20 teams in the AFL by 2030?
AFL 2030, wait there's still more Jon Pierik
The Age
August 26, 2012 THE AFL has begun to hypothesise on how the league will be shaped in 2030, with a third club based in Western Australia and Queensland part of its thinking.
As part of a conference featuring league boss Andrew Demetriou and club chief executives, what the league should look like, or aspire to, after expansion clubs Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney are bedded down, was discussed.
The Northern Territory has long wanted an AFL club, and so has Tasmania. ''We talked about what does 2030 look like, and that is only 18 years away,'' Demetriou said. ''We hypothesised that had anyone in 1994 predicted what the AFL competition will look like in 2012, I don't think anyone would have got near it.
''You can never say never. I am on the public record as saying, with the population the way it is going, you could see one day, I don't know when, … additional teams in the northern part of Western Australia and the northern part of Queensland, Tasmania, who knows?
''Certainly, in the short term, in the foreseeable future, that is not going to happen.''
Demetriou has stated in recent weeks that he is refreshed after taking seven weeks off and still has much to achieve in coming years. But will he still be in charge come 2030? ''I know one thing, I won't be around in 10, 15 years to worry about it,'' he said.
The first step towards playing regular home-and-away matches overseas is set to be taken next season when St Kilda heads to Wellington, New Zealand, for an Anzac Day clash, possibly against the Sydney Swans. If given the go-ahead, it will be the first overseas match for premiership points.
Demetriou said he expected more home-and-away matches to be held overseas within two decades.
''I can certainly see some games being played abroad. The world is getting smaller, travel times are getting less, why not?'' Demetriou said. ''You have got to aspire to do things that challenge the norm. That came up the other day - who knows?''
In the meantime, improving the balance sheets of the Suns, Giants, several Melbourne clubs and Port Adelaide remains paramount.
The Power has begun to search for a new coach and president, with Demetriou declaring it was ''extremely important'' for the under-siege club to find high-quality replacements.
While much has been made of the spoils the Power will receive when home games are shifted to the Adelaide Oval from 2014, Demetriou warned it was not the panacea for its troubles.
''If you think that Adelaide Oval will be their salvation, no, it's mistaken,'' he said. ''Adelaide Oval gives the Port Adelaide Football Club an opportunity to build on what they have already got. It can provide a catalyst for more finances to inject into the club.
''But they have got to get their structure right, they have got to get the right chairman, they have got to get the right coach.''
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