AFL puts focus on juniors
11 November 2007 Sunday Herald Sun
Jon Ralph
THE AFL has announced a bold overhaul of its junior pathways that will involve a massively boosted AIS-AFL Academy and a radical departure from the traditional Grand Final program.
After an extensive review of the second tier of football in Australia, it will set up eight junior AFL academies across Australia, including separate academies for Vic Metro and Vic Country.
The TAC Cup Grand Final, held on the MCG on Grand Final Day, will be shifted to Telstra Dome -- possibly alongside the VFL play-off - with the finals of the under-16 national championships to take centre stage.
The Division One and Two under-16 grand finals will be played on the MCG before the AFL's biggest clash, giving 14 and 15-year-olds across the country the chance to aspire to playing on Grand Final day.
The under-18 national championships will also be revamped, with the Division Two competition to be used as a qualifying series for the elite Division One section.
It will mean the top two Division Two teams will play off in Division One against the cream of the nation's young talent, allowing recruiters to line them up against stars from Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia.
The expansion of the AIS-AFL Academy should help continue the AFL's dominance in recruiting the country's best junior talent.
Where, previously, 30 of the the best 15 and 16-year-olds were chosen, the net will be cast wider to ensure elite talent will be fast-tracked into the AFL system.
Former AFL stars Jason McCartney and Michael Voss will step up their coaching commitments at the state-based academies, as talks are continuing with former Crows captain Mark Ricciuto on a role in South Australia.
AFL development manager David Matthews said the league wanted to give young footballers every chance to reach their potential.
"Our view is we are giving an elite, highly professional experience to the best 30 kids in Australia, but we should expand it and in a sense decentralise it, so kids everywhere in Australia have access to the same quality program," Matthews said.
"We want to give that same academy experience to 300 kids across Australia."
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