Author Topic: 2020 Fixture  (Read 41062 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #180 on: May 14, 2020, 01:50:36 AM »
Victorian teams may play home games against WA clubs in Queensland

Sam McClure
The Age
14 May 2020


AFL teams may be asked to play home games against West Coast and Fremantle in Queensland in order to restart the season.

The two Western Australian clubs are set to base themselves in Queensland for the restart of the AFL season, unless the Western Australian government backs away from its strong stance on its border closures.

But, using that scenario, the Eagles and the Dockers don’t want to travel to Melbourne to play Victorian teams and have asked the AFL to play all their games – home and away – in Queensland until the WA borders reopen.

Moving to Victoria remains a fallback option for West Coast and Fremantle, who could be asked to play Melbourne teams away from their opponents’ preferred home ground, in order to reduce Victorian bias.

League sources have confirmed to The Age that the AFL have offered them to play Victorian teams at their non-home grounds.

For example, if West Coast were forced to play a home game against Richmond in Victoria, it would be at Marvel Stadium and not the Tigers’ preferred MCG.

The opposite would apply if they were to play a Marvel Stadium club, like the Western Bulldogs or North Melbourne.

It would avoid West Coast and Fremantle playing home games at their opponent’s stronghold.

Victorian powerhouses Collingwood and Richmond has been flagged as a season ‘‘re-opener’’ inside AFL HQ, but that’s yet to be confirmed as league executives continued to negotiate with individual states late on Wednesday night.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/afl-teams-may-play-home-games-against-wa-clubs-in-queensland-20200513-p54spi.html

Offline pmac21

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #181 on: May 14, 2020, 11:33:55 AM »
This might be a case of all too hard and abandon the season altogether.  Hardly a level playing field. 

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #182 on: May 14, 2020, 01:54:10 PM »
This might be a case of all too hard and abandon the season altogether.  Hardly a level playing field.

I'll give you a minimum of $300 million reasons why it won't be cancelled
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline Tiger Tragic

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #183 on: May 14, 2020, 02:12:11 PM »
This might be a case of all too hard and abandon the season altogether.  Hardly a level playing field.

I'll give you a minimum of $300 million reasons why it won't be cancelled

Yeah, it's funny how dealing with obstacles slows you down less when there is money at stake

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #184 on: May 14, 2020, 02:33:42 PM »
West Coast and Fremantle will be allowed full contact AFL training in Western Australia before relocating to a Queensland-based quarantine hub.

WA premier Mark McGowan on Thursday confirmed the Eagles and Dockers will be granted access to club facilities from May 18, with full training permitted seven days later.

But McGowan is not backing down on a refusal to grant exemptions for the clubs to fly in and out of the state for games, forcing the teams to temporarily shift their operations in order for the AFL season to resume.

McGowan delivered a significant whack to “pampered” Victorian clubs, claiming they aren’t “willing to leave their comfort zone” to get the AFL season restarted.

https://au.sports.yahoo.com/wa-clubs-cleared-full-afl-training-032156213--spt.html
https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/live-afl-2020-news-coronavirus-updates-live-blog-season-restart-date-hubs-concept/news-story/9031b39f242dca48714443b486d8b4cc

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #185 on: May 14, 2020, 05:57:02 PM »
AFL TO REVEAL ITS RETURN-TO-PLAY PLAN TOMORROW

Tom Morris reports...

The AFL will wait until Friday to announce its return to play plan.

Foxfooty.com.au understands complications relating to hubs and state governments’ intricate health and safety regulations have pushed back a public announcement until the end of the week.

It’s understood there are no plans at this stage for Gillon McLachlan to face the media, though the release of information to clubs, broadcasters, players and fans is expected to be comprehensive.

The league wants teams to begin training in full on the same date, which could be May 18 in groups of 10, with Port Adelaide and Adelaide based in Queensland.

On May 25, full contact drills would be allowed given all clubs would be permitted to train in as an entire group by then.

It would be then up to the AFL whether it believed clubs need two or three weeks of normal training.

The former would see games played from June 11, while the latter would see the season restart on June 18. Another option is for the Eagles and Dockers to fly to Queensland over the weekend - along with the Crows and Power - which would theoretically allow full contact training in big groups from Monday.

These are just some of the options the league is working through with its various stakeholders, though sources have confirmed only finer details remain to be organised before Friday’s big announcement.

AFL SAID TO BE KEEN ON SIX-CLUB QLD HUB

The AFL is likely to send West Coast, Fremantle, Adelaide and Port Adelaide into southeast Queensland hubs to train and play games, reports Nine.

https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/live-afl-2020-news-coronavirus-updates-live-blog-season-restart-date-hubs-concept/news-story/9031b39f242dca48714443b486d8b4cc

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #186 on: May 14, 2020, 10:00:28 PM »
Mini-hub revealed, clubs to stay in luxury golf resorts

By Damian Barrett
afl.com.au
14 May 2020 8pm


THE four AFL clubs [Eagles, Freo, Port & Crows] required to enter hub life in order to re-start the 2020 season will do so in two of the Gold Coast's premier golf resorts.

Complexes at Palm Meadows and Royal Pines will each house two teams.



https://www.afl.com.au/news/433615/mini-hub-revealed-clubs-to-stay-in-luxury-golf-resorts

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #187 on: May 14, 2020, 10:01:04 PM »
The AFL season will restart on June 11 with training to resume on Monday, according to 7NEWS chief football reporter Mark Stevens.

Collingwood and Richmond are expected to restart the season with a round two blockbuster at the MCG.

The competition has been brought forward, with officials initially aiming for June 18 or 25, following positive announcements from the Victorian Government earlier this week.

https://7news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-restart-date-revealed-c-1038201

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture
« Reply #188 on: May 14, 2020, 10:06:09 PM »
AFL to reveal reboot date, full training starts May 25

Jake Niall
The Age
May 15, 2020


The AFL has told the clubs that the revamped "flexible'' fixture will only schedule games for the first four or so rounds and that full-contact training will begin on May 25.

The AFL also told the 18 clubs that it will confirm the starting date for returning to play on Friday, with an expectation within some clubs that the season will reboot on Thursday, June 11, a date that would give the clubs that play on that evening two and a half weeks of contact training. Collingwood v Richmond is among the options for that first game back.

As the South Australian and Western Australian teams prepare to join hubs in south-east Queensland at luxury resorts with golf courses, the AFL also has indicated that the players will not be able to play golf or eat at the restaurants early in the season. Players will be subject to stricter protocols and conditions than the rest of the community.

AFL chief executive Gillon McLachlan told the club CEOs of the anticipated contact training date of May 25 in a phone hook-up late Thursday, when the clubs also were told there would be a flexible fixture of only four rounds for the resumption of the season.

The plan to permit contact training on May 25 would bring all clubs into line with WA, where the state government said on Thursday that it would allow contact training on that date.

The AFL wants a flexible fixture, bearing in mind that the rules around borders and restrictions may change once the season starts and that there is even a possibility of crowds later in the season in some states, depending on the progress of the fight against the coronavirus.

Making arrangements for the SA and WA teams and dealing with their different rules is the major step the AFL needs before announcing a return date, with either Thursday June 11 or June 18 remaining the favoured days.

Clubs are said to need three weeks of full-bore training before resuming games.

The fixture for the early rounds will not be released until the WA and SA clubs' situations have been resolved.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/four-afl-teams-likely-headed-to-queensland-to-restart-season-20200514-p54t0h.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture - Official season restart June 11
« Reply #189 on: May 15, 2020, 01:27:32 PM »
Gil just held his media conference:

* Season to officially restart on Thursday, June 11.

* Fixture for the next 4 rounds will be released within the next 10 days.

* SA & WA clubs will likely play each other up in Qld during those 4 rounds.

* The rest of the fixture with be revealed in 4-6 week blocks to allow for flexibility in case state border rules change.

* Grand Final expected to be held in mid-late October at the MCG. If that date is pushed back due to changing circumstances then Docklands will be available. A reporter asked what if an interstate venue can host a crowd by then? Gil responded that the AFL has a contract to play the GF in Victoria.

* Training in groups of eight starts Monday (May 18).

* Full contact training from a week late (May 25). So 16 days of full training before the first game.

* All WA & SA clubs will move to a hub on the Gold Coast. WA clubs can fully train in Perth before flying across to Qld for their first games. SA clubs will need to fly up to Qld by May 25 given the SA govt. is preventing full training in Adelaide.

* Players to be tested twice a week.

* All players have been educated in and need to follow the health protocols.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture - Official season restart June 11
« Reply #190 on: May 15, 2020, 02:41:37 PM »
Footy's back: AFL statement on season return

afl.com.au
15 May 2020


The AFL has today announced that clubs will return to training on Monday, May 18 and the 2020 Toyota AFL Premiership season will resume on Thursday, June 11.

Players and football department officials will return to clubs on Monday, with clubs completing a 3.5 week training block before matches officially restart. 

Clubs will initially train in maximum groups of eight, before resuming full contact training from Monday, May 25.

All players and returning football department staff will have been tested for Covid-19 prior to returning to the club and undergone education sessions on the protocols they will need to follow, including rigorous ongoing screening and regular testing, throughout both the training and return to play period. This will also apply for umpires and AFL Match day staff once the season resumes.

Strict protocols will be in place to protect players, officials, staff and the wider public with all involved in the game regularly tested ahead of any contact sessions or matches.

“Today is a significant step in getting footy back for everyone - our fans, our clubs, players, coaches, umpires, officials and staff, our broadcast and corporate partners and club partners and all who love the game,” AFL Chief Executive Officer Gillon McLachlan said.

“We know as this situation continues to evolve, we have to remain agile and flexible to be able to adapt where necessary while ensuring we continue to prioritise the health and welfare of our players, staff and the wider community and - importantly - don’t place any burden on the public health system. 

"We have developed our model as the best option for returning to play for both players and officials and the general public and have done so following extensive consultation, including with the Federal, State and Territory Governments and Chief Health Officers.

“I want to thank the Prime Minister, the various ministers, State Premiers and Chief Ministers and all the Chief Health Officers for their on-going support and guidance.

"I particularly want to acknowledge the Victorian, NSW and Queensland Governments for their support in leading the way for football to return."

“All through this evolving pandemic we have anchored every decision in-line with the advice of the respective government and relevant medical authorities. Our return to play plans and our timings is evidence of that.

“Our industry understands the opportunity we have been given and we also fully understand and accept our responsibility to our football family and to the wider community.”

In order to maintain flexibility and given that some states still have restrictions in place, the AFL will release the remaining 144 games plus finals of 2020 Toyota AFL Premiership fixture in blocks of up to 4-6 weeks.

The first block of games will be released over the next 10 days with games in the early part of the season being scheduled at AFL venues in states that have approved full-contact training and matches.

The Return to Play model will see all teams based out of their home state with the exception of the Western Australian teams West Coast Eagles and Fremantle, and South Australian teams Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide.

West Coast Eagles and Fremantle will complete the pre-season training block at their home bases before relocating interstate ahead of their first scheduled match while current restrictions in SA will mean that Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide will need to relocate interstate before May 25 when full contact training will begin for all 18 clubs.

West Coast Eagles, Fremantle, Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide will all relocate to the Gold Coast.

The move has been made possible with the support of Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, Tourism Minister Kate Jones and the Queensland Government’s strong health response. The AFL also acknowledges the support of the Gold Coast City Council and Mayor Tom Tate.

All four clubs will be based interstate for an initial period of at least four weeks and the AFL will continue to remain flexible with fixturing so it can respond to any changes to restrictions in either state.

The four clubs will be housed in accommodation villages - West Coast Eagles and Fremantle at The Pines Resort and Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide at the Mercure Resort.  Players will be able to host family members at any stage during their time away from home which will be funded by the AFL. 

The AFL has agreed with the players it will continually review the arrangements in consultation with the AFLPA, clubs and the WA and SA Governments.

“We recognise the great collaboration and understanding with our WA and SA clubs and their support for ensuring we get a full national competition underway.  We know we are going to need to retain maximum flexibility with the fixture to allow for home games in each state should circumstances change.” Mr McLachlan said.

The AFL said the Return to Play model was the best possible response based on the different restrictions in each state and territory and the overwhelming priority to ensure the health and safety of everyone involved in football as well as the wider community, while seeking to minimise the impact on players, officials and their families.

The AFL hopes to play games in most states and territories but will continue to maintain an agile and flexible fixture to take account of any changes to restrictions in each respective jurisdiction.

“I am confident that how we start won’t necessarily be how we finish and that as the situation changes around the country we have the flexibility, agility and industry collaboration to change where we need to,” Mr McLachlan said.

All future decisions on location of matches will be made in consultation with Federal, State and Territory Governments and their respective Chief Health Officers.

PROTOCOLS

The AFL will implement protocols over and above the government restrictions to protect the health and safety of every member of our industry and the wider community.

The protocols have been developed with the advice of the Federal, State and Territory Governments along with the relevant Chief Health Officers across the country as well as the AFL’s own medical team and with consultation with players, coaches and clubs.

The protocols, which are in addition to the restrictions set out by the Federal, State and Territory Governments, cover the protection of players, officials and staff across training, travel and matches as well as the restrictions in place away from the club.

Protocols have applied to AFL players since the season was suspended at the conclusion of round one. 

Players received daily health screens and were tested if showing any potential symptoms. No player on an AFL list has tested positive to the virus in that time.

Key points of the protocols, which have been agreed to by the AFLPA, include:

* All testing of personnel under this protocol will be AFL-funded and conducted independently from the public health system to not place any burden on its resources. It will be subject to modification at any time according to the public health circumstances in the community.
   
* Players and officials will be temperature screened every single time before they enter club facilities and will be tested twice a week - ahead of contact training and matches - using PCR testing conducted by pathology provider Dorevitch.
   
* Players will train in consistent small groups (< 8 people) and when contact training is allowed, will still train in consistent small groups except for the main contact sessions each week.
   
* Players and Club staff to be tested within 24 hrs of main contact sessions and all players and officials, including umpires and key AFL match officials, taking part in matches will be tested approx. 24 hours ahead of games.
   
* Protocols on the movements of players, coaches and staff outside of training and matches to continue to be restricted, with contact with the public, outside of their immediate families, to be minimised.
   
* Strict limitations on anyone outside of players and nominated Football Department staff from entering football areas or rooms at any stage, including on match days. Only essential and tested AFL match day staff will be present on match day.

"We are confident that with the resilience measures, processes and protocols we currently have in place and the constantly revised measures we will continue to instil, we have a system in place to protect players, staff, the community and the competition,” Mr McLachlan said.

The AFL will continue to consult closely with Federal and State Governments along with the relevant Chief Health Officers across the country to continue to refine the protocols and ensure the best practices are being adhered to. The AFL and the clubs are committed to compliance with all standards and know these may change at different stages.

Following an AFL Commission meeting on Monday, the protocols are deemed to be part of the AFL rules with any breach of the rules deemed to be conduct unbecoming and will be dealt with in accordance with the AFL rules and an agreed framework between the AFL and AFLPA.

The AFL has also consulted with the Defence Department, BHP and Chef de Mission for the Paralympics in setting up protocols to provide support for those players who have to move away from home and their families as well as support protocols for those families who will join the players.

Mr McLachlan said the Project Return group had examined many structures before settling on the Return to Play model and the AFL had anchored its decisions in prioritising the health and welfare of the industry and the wider community  as well as protecting the integrity of the competition.

He thanked members and fans for their patience and their commitment and the clubs for their ongoing collaboration and support.

“There has been an extraordinary amount of work and collaboration across the football industry, from clubs, players, coaches, our AFL team, the AFLPA, broadcast and commercial partners, governments and venues to come up with the best possible model in these circumstances while ensuring health and safety was the key priority.

“We have the best fans in sports, they have been patient and committed during this time. We understand our responsibility to both them and the wider community, and hopefully with footy returning they can get some normality back in their lives and cheer their teams on.

“The return of footy doesn’t mean the work is complete. We must continue to follow the advice of the government and medical authorities and continue to play our role in helping to flatten the curve, and we encourage everyone to download the Covid-Safe app on your phone.”

https://www.afl.com.au/news/433686/footy-s-back-afl-statement-on-season-return

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture - Official season restart June 11
« Reply #191 on: May 15, 2020, 02:44:57 PM »
McLachlan earlier denied on 3AW that heavyweights Richmond and Collingwood would definitely kick off round two, and while he didn’t rule out the prospect of clubs playing more than one game a week, he indicated that, at this stage, each of the remaining rounds of footy would be played out over the orthodox timeframe of Thursday to Sunday.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/afl/afl-clubs-to-resume-training-on-monday-20200515-p54ta3.html

McLachlan also confirmed:

* The AFL will cover all costs for the Crows, Power, Eagles and Dockers in the quarantine hubs and their families.
   
* Families inside hubs will be subjected to the same testing and distancing protocols.
   
* The Crows and Power will share the Mercure Resort and Eagles and Dockers will be housed at The Pines Resort.
   
* Umpires and key match day staff will also be subjected to COVID-19 when the season resumes.
   
* Matches for the remainder of the season will be released in blocks of 4-6 weeks.
   
* The finals series will continue as a traditional four-week model.
   
* The default position for the 2020 Toyota AFL Grand Final location remained for it to be played at the MCG on a fluid date in October.
   
* AFL football operations boss Steve Hocking would soon confirm whether the interchange bench would increase to six.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/433640/revealed-afl-s-first-day-back-full-contact-training-more-covid-tests

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2020 Fixture - Official season restart June 11
« Reply #192 on: May 15, 2020, 05:40:29 PM »
West Coast will push for an extended run of home games later in the year as compensation for having to restart the AFL season interstate.

https://www.theadvocate.com.au/story/6758483/eagles-chase-afl-fixture-compensation/?cs=7660

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Re: 2020 Fixture - Official season restart June 11
« Reply #193 on: May 15, 2020, 05:46:01 PM »
EVERY player’s home assessed, limited visitors: AFL’s extremely strict relaunch protocols

May 15, 2020 4:53pm
Matt Balmer
FOX SPORTS


With the AFL to resume training on Monday and matches to begun from June 11, every player from the 14 teams not included in the isolation village in Queensland will need to have their homes assessed.

“Each household will be assessed for risk. There’ll be restrictions on visitors to households – there's a full suite of those,” AFL chief executive Gillon McLachlan told reporters on Friday.

“They're allowed to get food and drink and others, so there's a set of protocols that go above the current restrictions in Victoria that are consistent for all players nationally having been signed off by the Players’ Association. It's going to require a level of discipline from playing group, but they've signed up for that because they’re committed to getting our industry back on track and they want to play.

“There will be a set of protocols that govern how each player can work obviously at training and outside training and who can be allowed in the house and who they can live with and how that works.

“Broadly visitation won't be allowed, but it's be based on the risk assessment.”

Read more: https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-2020-season-restart-june-11-protocols-afl-rules-covid19-testing-coronavirus/news-story/a76e0895aac8c955ad677cd6366d481a

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