There is a saying in life about being too big for your boots ... there is no one simple solution to improving footy in NSW ... there are a heap of steps ... a heap of strategies ... a heap of time and effort ... and mostly they require a lot of time & money.
Troy - your stance on a State League has been an extremely strong one for as long as I have seen you post/write. However I am struggling to find one state in Australia that has their own State wide based league where players need to travel a minimum of 3-4 hours every second game ... as I understand it they are capital city centric. Please convince me otherwise.
Why haven't the successful footy states have a proper State wide league? Why doesn't East Perth play Broome; Woodonga play Geelong or Port Augusta play Glenelg??? Because of the time, travel & money constraints more than anything else. It is a reason why the NSW/ACT RAMS are not in the u/18 comp on a fulltime basis.
So if the other states don't have a state-wide league & they have proven to be successful over the years ... why do we need one Troy???
Will a NSW State League be a better quality of football just because a comp is called a State League ... the same player pool is going to be used & they will have the same work, player & study contraints ... they will not be fulltime professional players. Imagine a typical Sunday/Monday for players/supporters/volunteers - 8am bus trip to Canberra; 2pm play game; 6pm bus trip back to Sydney; 10pm home 11pm finish dinner, go to bed ... rise 5am for work ... stuff that every 2nd week.
I did the 1996 pre-season with Campbelltown (the year they went to Canberra) but I struggled getting to training during the week from a city job and I found it took a toll on the body (particularly back) when travelling a few hours before a footy match. Forget about them not being a force in Canberra (they were competitive at least) ... the reason they left the competition was for reasons other than quality competition (which drove them to the comp in the first place) ... remember that they are the most travel-friendly club outside Canberra as well ... how would North Shore go with the travel every 2nd week??
As a club administrator/volunteer it takes alot of time & effort running a footy club on a normal game day. Lifting the intensity of competition will make it alot harder on them as you know only a handful truly run a footy club & they run out of steam & burnout eventually. Are you volunteering our time Troy to help out a club?
There is no doubt that the burnout of volunteers at Campbelltown (Messrs Noack, Matheson, McLaughlin, Prenter & co) took its toll on the Campbelltown club that has been the most successful I have seen during my playing career. Remember these volunteers have their own family, work & study commitments too?
Why are we crying over "only getting $9m"? I think we should be really grateful ... do you realise how hard it has been for sporting organisations to get funding post-Olympics?
Where do we spend that money? Not solely on senior players who will not do anything for the promotion of the game at the grass roots ... no we need to spend that money wisely ... let the appropriate people/stakeholders have their 3 year & 5 year plans
& devise the strategies required & maximise the funding. I believe that there are alot of smart people around NSW footy who would lead us in the right direction. If you think you are the right person then nominate yourself for that position.
Let's look at the quality of rep footy matches to see ... lets have more NSW State teams at all age groups playing other states on a more regularly basis.
But lets not have a State wide league
Troy - your stance on a State League has been an extremely strong one for as long as I have seen you post/write. However I am struggling to find one state in Australia that has their own State wide based league where players need to travel a minimum of 3-4 hours every second game ... as I understand it they are capital city centric. Please convince me otherwise.
Why haven't the successful footy states have a proper State wide league? Why doesn't East Perth play Broome; Woodonga play Geelong or Port Augusta play Glenelg??? Because of the time, travel & money constraints more than anything else. It is a reason why the NSW/ACT RAMS are not in the u/18 comp on a fulltime basis.
So if the other states don't have a state-wide league & they have proven to be successful over the years ... why do we need one Troy???
Will a NSW State League be a better quality of football just because a comp is called a State League ... the same player pool is going to be used & they will have the same work, player & study contraints ... they will not be fulltime professional players. Imagine a typical Sunday/Monday for players/supporters/volunteers - 8am bus trip to Canberra; 2pm play game; 6pm bus trip back to Sydney; 10pm home 11pm finish dinner, go to bed ... rise 5am for work ... stuff that every 2nd week.
I did the 1996 pre-season with Campbelltown (the year they went to Canberra) but I struggled getting to training during the week from a city job and I found it took a toll on the body (particularly back) when travelling a few hours before a footy match. Forget about them not being a force in Canberra (they were competitive at least) ... the reason they left the competition was for reasons other than quality competition (which drove them to the comp in the first place) ... remember that they are the most travel-friendly club outside Canberra as well ... how would North Shore go with the travel every 2nd week??
As a club administrator/volunteer it takes alot of time & effort running a footy club on a normal game day. Lifting the intensity of competition will make it alot harder on them as you know only a handful truly run a footy club & they run out of steam & burnout eventually. Are you volunteering our time Troy to help out a club?
There is no doubt that the burnout of volunteers at Campbelltown (Messrs Noack, Matheson, McLaughlin, Prenter & co) took its toll on the Campbelltown club that has been the most successful I have seen during my playing career. Remember these volunteers have their own family, work & study commitments too?
Why are we crying over "only getting $9m"? I think we should be really grateful ... do you realise how hard it has been for sporting organisations to get funding post-Olympics?
Where do we spend that money? Not solely on senior players who will not do anything for the promotion of the game at the grass roots ... no we need to spend that money wisely ... let the appropriate people/stakeholders have their 3 year & 5 year plans
& devise the strategies required & maximise the funding. I believe that there are alot of smart people around NSW footy who would lead us in the right direction. If you think you are the right person then nominate yourself for that position.
Let's look at the quality of rep footy matches to see ... lets have more NSW State teams at all age groups playing other states on a more regularly basis.
But lets not have a State wide league
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