Clinton Casey and Tiger property deals had to be added on the end of this story for effect AFL stars' secret perks as extra payments revealed * Michael Warner
* Herald Sun
* February 25, 2010 THE AFL last night conceded 114 players were paid more than $2 million outside the league salary cap by club associates last season - and insisted it was all legal.
Chris Judd and Gary Ablett were already known to be pocketing substantial third-party sums, but after inquiries from the Herald Sun, the AFL admitted another 112 had been beneficiaries of extra payments involving club officials and sponsors.
The secret deals - classified as "employment and independent agreements" - ranged from less than $10,000 to more than $200,000, and fell outside AFL-approved marketing allowances, known as Additional Services Agreements.
Revelations of the payments came as league bosses this week promised to bolster their policing of third-party arrangements to protect the integrity of the salary cap.
Geelong president Frank Costa yesterday defended payments made from his private business empire to Ablett.
And Costa said the Cats might need to find new non-football income for Ablett to fend off a lucrative offer from the Gold Coast.
AFL football operations manager Adrian Anderson revealed last night several third-party payments had been blocked because they failed to stack up as "bona fide commercial value" deals.
"Players across the competition were paid $144 million last year, so you are talking about less than 1.4 per cent of the total money paid to players," Anderson said.
"They involve people connected to the football club ... and are policed strictly by (AFL investigations manager) Ken Wood.
"It's not an issue that has got out of hand, but it's one that we need to make sure doesn't get out of hand. There are genuine commercial opportunities that players can take up."
The AFL came clean on the extent of the payments after Carlton chief executive Greg Swann called radio station SEN to defend Judd's "environmental ambassador" role with cardboard giant Visy.
Visy is owned by the family of the late Blues president Dick Pratt.
Cash payments from Visy to Judd - believed to be at the upper end of the third-party agreements - come on top of his $1 million-a-season Carlton pay packet and were a key factor in the Blues luring him from West Coast.
"Chris Judd is not the only bloke. There are a lot of them. We're not Robinson Crusoe there," Swann said.
Ablett is the face of Costa's coastal property development business and is paid to do promotional and marketing work for the company.
Costa said the deal had been ticked off by the AFL.
"The AFL can more than see the value that I am getting out of it," he said.
"The service that the company is getting from the player has got to add up commercially in the eyes of the AFL, and they run a pretty strict department down there. In relation to Gary, it absolutely passes the test."
Asked if such private deals could help keep Ablett at Geelong, Costa replied: "Whatever we can come up with in the way of genuine support along those lines would be a great help in keeping Gary.
"Because there is no doubt, with our salary cap restrictions and the number of good players we've got, we can't match the Gold Coast offer as a straight club payment. So we'd have to have enough support activity, but it would have to be absolutely genuine and I stress that."
Judd's duties as an environmental ambassador include providing green tips for the AFL Record and appearing at Visy staff functions.
His image is also used on a cardboard jigsaw puzzle
The third-party deals revealed by the AFL do not include private investments such as the controversial property deal involving former Richmond president Clinton Casey and four Tiger players at Torquay.Anderson refused to name the 114 players, but he said not all clubs were involved.
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