It's time for an A-League fantasy league

By Jack George / Roar Guru

There have been talks for a while now about independently broadcasting A-League matches on an app.

Currently, we have the MyFootball app on which you can stream A-League and W-League games for seven dollars a month, unless you are a Telstra customer in which case it is free.

However, Football Federation Australia’s MyFootball app has struggled to gain awareness, with many people uninformed about the app and majority choosing Fox Sports or Kayo Sports over the FFA’s independent broadcasting platform.

But there are other ways that the FFA can utilise the app until the end of Foxtel’s contract.

More and more football leagues are beginning to deploy fantasy leagues, in which you sign players for different amounts of money within a transfer budget.

In some apps, you can make transfers throughout the season, allowing you to sell a player and sign another, within the transfer budget of course.

After each matchday, each player gets allocated points for your team. You also pick a team captain, who gets double points and a vice-captain who gets 1.5 amount of points.

The rules are simple; the team with the most amount of points after each round wins. You can join different leagues to compete with your friends and family members.

Overall, it is an interactive game that allows you to feel part of different players performances, maybe making you want to watch a match you usually wouldn’t tune into because someone from your fantasy team is playing.

This allows for a more interactive league, making fans feel ‘part’ of games, even if the club they support isn’t playing.

The FFA is always looking for ways to get fans to interact with the A-League, and a fantasy league may hold that key.

A great example of a successful fantasy league is the English Premier League FPL.

The English fantasy Premier League allows you a budget of 100 million and has three wildcard features.

Once a season, you are allowed a triple captain, meaning your captain will pick up triple points instead of double. You are also allowed a ‘free hit’, meaning that for one round you have an unlimited budget to make transfers. Your team then returns to normal after the round.

There is also a bench boost, where your four bench players count towards the total amount of points. You are allowed one transfer per week.

The fantasy Premier League has also been marketed intelligently.

The Premier League added it to a section of their app allowing the FPL to flourish and increase popularity within the application.

They started up a Twitter account which has gained 1.1 million followers since August 2016 and has added fantasy shows to their Youtube channel.

The Premier League’s fantasy has been a huge success in allowing fans to interact with the league.

FFA’s CEO James Johnson stated in his XI Principles for the future of Australian football document that he wants to ‘stimulate the growth of the Australian football economy and reset and rebuild Australian football products’.

With Fox Sports pulling further away from developing football within our country it is becoming increasingly likely that the FFA will have to develop initiatives to connect with fans.

It’s time for an A-League fantasy league.

The Crowd Says:

2021-10-21T07:51:45+00:00

SkyBlue99

Roar Rookie


There's always Artificial A-League... Been running for a few years now. I like it, it's about goals. No assists, no imaginary 'points' for passes or penalties for cards. Just goals (and clean sheets for defenders). Good fun. And exclusive player ownership. I'm not a big fan of the "5,000 people in a league and 4,000 have the top striker" type game. I had Matt Derbyshire last season, and nobody else in my league did. which was great...! Link: artificialaleague. com

AUTHOR

2020-08-24T00:06:21+00:00

Jack George

Roar Guru


I'll have to check out that platform, thanks. However, I feel it would be better for the league if the FFA was to run an official fantasy league.

AUTHOR

2020-08-24T00:04:44+00:00

Jack George

Roar Guru


I do see your point, but the fact that the Premier League has done so well with a fantasy league gives me hope that other competitions can do the same. However, I do agree that the system will need to favour players who actually play well consistently over the game, not the striker that scores the final goal. However, there is good marketing potential, especially for a league like the A-League that is looking to appeal to the next generation.

2020-08-23T23:46:24+00:00

At work

Roar Rookie


But it's better then nothing and if the scoring system can be improved then it's a great engagement tool.

2020-08-23T23:45:16+00:00

At work

Roar Rookie


I've played a few fantasy league comps for the A League over the years on a range of different platforms, although generally I come out of it feeling underwhelmed. I just don't think football works that well because you can have a very influential player in a match not get any points, or at least not score as many fantasy points then a player who gets an assist or goal but otherwise is useless for the other 85 minutes. I just don't see football as a stat heavy sport, which makes fantasy comps difficult.

2020-08-23T23:00:31+00:00

TK

Guest


I agree it adds to involvement in the league and teams you might not otherwise follow in as much detail. I have played with mates for the last three years. Fox ran one for a couple of years and then stopped there's another platform 'sportsdeck' we played this year. It's great and I agree would better promote the game and generate more interest.

Read more at The Roar