Fitzpatrick: Two more clubs by 2012
| February 16, 2008 12:00am
AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick has hinted the league could become an 18-team competition by 2012, with new clubs established on the Gold Coast and in western Sydney.
It was reported last night that Fitzpatrick confirmed he had held talks with all three AFL television broadcasters – Ten, Seven and Foxtel – along with Channel 9, to signal the AFL's intention to expand by 2012.
It was reported that the league had been packaging a nine-game per round, home-and-away season to be sold as the "linchpin" of AFL broadcast rights beyond 2011. Fitzpatrick was said to have conceded that it would be "virtually impossible" to tempt Victorian clubs to move, particularly after the failure to lure the financially strapped Kangaroos to the Gold Coast.
"We've got to go flat chat now," Fitzpatrick was reported as saying. "We've spoken to the networks and they are very keen to get more content.
"It's quite clear the Melbourne clubs have emotional attachments and infrastructures they are not prepared to relinquish.
"It is an enormous task that lies ahead . . .
"We did a lot of work on the Kangaroos (North Melbourne) option last year but that wasn't all we were working on."
He also said: "If you can't get a team to relocate on the basis that North was offered, then I don't think it's ever going to happen.
"In a sense it has solved a problem for us.
"If we are looking at establishing a 17th team on the Gold Coast by 2010-2011, the 18th team out of Sydney could follow within a year."
A west Sydney club would take on the Swans in the battle to win fans, sponsorship dollars and grounds, and would be a rival to Sydney's rugby league teams, the three NSW-based A-League soccer clubs and rugby's Waratahs.
Blacktown was earmarked as the home base for the new Sydney outfit, although the Olympic Stadium at Homebush would be the venue for most of its games.
A spokesman for Blacktown Mayor Leo Kelly confirmed last night that he had been in talks with the AFL.
Kelly had been earlier reported as saying: "There is plenty of support for a second club in Sydney's west.
"This is the second fastest growing region in Australia after the Gold Coast."
There has been a proposal to build a new sporting complex on the old 2000 Sydney Olympic baseball complex at Blacktown.
Outlined in the proposal is a the inclusion of softball and baseball venues with an athletics track and two new ovals for football and cricket.
There has been speculation that a bidding process for the new Gold Coast team is to be placed on the market later this year.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23223219-19742,00.html