Richmond home games at Princes Park during the World Cup? Early AFL season, game moves floated in Australia's World Cup soccer bid Jim Wilson
Herald Sun December 10, 2009 10:17PM AN EARLY start to the season and possible relocation of games to Visy Park, Skilled Stadium and interstate are among the options given to the AFL by organisers of Australia's World Cup bid.
The Herald Sun has obtained a copy of a Football Federation Australia document sent to the other football codes, outlining the options for their sports should Australia host the Cup in 2018 or 2022.
There are five options presented to the AFL - using the 2018 calendar as a guide - which all work on the assumption that the AFL will have moved to a 24-week season.
The Grand Final is locked in for September 28 on all options.
One option is to start the season as early as February 2 and have a nine-week break.
Another is to begin the season as normal in early March and relocate games for nine weeks at alternative venues.
FFA chief Ben Buckley envisaged some clubs, such as Collingwood, Essendon and Richmond, playing home games at the revamped base of arch-enemy Carlton.Others, such as North Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs, would have bases at Skilled Stadium, while yet others would find themselves playing in Launceston, Darwin and Canberra.
The document also proposes that St Kilda play at Geelong, and factors in a yet-to-be-built or funded "E-Gate" stadium in West Melbourne as another option for AFL matches.
Buckley said the FFA was "working with all the sports and we are not pointing the finger and saying, 'You should do it this way' ".
"It's not our right to tell someone how to run their own sport but we've simply put some options forward.
"We want to explore with the AFL and governments the alternative venues and what it might take to upgrade those and to use on a temporary basis to satisfy the needs."
Buckley, who was Demetriou's No. 2 at the AFL, said he "totally respected" the AFL.
"I grew up in the AFL system and they gave me a huge start in my professional career," he said.
"We've seen from the outset the World Cup is a World Cup for Australia and not just for a sport. It's not just for football and it will have wide ranging benefits for all Australians.
"We respect the fact there are complex issues and I respect other sports have to protect the interests of their own stakeholders.
"We are listening, we will seek to solve the problems in partnership with the sports and the state and federal governments."
Visy Park, which hasn't staged an AFL match since 2005, would need a considerable and costly upgrade if it was required to host games.
"The capacity right now is around 20,000 and it would need plenty spent on it to bring it up to a match venue," a Carlton spokesman said last night.
"There's no seating at one end of the ground where the old Heatley Stand used to be and across the board the outlay would be significant. Media facilities would need upgrading, maybe even a second tier on the Legends Stand would be required and that all costs a lot of money."
The AFL yesterday maintained its stance that the FFA was reneging on a promise made last year that Etihad Stadium was not part of the World Cup bid.
"The AFL supports our bid for the World Cup no question, but we need Etihad Stadium to run a viable competition," an AFL spokesman said.
It remains unclear whether FIFA would permit AFL being played in Melbourne during the cup, even at alternate venues away from the MCG and Etihad Stadium.
"We want to work with Victoria to bring as many World Cup games to Victoria and we acknowledge taking Etihad out of the AFL fixture for a period of time will be disruptive," Buckley said.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/what-in-the-world/story-e6frf9jf-1225809208392