AFL to launch 2nd team in Sydney
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I have been just as amazed at that attituide as to the former one that I mentioned.Does God believe in Atheists?Comment
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Can only assume you don't get out west too often. Take a drive from the centre of Penrith and head up the mountains. In quick succession you will see real footy goalposts in Nepean High School, Dukes oval at Emu Plains and Glenbrook Oval. They now play Aussie Rules at St Doms Kingswood, considered to be the strongest RL school in greater Penrith. The locals kids' attitude is changing too, perhaps that is because some of them are now playing the game.
Granted, the most fruitful areas for AFL conversion have thus far been the comfortable and predominately anglo saxon parts of Western Sydney - regions like the Hills and Lower Mountains. Getting a toehold in say Mt Druitt with its big islander population will be extremely difficult.
But there is ample evidence that Aussie Rules is gaining ground out here.Bevo bandwagon driverComment
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It's really chicken and egg stuff. Do you need a strong local comp or do you need the strong representation on/in the national arena. Personally, my view is that a second Sydney team will influence the growth of the code far faster than pouring money into grass roots football.
I do recognise that both need to happen, I just think an investment at the top level and getting the interest in sponsors and money from TV rights will naturally create the funds the AFL has to invest at local levels.
With an 18 team comp I hope we see the resurrection of a dedicated AFL channel.Comment
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No doubt having two teams in Sydney in the AFL would be a bonus, but that would be only for a sponsorship (clubwise) and a TV Rights (AFL) Point of View. After all how strong is the local comp at the moment with the Swans having just come off the Premiership in 2005? How strong are the links from Auskick to Senior Club Football in Sydney with the Swans in the AFL after being in Sydney all this time?
I have no doubt a second club has its advantages, but surely the AFL and NSWAFL have to be looking at bridging the gap between Auskick (where numbers keep rising) and Local Club Football (where we see very few of the Auskick kids coming though in the end). If a Western Sydney went hand in hand with building up the junior club system (along with the AFL, NSWAFL and the Swans) then we all should have a no issue because thats an issue solved.
But if the AFL doesn't want to tackle it, then its clear why they want the second team, plus it just creates a problem for the Western Sydney team which will find it hard to find a supporter base and the Swans who will find themselves fighting to hold onto the current supporter and sponsor base they have at the moment.
Personally, my view is that a second Sydney team will influence the growth of the code far faster than pouring money into grass roots football.
I do recognise that both need to happen, I just think an investment at the top level and getting the interest in sponsors and money from TV rights will naturally create the funds the AFL has to invest at local levels.
What a second team would do is bring in the money to support itself for along time because to be honest, there would be little chance of the team running at a profit for at least the first 5 years and would need to build from nothing an entire training base, office and marketing base and employ staff. They are going to face an uphill battle to begin with, because many people are either going to stick with the Swans or with the code (League/Union) they already support. They will get there in the end with plenty of support, but the code MUST have money poured into it as well.
With an 18 team comp I hope we see the resurrection of a dedicated AFL channel.Once was, now elsewhereComment
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..And the Swans are the Premiers...The Ultimate Team...The Ultimate Warriors. They have overcome the highly fancied Hawks in brilliant style. Sydney the 2012 Premiers - Gerard Whately ABC
Here it is Again! - Huddo SENComment
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The main problem for AFL in Sydney is not so much the weakness of the local competition. That is just a symptom. The big hole between Auskick and senior/local clubs is the main stumbling block. For example private/GPS schools suck the life out of the youthful interest of eager talented sportsmen with their compulsory rugby and soccer participation. A local derby with all its publicity would go a long way to promote that teenage passion for a rivalry with a close enemy (although I would also argue the last thing Sydney needs is a another excuse for a westie v silvertail divide) and the demand for regular games in those middle years.
The battle with the NRL is secondary to getting kids passionate about winning a game of AFL (what is the northern acceptable colloquialism?) against the school down the road, over the bridge, etc then the code will look after itself rather than kids trying to show their loyalty to a brilliant but minority footy code to the rugby thugs. Melbourne, Brisbane or whatever is not on their radar.
As some of the posts show tribalism is an important part of being a fan. It's nothing to do with logic.
I don't what the name of the new team should be but WHAT COLOURS???!!!Last edited by bodgie; 20 February 2008, 11:25 PM.Comment
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In Adelaide how people would watch Port one week then the Crows the next? Very very few, aside from SANFL Members who want to get value for money on their season memberships. Things are more extreme in WA, with Eagles matches will a 5000 person waiting list.
The only real city where you seriously can see your team most weeks in Melbourne.And that doesn't represent all the fans who follow AFL footy these days, does it?
JF"Never ever ever state that Sydney is gone.They are like cockroaches in the aftermath of a nuclear war"
(Forum poster 'Change', Big Footy 04Apr09)Comment
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Will we see a flood of silly season cup games and training games played by other teams in the west in on the Gold Coast over the next four years. Just to get more AFL in those regions.One vege patch at a time
Looking for a beer? Look here,
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That depends on who you want to talk to. But at the end of the day the biggest problem a team in Western Sydney will face, will be the need to bring in NEW PEOPLE AND NEW SPONSORS to make them a successful club in the long term.
So a Western Sydney team NEEDS to get new people involved by get kids hooked at an early age at the junior level, hence the need for them having a strong local comp and junior links within it. Plus it would mean the chances of Sydney kids reaching the AFL rise.
I have no doubt a second club has its advantages, but surely the AFL and NSWAFL have to be looking at bridging the gap between Auskick (where numbers keep rising) and Local Club Football (where we see very few of the Auskick kids coming though in the end). If a Western Sydney went hand in hand with building up the junior club system (along with the AFL, NSWAFL and the Swans) then we all should have a no issue because thats an issue solved.
But if the AFL doesn't want to tackle it, then its clear why they want the second team, plus it just creates a problem for the Western Sydney team which will find it hard to find a supporter base and the Swans who will find themselves fighting to hold onto the current supporter and sponsor base they have at the moment.
There is no link between growth/success of the senior leagues and the new second team, support for the new team will come from Auskick and junior kids, the future members of the new club which have been increasing with the $$$ spent on development in those areas already. This should only increase further with a stronger presence from the 2nd team.
However the second team will only suck what little sponsors and money there is for the current senior sides right out from underneath them and weaken (kill???) their competitons further.Comment
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The other clubs cried about the support given to the swans to try and get our game off the ground here in Sydney.....who can forget sitting at the SCG for two years without seeing a winning game.....this time round it will take a long time and a lot of money to prop up another team. The Kanga thing didn't work.....maybe they should talk to the Tigers about a relocation and Tassie should get its own team. There are plenty of options and it sure would be nice to have footy every week. Carn the SwansComment
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New Sydney Club on Fast Track
The AFL's new western Sydney team could make its under-18 debut as early as next season alongside the Gold Coast in the TAC Cup competition.
The competition's working party dealing with the yet-to-be-named team met for the first time last week and will almost certainly grant the new side most of NSW and the ACT as an exclusive recruiting zone to potentially enter the under-18s competition in 2009 and make its AFL debut in 2012.
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New Sydney Club on Fast Track
under-18 debut as early as next season alongside the Gold Coast in the TAC Cup competition.
Each time I hear something from the AFL politbureau regarding the new West Sydney team I get more and more fearful it's the usual AFL, make up the story as we go along, approach.
The second and third paras in that story are in contradiction to each other. The scholarship scheme as it exists today can't continue if you grant a large swathe of NSW as a recruiting zone for the new club. By and large the horse has already bolted anyway with the majority of Under 17 talent taken in scholarships to interstate clubs. These are the players that would've made up a reasonable percentage of the starting lineup of the new team in 2012.Comment
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I agree Floppin'. They are all over the shop with the scholarship scheme and how it fits into giving a new team access to local talent. Surely if they are set on starting to gather a pool of local talent for the new team, they need to start curtailing the scholarship scheme, not talk about reducing the restrictions on numbers. Maybe they think there is a gigantic pool of untapped talent out there. Maybe there is, but most of it is still going to be eventually drawn to league, rugby and soccer with just a trickle diverting to AFL. It's going to take time before that trickle becomes a river.
It will be interesting to see how they treat the Swans if they give almost exclusive access to local talent to a new team. I don't think there's any doubt they've given the Swans assurances that their own position will be protected to some degree. And while we currently only have limited priority access to local talent, I can't see the club (Swans) being happy knowing they have NO access to local players for a period of a few years. Even though recruiting is mostly on a national basis, it is still important that we have the Jacks, Bevans, LRTs, McVeighs of this world to give the team a local flavour.Comment
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