One-Eyed Richmond Forum

Football => View from the Outer => Topic started by: one-eyed on April 24, 2012, 04:21:53 AM

Title: Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly (Age)
Post by: one-eyed on April 24, 2012, 04:21:53 AM
Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly
The Secret Agent
The Age
April 24, 2012


MICK Malthouse is not the only one who believes the Anzac Day game should be shared around the clubs, rather than giving Essendon and Collingwood a duopoly on the second-biggest day of the season.

Board members of rival AFL clubs, key administrators and players have been discussing whether a performance-based strategy rewarding two clubs with the right to represent the AFL on the historic day would be more appropriate. It is a cash bonanza and there is widespread feeling that the AFL should share the wealth of opportunity among its clubs equally and that Anzac Day would be a good place to start. The Age revealed last week that the AFL had increased costs to clubs across the board in areas as diverse as iPad apps, Brownlow tables and talent pathway fees at a cost of up to $150,000. Clubs are now employing, on average, an extra six people a year, with more resources being spent in development, welfare and player recruitment areas.

But some clubs cannot afford the luxury of spending extra money on development, nor do they command the sponsorship dollars of the big clubs such as Essendon and Collingwood. There is a feeling other clubs would benefit hugely with exposure in the Anzac Day game.

The occasion has escalated considerably from an idea by Kevin Sheedy in his garden during the mid-1990s. Today, both Essendon and Collingwood use this match to increase the value of their sponsorships and corporate packages.

Anzac Day is now a commercial commodity. The event and the occasion are both so grand there is a feeling that 80,000 to 90,000 people would attend the MCG regardless of the two teams participating.

The Community Shield in English soccer, where the winners of the Premier League and FA Cup do battle at Wembley, always draws 90,000 people.

There have been suggestions that the two grand finalists from the previous year do battle, or the premier from the previous year and the winner of the NAB preseason cup. That way the NAB Cup would mean more, increasing crowd numbers, growing the level of interest and encouraging clubs to field stronger sides.

The evolution of the Australian sponsorship market has changed dramatically and there are plenty of players who feel the occasion is now too grand for two clubs to have a duopoly on "owning" the day.

No sport has two clubs that either own a time slot or have an opportunity to horde major profits like this.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/clubs-clamour-to-end-the-anzac-day-duopoly-20120423-1xhd0.html
Title: Re: Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly (Age)
Post by: cub on April 25, 2012, 05:35:22 PM
Think no one else could do a better job than these two have - Including the care factor would just leave it as is.
Title: Re: Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly (Age)
Post by: dwaino on April 25, 2012, 08:06:08 PM
Think no one else could do a better job than these two have - Including the care factor would just leave it as is.

 :cheers

I think the argument about them owning the goldmine that comes with it is a good one. But if there was ever reason for them to lose the exclusive rights to this game, I'm sure the same would be used on us to take away the round 1 curtain raiser.
Title: Re: Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly (Age)
Post by: Penelope on April 25, 2012, 08:30:36 PM
as well as the dream time game.
sometimes it pays just to STFU
Title: Re: Clubs clamour to end the Anzac Day duopoly (Age)
Post by: mightytiges on April 27, 2012, 10:17:07 PM
It should be shared around or at least have a night game as well as the NRL does. The AFL won't change it though as sharing it means you'd have to have North vs Dogs one time and that would struggle to get 50-60k even if both sides were 1 & 2 on the ladder let alone a crowd 85k+.