West Sydney is AFL's Vietnam
James Phelps | April 29, 2009
RUGBY league boss Geoff Carr has warned the AFL its push into western Sydney could be its Vietnam War.
The warning came as the AFL's plan for a second Sydney team hit a major hurdle with the New South Wales Government withdrawing financial backing for the expansion.
The Government has told the AFL it will not help fund the $100 million redevelopment of the Sydney Showground at Homebush, where a second AFL side was set to be based from 2012.
NSW Premier Nathan Rees met AFL boss Andrew Demetriou three weeks ago to tell him of the decision.
With NSW in a parlous financial state, it is understood the Government decided pumping big money into AFL's expansion - in the heartland of rugby league - would risk a voter backlash.
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Australian Rugby League chief executive Carr told the Herald Sun the AFL was wasting its money trying to win the hearts and minds of Sydney's "westies".
"It is a huge risk for them and a lot of people say it will be their Vietnam," Carr said. "If they want to fight out there, that is their call."
As rugby league bosses met yesterday in Penrith in Sydney's west and discussed strategies to combat AFL's push, an investigation has found:
RUGBY league is outspending the AFL by $6.5 million in Sydney's west.
RUGBY league boasts 20,204 registered club players in the area compared to AFL's 2929.
AFL club registrations in NSW dropped between 2005 and 2008, but school figures have risen by 30,000 in three years because of AusKick.
The AFL's ambition to spread the game into Sydney's west, largely at a junior level, has stirred plenty of debate.
Carr's strong comments came after he criticised the AFL for inflating the numbers of people playing the game in NSW to secure funding from the government and local councils.
Carr accused the AFL of counting all youngsters who come into contact with the game through the AusKick program at schools as "registered" players.
Forced to abandon its ambitious Homebush project, the AFL will now have to spend at least $33 million to set up the Showground as a no-frills home ground, something officials and key stakeholders are not prepared to do.
The addition of a Gold Coast side in 2011 was approved by the AFL only when it was given a $60 million grant by the Queensland Government.
The AFL's NSW/ACT general manager Dale Holmes said last night there was no other proposals before the NSW Government about venues for a western Sydney side.
Holmes said playing at ANZ Stadium was an option.
A spokesman for AFL boss Andrew Demetriou was last night adamant the league was on track for the proposed launch in 2012.
"The AFL Commission reiterated again yesterday its support for a team in western Sydney starting in the AFL in season 2012," he said.
While the Showground plans have been canned, the $30 million redevelopment of Blacktown's Olympic Park into a 10,000-capacity venue and training base was on schedule to be completed by June.
But the ground will be unsuitable for AFL matches unless there is a further multi-million dollar investment, something the NSW Government is reluctant to fund based on the AFL's current expansion case.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,25402601-19742,00.html