Tassie push into the AFL gains clout
Mike Sheahan | July 09, 2008
FOR the first time in all the years Tasmania and her displaced sons have been pushing for an AFL berth, there seems to be belief in the dream. There's an impressive level of vigour attached to the current campaign.
Perhaps it's energy born of the overwhelming public support in the recent Herald Sun Footy Fans Survey for Tasmania's inclusion in the next phase of the AFL's expansion plan.
Perhaps it is yesterday's announcement in Melbourne of the appointment of the high-powered gemba group to prepare Tasmania's bid for an AFL licence.
Gemba, whose directors include former Essendon captain James Hird, is a consultancy with a broad experience in the Australian sports market, including an involvement with eight AFL clubs.
Hird and fellow directors, Ben Crowe and CEO Rob Mills, attended yesterday's announcement by Tasmania's Minister for Economic Development and Tourism, Paula Wriedt. As usual, the function was attended by several expatriate Tasmanians with profiles in Victoria.
They included AFL and Hawthorn legend Peter Hudson; former Melbourne champion Stuart Spencer, who quit the AFL at 24 to move to Tasmania, where he became a local legend; Collingwood premiership ruckman James Manson; broadcaster Tim Lane; and retired journalists John Sorell and Geoff Poulter.
Current AFL players, Matthew Richardson (Richmond) and Brad Green (Melbourne), were apologies, apparently due to training commitments. Minister Wriedt said: "This is a very historic opportunity for Tasmania . . . and we intend to do it justice."
Bold words delivered boldly.
She was wearing two hats: that of a member of the Tasmanian Government, the other of a mother. "Our young footballers should have the opportunity to aspire to play for their own home state," she said.
Wriedt wheeled out familiar lines about a "truly national competition" and "the contribution we've made to the game", with one or two new ones.
Like "there's never been this much momentum", and it wasn't just rhetoric.
Her government is on board. It currently injects $3 million into an AFL presence in Tasmania, underwriting Hawthorn's involvement at Aurora Stadium in Launceston.
State Government contributions and AFL dividends would provide roughly one-third of the $30 million a Tasmanian club would require annually.
Wriedt said the net economic benefit was huge, with up to 5000 people travelling to the state for each of Hawthorn's official fixtures.
It's a clear winner for the government. Apart from the tourism dollars, something to deflect attention from wood-chipping issue, too.
Gemba has six weeks to turn passion, interest, hope and emerging corporate interest into a compelling submission, one that might yet convince the AFL Commission to include the forgotten state in the national competition.
"You ignore home base at your peril," former Premier Paul Lennon said in April.
What gemba and the steering committee must do now is co-ordinate the forces, sell the story of Tasmania's football passion - Hawthorn has more than 4000 members in the state - hammer the AFL with the message that Tassie is ready when Sydney's west clearly isn't, and mobilise the big guns.
Bring them all together: Huddo, Stewie, Lynchy, Royce, the Doc, Verdun, Richo, Roachy . . . "Punter" Ponting. Turn them into evangelists, all of them.
Tassie must make a noise. Often. To quote Chris Judd on another matter: "You feed the barking dog."
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23991528-19742,00.html