With all the crap going on at the moment about gold coast poaching players, free agency and outside payments, it got me thinking about the two clubs that have dominated their respective leagues recently. Geelong playing in the last 3 Grand Finals for 2 wins and Melbourne Storm playing in the last 4 Grand Finals for 2 wins.
The two clubs though have vastly different methods in trying to combat the salary cap and keep a competatve side on the field.
Geelong have gone down the path of trying to keep as much of the playing group together as possible, hoping the lure of premiership glory will outweigh the lure of big bucks. They are "relying on the players in my opinion to accept offers which are about 20 per cent less than their market value"
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/geelong-cats-confident-salary-cap-squeeze-will-not-break-them/story-e6frf9io-1225780167980The Storm on the other hand rely on a spine (fullback, five-eighth, halfback and hooker) of superstars who are highly paid on long term contracts, with a big gap in payments from the top to the bottom.
"We have a massive gap between our top tier and the guys at the bottom of our salary cap."
"There's a lot of those on the minimum wage. That's just the way it is. We make no apologies for it."
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/sport/how-melbourne-storm-defies-salary-cap/story-e6frg7mf-1225782320430Every year the storm seem to loose 'name' players yet still keep fronting up. They obviously feel that you can afford to loose those run of the mill type players as long as the key positions are filled by elite, match winning players.
To me this makes sense, as its easier to replace those type of players than the out and out champions. I suppose the AFL equivalent would be having 3 or 4 top line midfielders and a KPF and KPB on the top tier of payments then surrounding them with sound players and youngsters on lower level players.
To me, on face value, the Storm have the better system in place for long term success, but would it work in the AFL?
Which path should Richmond head down in 3 or 4 years time ?
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