Author Topic: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)  (Read 11479 times)

Jackstar is back again

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #45 on: April 04, 2012, 07:24:29 AM »
He is one of many who shouldn't have a job

Offline JVT

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #46 on: April 04, 2012, 09:17:05 AM »
Mifsud should be given the boot, clearly at fault over the Rendell situation and now Neeld in the space of 3 weeks.

Offline rogerd3

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #47 on: April 04, 2012, 12:29:32 PM »
I work in the building industry and have involvement in this project - at Geelong
Everyone including the AFL and teams scheduled to play there knew of restrictions at the stadium late last year.games could of been rescheduled and moved then.thats life.

Yes Jack everyone knew late last year that the thing was beig redeveloped and it would have reduced capicity that is not in dispute

What wasn't known then was how many tickets/seats Geelong would make available to visting teams.

And isn't the issue here the fact that visiting clubs are only getting 200 tickets allocated to them?

 


clear as mud.  :thumbsup

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond shouldn’t dictate where away games are played (theRoar)
« Reply #48 on: April 04, 2012, 04:05:41 PM »
Richmond shouldn’t dictate where away games are played
By Michael DiFabrizio
theroar.com.au
4 Apr 2012



News surfaced yesterday that Richmond CEO Brendon Gale had last month attempted to get his club’s Round 4 clash with Geelong shifted away from Simonds Stadium.

The fixture was locked in for Geelong’s unfurling of the premiership flag, but Gale clearly wasn’t feeling sentimental about playing out in the sticks.

“I’ve got a responsibility on behalf of our members to push to get them into venues where as few as possible miss out,” Gale said.

“One of the guiding principles of the AFL fixture is to maximise attendances and we’ve got a situation here where 20,000 to 25,000 of our members are going to miss experiencing the game live. Etihad Stadium is vacant on the day in question and we’re talking about a ground with double the current capacity of Simonds.”

What a joke.

It’s Geelong’s home game so they should, as often as possible, be able to play it where they wish.

Sure, more of Richmond’s members may be able to attend if it was in Melbourne – but why should the venue of a Geelong home game be decided by Richmond members?

It’s ludicrous. Especially considering that were the game moved to Melbourne, there would be Geelong members that miss out (the time and money it costs to get up the highway should not be underestimated).

But what truly made Gale’s suggestion out of whack was two factors that Caroline Wilson, the Richmond-supporting journalist who broke the story, failed to mention.

The first is that only last year, Geelong played a home game against the Tigers at Etihad. It attracted just 33,761 supporters. (25,000 Richmond members missing out? Err, where were they all that day?)

The second point is that if the Tigers are truly so appalled about their members missing out on an away game, perhaps they need to look at the venue of their Round 16 home game.

Yep, that’s right. It’s in Cairns.

Not sure how many members will be able to make it up to that one.

While Gale was partly pushing ahead with his club’s request to ensure they don’t get games in Geelong down the track, the fact that he’s made a big deal out of this year’s fixture was poor form.

If your club is going to sell a home game, you can’t expect other clubs to give up their home games to compensate you.

Some might say that he had a point when he said Carlton and Essendon – who have (slightly) fewer members than the Tigers – don’t travel to the Cattery.

But that was a dud point too. The Blues and Bombers were finalists last year. One of them beat the Cats, the other lost only after a concussed ruckman missed a set shot from 15m out with less than two minutes remaining.

Clearly, a clash between either of them and Geelong has the potential to explode into a blockbuster. You cannot say the same thing when Richmond is the opponent. Not yet, anyway.

Make it to September, and develop even a minor modern-day rivalry with the Cats. Then, Brendon, you can get back to us.

http://www.theroar.com.au/2012/04/04/richmond-shouldnt-dictate-where-away-games-are-played/

gerkin greg

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #49 on: April 04, 2012, 04:51:23 PM »
Agree with that muppet. Gale should shut the eff up.

The only point worth making is why didn't Carlton, Essendon or Collingwood play down there when they were poo and had eff all members? Carlton were the worst performing team of the decade and at one stage had about 40 members left. Yet when did they last play down there?

The fixture isn't fair, we all know that, just get on with it FFS

Offline Coach

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #50 on: April 04, 2012, 04:55:55 PM »
Michael DiFabrizio goes bang. Cop that :lol

Well said too

Offline Mr Magic

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #51 on: April 04, 2012, 06:29:58 PM »
Michael DiFabrizio goes bang. Cop that :lol

Well said too

Yep. Over to you Benny.

Offline rogerd3

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #52 on: April 04, 2012, 08:02:39 PM »
thats alright once we get up and about they
will be all screaming to play us. :lol

i ask how can a club that has been so successful
still fail to attract members...strange.

Dubstep Dookie

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #53 on: April 04, 2012, 08:17:51 PM »
We shouldn't be in this position in the first place with so many members.


Offline Loui Tufga

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #54 on: April 04, 2012, 11:48:57 PM »
We shouldn't be in this position in the first place with so many members.

Correct, now bend over!

Offline yellowandback

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #55 on: April 05, 2012, 06:47:40 AM »
The guy is a crock. We are part of the Big 4. Give us all the takings and we'll consider it.
Otherwise shut the stuff up and move the game.
I earnt the right to sit in the locker room bar and occasionally glance at the TV when we kick a goal by being a supporter of a Big 4 team.
Now I have to do that at home  :banghead
« Last Edit: April 05, 2012, 12:25:16 PM by one-eyed »
It's that simple Spud
"I discussed (it) with my three daughters, my wife and my 82-year-old mum, because it has really affected me … If those comments … were made about one of my daughters, it would make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. I would not have liked it at all.”

Offline JVT

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #56 on: April 05, 2012, 09:32:40 AM »
The RFC should have a say where we play all our games, forget the other muppet clubs, we should dictate it all!! Just like Collingwood  :rollin :lol

Offline one-eyed

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A no-brainer: it's Cats-Tigers at the 'G' (BPL)
« Reply #57 on: April 16, 2012, 05:27:18 AM »
A no-brainer: it's Cats-Tigers at the 'G'
Charles Happell
Backpagelead.com.au
Sunday, 15 April 2012 22:24



Round four of the AFL throws up one of those fixturing anomalies that would have been easy enough to explain away when the draw was first released but now, three rounds into the new season, seems just plain ridiculous.

Richmond is due to travel down to Simonds Stadium (the ground formerly known as Kardinia Park) for the 1pm game against Geelong on Sunday. The Tigers, after a strong win over Melbourne and competitive opening efforts again Carlton and Collingwood, are ready to emit one of their throaty early-season roars - and their fans would have turned out in numbers to see them take on the 2011 premiers.

But Skilled Stadium is undergoing an upgrade at the moment, so the capacity is 24,500. That will mean the yellow-and-black contingent will be next to anonymous in the sell-out Geelong crowd. And the fact the Cats will unfurl their premiership pennant from last year will mean visitors' tickets are even more scarce than usual.

Meanwhile, the late match scheduled for the MCG on Sunday is Melbourne's home game against the Western Bulldogs - a contest that might, on the most generous assessment, attract 30-35,000 fans. (The corresponding fixture at Etihad last season drew 29,500.) Given that both teams are winless, and struggling badly, the match will provide much-needed succour for one club.

So the solution for the AFL - on the surface, at least - is simple: switch the two games. Play Geelong-Richmond in the early match at the MCG; Melbourne-Bulldogs in the twilight game at Etihad.

The Cats and Tigers would surely attract a crowd of 70,000 at the MCG - maybe many more on a nice day - in (faint) echoes of their great grudge matches of the 1960s. (Or, put another way, 45,000 more than will get to see the game as it's currently scheduled.)

And as for the Demons giving up a home game at the 'G' .... Well they chose to play a home game at Docklands in round 21 last year when they hosted West Coast - so it's not as if there's no precedent there.

Earlier this month, Richmond CEO Brendon Gale said he had attempted in March to get this clash moved from Simonds Stadium.

“I’ve got a responsibility on behalf of our members to push to get them into venues where as few as possible miss out,” Gale said. ''One of the guiding principles of the AFL fixture is to maximise attendances and we’ve got a situation here where 20,000 to 25,000 of our members are going to miss experiencing the game live. Etihad Stadium is vacant on the day in question and we’re talking about a ground with double the current capacity of Simonds.”

That didn't cut much ice with the AFL - or Geelong for that matter, who enjoy a massive home-ground advantage at Simonds/Skilled/Shell (etc) Stadium.

But, as Gale rightly points out, AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou has said for years that the league's guiding principle when putting together its season fixture is maximising attendances.That's why Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon and Richmond pretty much get to play each other twice every season - and then the poorer-drawing clubs kind of fill in the gaps around those blockbusters.

Demetriou was quoted in The Age recently when talking about the league's fixturing policy: "Our starting point is to grow attendances … We use our fixture and schedule to try to maximise attendance, we do that unashamedly."

Well, boys, have we got a doozy of a suggestion for you? And all it requires is a bit of leadership and intestinal fortitude.

http://www.backpagelead.com.au/afl/6226-a-no-brainer-its-cats-tigers-at-the-g

Offline Eat_em_Alive

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #58 on: April 16, 2012, 06:23:40 AM »
Good idea, won't happen though.
The anywhere, anytime Tigers.
E A T  E M  A L I V E  M O F O S

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Tigers get no joy from bid to shift Geelong game (Age)
« Reply #59 on: April 19, 2012, 02:46:49 AM »
Geelong's stadium redevelopment will strip $1 million from its bottom line this year and allow just more than 1000 Richmond supporters to see Sunday's clash.

The Cats will unfurl their premiership flag in front of more than 20,000 members, but work on a new 9000-seat southern stand will slash ground capacity.

The Tigers had tried to have the game moved, but Geelong chief executive Brian Cook said Richmond would still be represented.

The Richmond cheer squad will have 100 seats (down on 320 allowed at the MCG) and some supporters have booked some of the 400 seats and 1500 standing room tickets.

"The game is a sell-out," Cook said.

"We have a capacity of 22,000 and there are 20,500 seats and 1500 standing room tickets.

"Two weeks ago, we put out what tickets there were ... and they all went."

Cook said the Cats would lose $1 million on reserved ticket revenue but the new stand would see ground capacity rise to 35,500.

http://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/afl/geelong-in-search-of-hard-edge/story-e6frepf6-1226331508435