Buddy and the Swans, an unlikely perfect match

By Warren Cooper / Roar Guru

When Lance Franklin signed with the Sydney Swans, it sent shock waves throughout the AFL.

The mass hysteria it created over the Cost of Living Allowance (COLA), and how the GWS Giants were blindsided by their crosstown rivals, at the time, it was thought of as the most unimaginable combination in footy – how on earth would it work?

And could it work? Few believed it could.

The Sydney Swans, now one of the most envied sporting clubs in Australia, with its much respected and sought after “Bloods” culture, and Lance Franklin, a show stopping glam power forward who is no stranger to front page headlines. It sounded like the AFL’s version of the Odd Couple.

It was so unthinkable, many believed the champion Hawks forward could threaten the Bloods culture, and potentially ruin it.

Even legendary Swans figure, Bob Skilton, who has seen his club go from the brink of oblivion and being the laughing stock of Australian sport, to being one of the most respected brands in Australian sport (now worth $3 million dollars in corporate sponsors alone), feared his beloved club could potentially endanger everything it has worked hard for.

Initially, it was looking that way, when rumours of alleged friction in the Swans camp emerged. Apparently Ryan O’Keefe and Franklin were at loggerheads, and Dan Hannebery had pranged Buddy’s Mercedes.

For much of 2013, the expectation was Franklin would go to the GWS Giants.

It was a no brainer – a perfect match. GWS, a club desperately trying to settle in the AFL’s toughest expansion area, and Buddy, a star forward with a perfect chance to escape the Melbourne fishbowl. There was a staggering offer of $2 million a season over six years on the table, with the AFL looking to endorse the Franklin move to the Giants, by offering him an ambassadorial role to promote the game in Western Sydney.

The Giants offer was lost amidst all the hysteria over Franklin’s $10 million over nine years deal at the Swans.

What also got lost in the hysteria was Hawthorn had offered Buddy $4.5 million over four years to stay a Hawk.

Understandably, the Giants fumed the Swans had beaten them to Buddy’s signature, they felt cheated. However as it unfolded, Buddy, via his manager, had instigated talks with the Swans after the 2012 Grand Final.

There was something attractive for Buddy about playing for Sydney.

All the talk about the money and the size of his contract has been proven to be complete nonsense, considering he was offered richer deals.

Presently, at the Swans, he is earning less over the next four years than he could have been at Hawthorn, and by the time the Swans feel the pinch of his heavily back ended contract, the club will have had most of its current roster either retired or moved on, the salary cap will have increased, and players at other clubs will be on even bigger deals.

The money alone seems it would not have been enough to get Buddy ‘s signature, it was the whole package.

What the Swans offered him was far more attractive. The culture, the settled environment, the guarantee of on field success, and the lure of Sydney’s social network.

Not even escaping the Melbourne fishbowl has had anything to do with it.

There was talk about the escape from the Melbourne fishbowl, signing with Sydney immediately ruled out any escape from the fishbowl, considering the Swans had been under heavy fire from rival clubs after signing Kurt Tippett.

The Sydney fishbowl, as far as the AFL is concerned, operates differently to Melbourne. It has to be a really good story to make the back page in the NRL soaked Sydney media. And an even better one to make the front page.

Crashing your girlfriend’s Jeep into four parked cars is going to do it. But so is a nine goal haul, with his team sitting on top of the AFL ladder with two rounds to go.

Why would Buddy go to the Swans, just to escape the media?

Melbourne and Sydney’s media have both been sweating on Buddy going to the Swans being a disaster?

A year in, so far the disaster hasn’t happened.

In fact, he is playing as well as he has ever done, and the Swans faithful have embraced him, the club has hit 40,000 members for the first time, and if Sydney goes on to win this years flag, the membership number is only going to skyrocket.

No one talks about why Buddy possibly baulked at playing for the GWS Giants.

Western Sydney is a traditional rugby league area, and home to four of the proudest clubs in the NRL, with histories as deep as any traditional AFL club.

Buddy was supposed to be the Giants very own Tony Lockett and do for the GWS what Plugger had done for the Swans. He could do for the Giants what Gary Ablett Jr has done for the Gold Coast Suns.

The sort of heavy promotion required for the AFL in Western Sydney would not be attractive to a player like Lance Franklin, who, regardless of his charismatic nature, just wants to play football.

At the GWS he would not have just been playing football.

The other problem is, the Giants are far from settled. Are they for Western Sydney, or are they for Canberra? They look vulnerable in Western Sydney and look to have a decent following in the ACT. Not a hard sum to figure out there.

They also look vulnerable to raids by Victorian clubs ready to pounce on any homesick kids.

The AFL has underestimated the challenge of establishing a club in Western Sydney.

But for Buddy, that is not his problem. At least at the Swans, he can just play football, and that’s just perfect.

The Crowd Says:

2014-09-02T13:13:13+00:00

John Hamilton

Roar Pro


Nick Haynes recently re-signed with GWS

2014-08-25T08:56:56+00:00

ZRock

Guest


I think the Swans had to recruit Franklin. The Swans have a history of tall power forwards (Capper, Lockett, Hall) and their list is aging. Also, the presence of Alessandro Del Piero probably scared the living daylights out of everyone involved with the AFL and probably all other sports in Sydney and the Swans hierarchy probably decided they needed a player to build the team around as well as promote the game in Sydney FC's territory.

2014-08-25T07:21:50+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


About the one woman?

2014-08-24T07:27:52+00:00

Peter Baudinette

Roar Guru


No it isn't mate. He and the back six all have it, some more prominent than others.

2014-08-24T06:12:42+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Peter, that tattoo is about his wife!

2014-08-24T05:28:26+00:00

Peter Baudinette

Roar Guru


TomC Something tangible for you, to show how real the bloods culture is. The three star tattoo in Malceski's back. One star for each of the key words which are the framework of the teams values. Hard. Relentless. Disciplined. After the 2012 GF, he and others went and got the tattoo. His is most prevalent, you can see one of them on his shoulder.

2014-08-23T08:20:11+00:00

david graham

Guest


Who on earth is this Haynes character?

2014-08-21T22:57:50+00:00

Jim

Guest


Mitchell is not going anywhere.... where do people keep pulling this dribble up from?

AUTHOR

2014-08-21T10:13:54+00:00

Warren Cooper

Roar Guru


Take a chill pill Tom C. You said, 'The bloods culture appears to be a nebulous idea that is used to create a romance around simply running an efficient, successful football, with a recruitment strategy muscled up with an extra salary cap allowance." "Absolutely the extra salary cap allowance is a significant factor in the Swans’ success. I mention it because it is a very tangible, clear advantage as opposed to the nebulous (yep) concept of an all encompassing culture that can’t be defined or quantified." How can I twist that? Either the club culture has played or role, or not. Either the salary cap allowance is a reason for the Swans success, or not. Either footbally club culture is a myth, or not. The whole Kennett's curse thing you dismiss, is a bit of fun. The Bloods Culture is used by commentators to describe how the Swans have achieved what they have against the odds. For the Swans themselves, it is about being hard, disciplined, and having respect. A no d*ckheads policy. No one has said the Swans have a monopoly on football club culture, Hawthorn and Geelong have great cultures, and Port Adelaide is developing one, who by the way, Ken Hinkley said the Power would look to emulate the culture Sydney has created for themselves. The Canberra Raiders in the NRL consulted the Swans to find out what the Bloods Culture is. The GWS are already proving that an extra salary cap allowance, one, does not make it a big lure for players to move interstate to play football at the Giants, and two, play apart in building success. And as the Swans, and even the Lions have proved, it takes more than a salary cap allowance to build the success Sydney has achieved. Particularly for clubs in non-traditional AFL states, but just as true for any footy club. For the most part, the Swans biggest achievements have mostly been without high profile football stars. In 2005, they had Barry Hall and Adam Goodes. In 2012, it was just Adam Goodes. Compare the list of stars in the Swans 2012 Grand Final team - before they recieved recognition after winning the game - to the Hawks list of stars. At the same in 2005, compare the Eagles list of stars, compared to the Swans. Not a hard sum.

2014-08-21T03:53:10+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Some might argue that he already is.

2014-08-21T03:20:36+00:00

geoff

Guest


Buddy has now played 200 games. 9 years x 22 games = another 200 = 400 games. He will be one of the greatest players ever if he achieves this

2014-08-21T00:20:22+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Ryder? Freo's CHF next year. His dad played for East Freo. Paddy has purple blood. See, I can make audacious claims too...and as you all know, that's against my character.

2014-08-21T00:16:04+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Yes, Gene, but Buddy doesn't actually carry the money bags on his back during a game. The money won't make him weary (spending it might).

2014-08-21T00:04:13+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Top post Olivia.

2014-08-20T23:12:24+00:00

momentbymoment

Guest


Bosk is not a happy man - such is life.

2014-08-20T22:24:04+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


Why do you put words in my mouth then tell me to give you a break? Give yourself a break! You can go back and look at my posting history in 2012 if you like: I was very bullish on the Swans from very early in the year. Some might have written them off but it's not true that 'no one gave the Swans a chance'. I am not at all saying that a greater salary cap is the only reason the Swans are successful, nor that culture has no role at all. I just haven't said that. You just don't appear to be capable of assessing what I've written on its own merits: you have to simplify and twist it in order to respond to it, or airily assume that I disagree with you out of jealousy. It speaks volumes for yourself and for your case.

2014-08-20T19:49:35+00:00

Jason K

Guest


I think it's a bit of an exaggeration to say that no one saw the Buddy/Swans deal working out. When I first heard about it, Buddy to the Swans made perfect sense to me. I have an MBA in marketing and my first thought was "that's a marketing powerhouse right there!" Beyond the marketing, it made perfect sense as a tactical move in terms of improving the team's chances of winning. When you count the money Buddy will make on licensed Swans merchandise with his name on it, the deal is a no brainer, even though his salary may be lower than he would receive from GWS or Hawks.

2014-08-20T14:07:43+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I love Suban. I think they will play him ahead of Mora...but I want Mora.

2014-08-20T14:04:07+00:00

Peter Baudinette

Roar Guru


Don, if you revert back to the first line of my comment, 4 posts back, that is pretty much what Bosk was saying.

2014-08-20T14:03:21+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Seven untold stories from Round 21

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