A couple of more articles today in the media on the same topic ...Ground deals key as revenue gap growsJake Niall
May 5, 2011THE revenue gap between the AFL's richest and poorest clubs reached $21 million last year, with Port Adelaide and North Melbourne earning approximately that amount less than financial powerhouses Collingwood and West Coast.
Figures obtained by The Age show that the top-two earning clubs, Collingwood and the Eagles, each had football revenue of $45.6 million, compared to North Melbourne's $24.7 million and Port Adelaide's $24.6 million, the latter pair having the least football income of any of 2010's 16 clubs.
The difference between top and bottom clubs for revenue is for what the AFL terms ''club-sourced football revenue'' which includes membership, gate-takings, sponsorship, merchandise, corporate hospitality and all distributions from the AFL, counting the annual special distribution (ASD), the extra funding given to clubs that have smaller supporter bases or poor stadium deals.
Indeed, the figures demonstrate that the quality of a stadium deal is almost as critical to a club's earnings and overall financial heath as its level of support. Fremantle, which has a similar arrangement to West Coast, is a distant third on the cash ladder, with $34.6 million, followed by Geelong ($34.2 million), which also has control of its own stadium and reaps huge returns on relatively small crowds.
Hawthorn, fifth on the revenue ladder with $33.7 million, manages to finish above its traditionally stronger foes Carlton ($31.7 million) and Essendon ($30.6 million).
The Hawks have improved their position significantly by their lucrative deal to play four games a season in Launceston, where they receive a ''clean stadium'' along the lines of Geelong and also reap huge sponsorship dollars from the Tasmanian government.
Essendon, one of the strongest clubs in terms of support and net assets, ranked seventh for revenue last year, but the Bombers - having boosted their spending by hiring James Hird and Mark Thompson to head a high-calibre coaching panel - are on track to increase their revenue significantly this year, due to major increases in membership and other match-day earnings.
The revenue ladder is consistent with the debate about the spending gap between the likes of Collingwood and West Coast - which are one and two respectively in football department outlay - and North Melbourne, Port Adelaide, the Bulldogs and Richmond.
St Kilda finished mid-table in the revenue ladder, equal with the Brisbane Lions, at $29.8 million - numbers that are commensurate with its on-field performances. The Saints had the highest player payments last season, however, with $11.7 million, a million dollars ahead of second-placed Collingwood - a staggering figure that is believed to include the settlement to sacked recruit Andrew Lovett.
Richmond remains low on the revenue ladder, in 14th place and below the Bulldogs, despite its sizeable supporter base.
The Tigers' prolonged lack of on-field success, has seen them mired in the bottom five for revenue for much of its recent history, but all within the AFL industry agree that they have enormous financial upside if they win games.The most surprising number, perhaps, is that Adelaide ranks 12th for revenue, behind much smaller clubs Melbourne, Sydney and St Kilda. This is obviously a reflection of the poor returns the Crows receive from Football Park, which both South Australian clubs are abandoning for the Adelaide Oval.
Since club-sourced football earnings do not include poker machines and other non-football earnings, such as investments, they can be viewed as an accurate reflection of the current earning power of the 16 clubs (with 17th club, Gold Coast, to be added to the table at year's end).
If you subtract player payments from the equation, then the bottom four for football department spending in 2010 were Melbourne (13th), Richmond (14th), North (15th) and the Bulldogs (16th). The Dogs spent $4.7 million on their football department, not counting players, compared to the $8.8 million Collingwood spent on everything besides player payments. Essendon spent $7.2 million on football, players exempted.
http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/ground-deals-key-as-revenue-gap-grows-20110504-1e8g2.html#ixzz1LOpIJqiU