Author Topic: Benny Gale on Ch 7 / Senior coaches on collision course with AFL over cuts  (Read 2670 times)

Offline one-eyed

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How your coaching team will look after COVID-19 changes

By Mitch Cleary and Callum Twomey
afl.com.au
22 May 2020


Richmond

The Tigers confirmed all of their coaches have returned to Punt Road this week, meaning two-time premiership coach Damien Hardwick has retained his group as he searches for another flag. Veteran administrator Neil Balme will have a role away from matchday.

Every club here: https://www.afl.com.au/news/435419/how-your-coaching-team-will-look-after-covid-19-changes

Offline one-eyed

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The flag stat that has clubs calling on the AFL to resist radical list cuts

By Callum Twomey
afl.com.au
24 May 2020


TWENTY per cent of premiership players over the past decade have started their career as rookies or through the pre-season draft, with clubs calling on the AFL to resist radical list size cuts.

As the League assesses its next move after the COVID-19 hit, it continues to debate slashing list sizes across the competition.

Although the AFL Players' Association would need to be consulted before any changes are confirmed, clubs believe the rookie list is in real doubt to survive the cull as the AFL finds way to reduce the salary cap.

AFL.com.au found that in the past 10 premiership sides there had been 44 players (at an average of more than four a side) who begun their careers on the rookie list or as picks from the pre-season draft.

Some players, such as two-time premiership Tiger Jason Castagna, counts twice given he played in both of Richmond's recent triumphs.

The one-in-five ratio may surprise some, however it is a key reason clubs are mindful that with fewer spots on the list and draft picks to use, they may not take on the prospects who are not yet physically matured or have knocks on their game who have previously slipped through to the rookie list.

Castagna was one of seven players in last year's Tigers' side that had risen off the rookie list or from the pre-season draft to feature in the flag.

Of the past 10 years two other flag-winning teams – the Western Bulldogs in 2016 and Collingwood in 2010 – also had seven players in the same position.

With the expectation that there could be far fewer draft selections this season, clubs are mindful that late draft gems will go neglected.

By including premiership players who were picked in the draft from selection No.60 onwards in the national draft, the percentage rises to 26 – more than a quarter of premiership players from the past 10 years.

"The question is whether we will get to see these guys with less picks and less opportunity to get them onto a list?" one senior recruiter said this week. "So many of them just won't get a chance."

Quote
    What about as well Cal - less spots on list = more likely that talented all rounders at a young age decide to pursue different sport, because more opportunity to Become a pro/ play overseas (cricket Bball rugby soccer ect) would be a horrible move for our sport
    — Ben Keays (@benkeays) May 24, 2020

ROOKIES AND PRE-SEASON DRAFT SELECTIONS FOR THE PAST 10 PREMIERS

2019 – Richmond
Dylan Grimes (pre-season draft)
Jayden Short (rookie)
Kane Lambert (rookie)
Jason Castagna (rookie)
Ivan Soldo (rookie)
Liam Baker (rookie)
Marlion Pickett (rookie)

2018 – West Coast
Jeremy McGovern (rookie)
Mark Hutchings (rookie)

2017 – Richmond
Dylan Grimes (pre-season draft)
Kane Lambert (rookie)
Jason Castagna (rookie)

2016 – Western Bulldogs
Fletcher Roberts (pre-season draft)
Jason Johannisen (rookie)
Matthew Boyd (rookie)
Shane Biggs (rookie)
Dale Morris (rookie)
Liam Picken (rookie)
Luke Dahlhaus (rookie)

2015 – Hawthorn
Josh Gibson (rookie)
Luke Breust (rookie)
Matt Suckling (rookie)

2014 – Hawthorn
Josh Gibson (rookie)
Matt Suckling (rookie)
Will Langford (rookie)
Luke Breust (rookie)

2013 – Hawthorn
Josh Gibson (rookie)
Luke Breust (rookie)
Brad Sewell (rookie)
Jonathan Simpkin (rookie)

2012 – Sydney

Marty Mattner (rookie)
Heath Grundy (rookie)
Nick Smith (rookie)
Kieren Jack (rookie)
Shane Mumford (rookie)
Mike Pyke (rookie)

2011 – Geelong
James Podsiadly (rookie)

2010 – Collingwood
Nick Maxwell (rookie)
Jarrid Blair (rookie)
Alan Toovey (rookie)
Heritier Lumumba (rookie)
Sharrod Wellingham (rookie)
Darren Jolly (rookie)
Brent Macaffer (rookie)

https://www.afl.com.au/news/435733/the-flag-stat-that-has-clubs-calling-on-the-afl-to-resist-radical-list-cuts

Offline tdy

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I expect a higher injury rate over all as medical gets cut in proportion. Careers will on average be shorter an older players retire earlier as the massages pre and post games, high attention to minor injuries etc will be less available.

Offline one-eyed

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CLUBS have gained a mini-victory, with permission from the AFL to increase the head count in their off-field football staff.

As of June 1, 27 staff will be allowed in each club's football department, with that number increased to 28 if a club wants to include a second doctor on its books.

For matches, clubs will be allowed to employ 30 off-field staff as well as three media department officials.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/440282/clubs-get-off-field-win-afl-makes-call-on-marvel-roof

Offline one-eyed

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AFL sets new 'soft cap' on club spending

Jake Niall
The Age
29 May 2020


AFL clubs have been set a spending limit of $511,000 per month on their football operations, minus player payments, until the end of the 2020 season.

The new budget, which would translate to a football cap of $6.132 million over a year, is a reduction of just under 37 per cent compared to the pre-COVID-19 cap that clubs had at the start of this season of around $9.7 million.

But the AFL has raised the number of staff who can have contact with players from 25 to 30 for the remainder of the season, with clubs allowed to determine which employees can be directly involved, face to face, with the team.

The clubs will have to use that monthly amount of $511,000 until the season ends but the cap is still "soft", meaning that the clubs would be taxed by the AFL if they exceed it. The AFL said it was it was not a "hard" cap, like the salary cap on player payments, for which there are significant penalties when a club is found to have intentionally breached.

The new cap will be in place from next week, a matter of 10 days before the first return to play game on Thursday, June 11 between Collingwood and Richmond.

It is the first measure of how far the AFL has shrunk the game in order to sustain the competition - a figure that some richer clubs complain should be higher, believing that the league has set the bar low to accommodate the poorer clubs and thus forced the loss of jobs in football.

The clubs have been operating on a budget of $438,000 over the past two-and-a-half weeks, following the announcement of a return to play date, but the AFL has boosted that amount to $511,000 for the playing period, which is slated to end in late October.

Senior officials at some clubs believe the football spending cap will be similar to the monthly limit, over a full year, in 2021, with an amount close to $6.1 - 6.3 million though this is unlikely to be set until the AFL has a clear picture of revenue for next year.

The name and amount each staff member is paid has to be submitted and is audited.

The AFL had initially set a drastic spending limit of $25,000 per week, or a little over $100,000 per month, when the clubs and competition were shutdown following round one and operated on a skeleton staff, with 75 to 80 per cent of staff stood down.

Clubs have no idea what they can spend on players - given the new reduced salary has not been set - and contracts remain frozen, in what is frustrating situation for some players and their agents. This critical number will be shaped by the amount the AFL receives from their broadcasters, sponsors and the revenue expected from membership.

The AFL based the increased staffing limit both to contain spending during the pandemic and also to minimise the number of coaches, conditioning staff, welfare people and medicos who have physical proximity to players, with others allowed to work remotely.

This staff limit of 30 will apply to the clubs that are within the hubs on the Gold Coast - Adelaide, Port Adelaide, West Coast and Fremantle, who will play their next four matches in south-east Queensland.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/afl-sets-new-soft-cap-on-club-spending-20200528-p54xgi.html

Offline one-eyed

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Once the AFL settles on a new radically reduced football department budget figure for every club beyond this emergency phase - and a soft cap albeit with new tough conditions is expected to prevail - the expectation is that the wealthier clubs will see their league distribution heavily reduced in a new financial structure.

Clubs like West Coast, Hawthorn, Richmond and Collingwood will not be thrilled at the prospect of effectively being taxed and by extension watching their organisations reduced to support the survival of unsuccessful clubs.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/why-there-are-doubts-over-an-18-team-afl-competition-20200529-p54xoi.html

Offline one-eyed

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Surprise boost to Tigers’ flag defence (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #21 on: June 04, 2020, 02:21:20 AM »
Surprise boost to Tigers’ flag defence

While clubs have been gripped by enforced cuts to football departments, Richmond will go into the restart seemingly unscathed. And it is set to help them in their pursuit of a third flag in four years.

Paywall: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/richmond/richmond-premiership-coach-damien-hardwick-has-kept-on-every-assistant-coach-as-the-tigers-chase-their-third-premiership-in-four-seasons/news-story/53d546c547c6bcde3123992907a34ec2


Offline one-eyed

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But McLachlan was adamant that the austerity the game faced would not come at the expense of Indigenous players and the participation of women and the AFLW - despite the fears expressed within clubs such as Richmond that Indigenous players face a harder road to get drafted, given the risk averse nature of recruiting, if list sizes are heavily cut.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/operation-payback-mclachlan-s-huge-debt-call-20200605-p55010.html