New teams put VFL in the gun JAKE NIALL
March 5, 2010 THE future of the VFL competition and potentially some of its clubs is up in the air for 2011, as the AFL considers a major revamp of the second tier of the game in the eastern states.
First optionthe possible creation of an eastern seaboard competition - a de facto reserves competition for 14 of the eventual 18 clubs. Gold Coast and GWS and possibly Sydney and the Brisbane Lions would play their reserves in an expanded eastern seaboard competition, the remaining clubs coming from either AFL reserves (such as Geelong and Collingwood) or AFL-affiliated VFL clubs; it is unclear how stand-alone VFL clubs would fare in that revamped competition, which could have a different name.
The VFL clubs depend heavily on support from their AFL club affiliations, but it is unclear how many would retain those affiliations - AFL clubs can field stand-alone reserves - in the new landscape created by the expansion.Second option a ''northern states league'' would be created in which Gold Coast, GWS, Brisbane and Sydney would field reserves teams and be joined by the strongest clubs from the ACT.
The third - and least radical, or minimalist optionan expansion of the Queensland state league, with Gold Coast fielding a reserves team in that league, where the Brisbane Lions have their seconds. In this third scenario, Sydney's reserves would remain in the ACT league, and would be joined in that Canberra-based league by a GWS reserves side, while the VFL would remain more or less in its present form - and a Victorian-only competition.
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