and control of their destiny, the likes of which Geelong are currently pioneering through their investment and home matches at Kardinia Park.

Imagine wrestling some of that unnecessary financial control off the AFL through the tenancy stadium system, as well as its crude drip feed of payouts to the smaller clubs subject to their terms and conditions.

Imagine a league where Essendon and Collingwood get to enjoy a home ground of their own, the way the Greater Western Sydney Giants (est 2011) and the Gold Coast Suns (est 2009) get to have one.

Progress is inevitable, but even the European and American hob knobs of sport knew not to mess with a clubs spiritual home and playing arena.

The Crowd Says:

2013-01-17T04:38:12+00:00

Dingo

Guest


Excellent video, what a great G.F that was.

2013-01-16T23:24:29+00:00

Brewski

Guest


@ Redb, Any way you slice or dice it, them's the facts about poor old Harry.

2013-01-16T23:22:35+00:00

Strummer Jones

Guest


Hmmm. My understanding is that the VFL demanded the money to prop up (save) the distressed Vic clubs you mentioned. If they were in a healthy financial situation it is highly unlikely (based on the evidence) they would have invited WAFL and SANFL to enters teams. This is my point. You mention the TV rights, though without WA (and to a lesser extent Brisbane) and the realisation at that time that the National comp was going to be much bigger than anticipated (huge crowds and TV viewers in Perth and in Adelaide, and the realisation that Adelaide would enter a team eventually) these licence fees would have been much less, so to say the $30m TV rights saved them in isolation is, in my view, not entirely correct. I agree that WAFL was desperate at that time, but so too was the VFL as this is the point. Also agree that by 1990 the health of the VFL/AFL was significantly better. The Vics had not realised that the National Comp was going to be this successful in the mid-80s In summary, my point is that without those fees and Perth entering a team in 1987, it is highly likely several Victorian clubs would have folded or merged.

2013-01-16T23:21:31+00:00

Brewski

Guest


A bit off topic, but considering some people in the northern states, and southern as well call Australian football just AFL, and this article is about growth, i thought i would link a article regarding the Darling Downs (QLD) Australian football league, which appears to be going from strength to strength. The league this year will be expanding 2 new clubs which will bring the amount of senior clubs up that way to 11 senior clubs, which in a country league is pretty big, the 2 new teams are the Chinchilla SUNS & South Burnett Saints. http://www.sportingpulse.com/assoc_page.cgi?client=1-3485-0-211752-0&sID=56335&&news_task=DETAIL&articleID=21893278

2013-01-16T21:32:18+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


AFL 360 is a great show. I think we need more AFL videos for our friends to enjoy. haha

2013-01-16T21:30:48+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


Harry, Nothing you say is factual you're a troll and it must be getting to you...

2013-01-16T21:29:23+00:00

Redb

Roar Guru


lets just say it wasn't an accident. :)

2013-01-16T13:41:51+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


Same reason every club has paid the same license fee since 1987, including Fremantle and Port Adelaide. Definitely didnt hurt the situation in Victoria, but wasnt the be all and end all people makeit out to be. Although it seems likely that GWS and Gold Coast didnt pay it.

2013-01-16T11:58:44+00:00

Peter Wilson

Roar Guru


Is redb's comment relevant and Moderators, why are you allowing comments like this and deleting my comments which are more facts than insults.

2013-01-16T11:50:50+00:00

Floyd Calhoun

Guest


So true Titus, so true!

2013-01-16T11:38:42+00:00

BigAl

Guest


If only! . . . perfect one stop shopping.

2013-01-16T11:37:41+00:00

Titus

Guest


Hmmm........Enter Shikari, may our stay be Epica with very little Moonsorrow.

2013-01-16T11:29:11+00:00

Floyd Calhoun

Guest


Ensitfiorm? Sounds like you'd need a prescription for that! As for Alerum, you'd better have some Imodium close by!

2013-01-16T10:25:53+00:00

Harry

Guest


G'day Brewski, Glad to see you have woken from your slumber. My comment about Redb is factual and not intended to be humour, satire or irony. Do you work as a council ranger somewhere...??

2013-01-16T10:02:59+00:00

Brewski

Guest


Harry said - Redb, Your shrill rants say more about you than your intended targets. That statement is obviously meant to be funny, or the irony of your statement has gone straight over your head, my guess is ....... phew, straight over the top.

2013-01-16T10:01:31+00:00

Harry

Guest


Yeah ya right Wookie....hope he's got a good......and cheap dentist.

2013-01-16T09:42:48+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


Strummer: there are places in the darker locations of the internet if you know where to look.

2013-01-16T09:41:53+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


Say what you will about AFL 360, they have a great production team when it comes to montages and stuff like this.

2013-01-16T09:40:34+00:00

The_Wookie

Roar Guru


Nah hes a Bombers man. Hard to tell the difference though

2013-01-16T09:33:36+00:00

Harry

Guest


Hmmmm......maybe try Monty Pythons Flying Circus.......!!

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