AFL boss Andrew Demetriou willing to help Shinboners expand to tropical north Queensland Andrew Hamilton
The Courier-Mail
November 18, 2010CAIRNS has emerged as a potential semi-permanent AFL venue, with the league vowing to help the embattled Kangaroos find a new second home.
The cash-strapped Kangaroos missed out on an AFL-endorsed bid to play seven home games a season in Hobart and Launceston when the Tasmanian Government opted to renew its association with Hawthorn.
Now, three years after knocking back a $100 million relocation package to move to the Gold Coast, the Kangaroos are once again looking for greener pastures.
AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said the league would help the Kangaroos if they wished to explore playing home games in the tropics.
"We don't steer clubs, they have boards to make policies decisions," he said.
"But if they come to the AFL and ask for assistance, we will do our best to help them.
"We tried to help them out a couple of years ago, but ultimately they have a board that is chartered to decide the direction of their football club."
Cairns will host its first premiership match next season when Richmond play the Suns and Demetriou said government-funded upgrades to Cazaly's Stadium meant more regular fixturing was a distinct possibility - as was the case when AFL football first arrived in Launceston.
"We will have a good look at it," he said.
"It was how Tasmanian footy started. I remember York Park when it had a single grandstand with a great surface but was very cold and wet and windy.
"Now there is a fully covered stand the whole way around the ground. It is a terrific facility and it got to that point because we put more content in there.
"I think Cairns and North Queensland have a real appetite for Australian football and Cazaly's is a really great facility opportunity for us."
Demetriou agreed the failure of the Kangaroos' Tasmanian bid left the club needing to find an alternative region to expand its supporter base.
"The North Melbourne Football Club is obviously seeking another market to broaden its supporter base," he said.
"Hawthorn - with 8000 Tasmanian members out of 50,000 members - is a perfect example of that.
"North Melbourne saw an opportunity and now they will have to go back to the drawing board but it will be a challenge for them because they need to grow to keep pace with the opposition."
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