Concessions now causing inequity
Patrick Smih
The Australian
June 16, 2004
THE AFL guards it closely. The document does not leave the building. Anyone wishing to see it must go to AFL House. Only there can interested parties run their eyes over it.
It is considered by many to be the blueprint for the domination of the competition. Some call it football's Holy Grail.
The document is thick. It is full of graphs and tables that track footballers from one state to another. It analyses salaries and promotional money. It took some of the best brains in football to carefully piece together. It is more than 12 months since it was completed and took nearly as many months to prepare.
The fortunes of the competition and particular clubs are spelt out clearly for this year as well as 2005 and 2006.
Collingwood, Essendon and Brisbane have sought permission to read the document. It is telling they are the only clubs in the past three grand finals.
Officials are strip-searched before they are ushered into a room sparse with furniture. There's a table, some chairs and precious little else. A senior official places the document on the table and leaves. You are not permitted to photocopy any information but you can take notes.
Intermittently, a high-ranking league official will check the club officials are following protocol. When the club men have finished, the AFL official is summoned. The document is removed and placed back in a safe, secure spot deep within the building. The club officials are then escorted from the offices.
That may be over-dramatising the procedure slightly but not by much. Officials are merely frisked and not strip-searched. It does, though, explain how powerful and compelling the document is.
Many say it has delivered Brisbane three successive premierships and more than likely a fourth.
It is the document that argues clinically and effectively for the rich salary cap concessions enjoyed by Brisbane. The document -- scrutinised three times by the AFL commission last year before it was ratified -- argues eloquently that Brisbane, a developing market, has to pay its players above market rates because of the go-home factor.
In the past the Lions have been allowed to pay 110 per cent of the salary cap. In their three-year reign at the top the club has been able to pay its players $1.6million more than all league clubs other than Sydney.
That formula has been amended this year. This season the club can pay 109 per cent of the salary, 107.5 per cent in 2005 and no more than $360,000 above the cap in 2006.
The Lions are allowed to pay the extra money because the AFL recognises clubs in developing markets are forced to draft players from interstate.
Eventually the pull for those players to go home is strong and the Lions must be able to have the facility to match offers from clubs in their original states.
The go-home factor is indisputable and the scrupulously researched document proves it emphatically.
However, there is another dynamic in football now and one the AFL had not anticipated. Make that no-one anticipated. And it is so overwhelming the AFL has no choice but to abandon salary cap concessions to Brisbane as soon as practically and legally possible.
The Brisbane administration, coaching staff and playing list have circumvented the go-home factor. The natural pull to return to a player's home state has been nullified.
No doubt it is mostly down to coach Leigh Matthews. He has been able to create an environment where players will take pay cuts to stay rather than pay increases to leave.
Stars including Justin Leppitsch, Luke Power, Simon Black, Jonathan Brown and Nigel Lappin are just a few players who have resisted huge offers to return to clubs in their home states.
Effectively, the club has only lost Des Headland from its premiership squad. Headland returned to Western Australia after playing in the 2002 premiership.
The go-home formula has been superseded by the stay-together factor. Brisbane has created an environment where players have sacrificed money, incentives and playing opportunities to be part of what might be the greatest dynasty in football history.
That anybody could at first be so successful, then so professional and inventive to achieve this was not considered possible. Salary cap concessions were meant to balance out an inequity. Now they create one.
The AFL must change its policy. Money must be poured into football in Queensland so it can develop its own players for Brisbane and not into Brisbane players.
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