Swans salary cap concessions

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Mel
    Regular in the Side
    • Jul 2005
    • 883

    Originally posted by DamY
    These are ELITE sportspeople. AFL has stated that they intend to be the most professional league in Australia. That is corporate speak for highest paying. The theory goes that if you have the big bucks, you will have the most entertaining code of them all. You will attract at least Australia's best talent. This will probably result in future profitability. I know this all sounds very unromantic, but all companies (which the AFL and all clubs are) need to be financially stable and profitable.

    A single young man in the AFL has probably had to invest a lot of time, training and so on to become an AFL player. Their opportunity to make money is generally very limited. The after effects of a career in AFL are still being discovered now (brain damage, Parkinson's etc).

    I believe that the economy and free market determines the fair wages in most industries, and the AFL is no different. I have no issue with the pay AFL players receive, and believe the COLA for Sydney based players is necessary and required. However I also believe QLD should also receive allowances to attract key talent away from AFL Heartland states. I also think WA should have some COLA as well due to the price rises linked to the mining boom (even coffee is more expensive in WA than Sydney).

    AFL players have to work so hard for a career, training basically full time, with a restricted diet, timetable and lifestyle. They can't take a sickie or sneak off to the beach like most people. Unless you're Nick Davis, you can't be out eating KFC whenever you want.

    Comparing an AFL player to a Joe Blow citizen oversimplifies the situation. CEOs, doctors, locksmiths and lawyers could get by on $80,000 in Sydney too, but the economic reality is that they are paid much more than that.
    Yes, but nobody is MAKING them be an AFL player. Rookies/newbies on $80K a year (which by the way, is more than my family of five lives on) are lured by the promise of big bucks if they 'make it' and their love of playing the game. Im sure the fact that they can't "sneak off to the beach" (which I have never done in my life as my moral compass won't allow me to) is far outweighed by their dreams of playing in front of 100 000 people on grand final day, doing something they love.

    Having said all of that, I believe the COL allowance is more than justified. It's been a long time since I looked for a job, but I remember comparing similar jobs in different cities and the Sydney jobs always paid slightly more. Things might have changed though.
    Life's not a spectator sport

    Comment

    • DamY
      Senior Player
      • Sep 2011
      • 1479

      Originally posted by Mel
      Yes, but nobody is MAKING them be an AFL player. Rookies/newbies on $80K a year (which by the way, is more than my family of five lives on) are lured by the promise of big bucks if they 'make it' and their love of playing the game. Im sure the fact that they can't "sneak off to the beach" (which I have never done in my life as my moral compass won't allow me to) is far outweighed by their dreams of playing in front of 100 000 people on grand final day, doing something they love.

      Having said all of that, I believe the COL allowance is more than justified. It's been a long time since I looked for a job, but I remember comparing similar jobs in different cities and the Sydney jobs always paid slightly more. Things might have changed though.
      Well I'm glad you agree with me, and thanks for being pedantic and pulling out specific examples even though they were just to elaborate and describe a point, rather than being the only challenges an AFL player has.

      You could argue that no-one MAKES anyone do any job that they have, more often than not people choose not to change jobs (see steel industry workers in Newcastle, car industry in Geelong, etc) people tend to stay in jobs because it's what their used to, they do it for a long time, it becomes a habit/expectation etc.

      If you want to compare apples and apples, you should be comparing to other sports people, which is my main point. Comparing them to the average Sydney or Australian person/family is definitely apples and pears. And yes they may be doing "something that they love", but that something is still a full-time job, hours and hours of training, viewing footage, learning tactics and game plans, performing in one of the longest sporting seasons out of ANY codes.

      Anyways at the end of that I'm glad that we agree.

      Comment

      • erica
        Happy and I know it
        • Jan 2008
        • 1247

        I'm not arguing whether payers deserve what they are paid or not. That's up to the AFL and the club to determine.

        I'm trying to keep a sense of perspective about how far money goes in Sydney. If a young player earns $80,000 a year, he can live comfortably in this city.
        All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. - Edmund Burke

        Comment

        • Mel
          Regular in the Side
          • Jul 2005
          • 883

          Originally posted by DamY
          Well I'm glad you agree with me, and thanks for being pedantic and pulling out specific examples even though they were just to elaborate and describe a point, rather than being the only challenges an AFL player has.

          You could argue that no-one MAKES anyone do any job that they have, more often than not people choose not to change jobs (see steel industry workers in Newcastle, car industry in Geelong, etc) people tend to stay in jobs because it's what their used to, they do it for a long time, it becomes a habit/expectation etc.

          If you want to compare apples and apples, you should be comparing to other sports people, which is my main point. Comparing them to the average Sydney or Australian person/family is definitely apples and pears. And yes they may be doing "something that they love", but that something is still a full-time job, hours and hours of training, viewing footage, learning tactics and game plans, performing in one of the longest sporting seasons out of ANY codes.

          Anyways at the end of that I'm glad that we agree.
          But you make it sound like AFL Players are the only people who put in long hours, hours and hours of traing etc. How many hours does it take to study law or medicine? And how much do you think a kid fresh out of his law/accounting degree makes? Compared to the hours they work?

          What do rookies/first year players make in the NRL or A League? Im sure it's comparable to the AFL.

          Again though, I have absolutely no issue with the COLA and I actually have no problem with the amount AFL players make.

          What struck me in your earlier post was the 'a single young man...' line. $80k for a rookie seems a fair amount to me.
          Life's not a spectator sport

          Comment

          • ScottH
            It's Goodes to cheer!!
            • Sep 2003
            • 23665

            Originally posted by erica
            Many families are able to make do on $80K or less a year in Sydney. I don't see why a single young man can't make ends meet on that money.
            True. but have you seen the drinking bill of young men these days!!
            The money is there to help retain these players AFAIK.

            Comment

            • DamY
              Senior Player
              • Sep 2011
              • 1479

              Originally posted by Mel
              But you make it sound like AFL Players are the only people who put in long hours, hours and hours of traing etc. How many hours does it take to study law or medicine? And how much do you think a kid fresh out of his law/accounting degree makes? Compared to the hours they work?

              What do rookies/first year players make in the NRL or A League? Im sure it's comparable to the AFL.

              Again though, I have absolutely no issue with the COLA and I actually have no problem with the amount AFL players make.

              What struck me in your earlier post was the 'a single young man...' line. $80k for a rookie seems a fair amount to me.
              I'm just assuming most AFL players when they start out are single young men.
              And I agree, AFL players aren't the only people that study/train for long hours, but those people are also generally fairly compensated. Lawyers have god awful hours though, that's a lifestyle decision that they make lol

              Comment

              • Primmy
                Proud Tragic Swan
                • Apr 2008
                • 5970

                Ahem. According to newspaper reports today, Sydney is only behind Tokyo in the race to be the MOST EXPENSIVE CITY TO LIVE IN IN THE WORLD. There, that should silence the lambs.
                If you've never jumped from one couch to the other to save yourself from lava then you didn't have a childhood

                Comment

                • Triple B
                  Formerly 'BBB'
                  • Feb 2003
                  • 6999

                  Originally posted by Mel
                  And how much do you think a kid fresh out of his law/accounting degree makes?
                  Depends how convincing he sounds when he asks "Do you want fries with that??"
                  Driver of the Dan Hannebery bandwagon....all aboard. 4th April 09

                  Comment

                  • Doctor
                    Bay 29
                    • Sep 2003
                    • 2757

                    Originally posted by erica
                    I'm not arguing whether payers deserve what they are paid or not. That's up to the AFL and the club to determine.

                    I'm trying to keep a sense of perspective about how far money goes in Sydney. If a young player earns $80,000 a year, he can live comfortably in this city.
                    Perhaps, but the $80,000 will go FURTHER in other cities. When we're usually trying to relocate players as well as sign them, we need the incentive. Considering where our home ground and training facilities are too, the COL is a lot higher if the players are to live close to their place of work.
                    Today's a draft of your epitaph

                    Comment

                    • erica
                      Happy and I know it
                      • Jan 2008
                      • 1247

                      Originally posted by Doctor
                      Perhaps, but the $80,000 will go FURTHER in other cities. When we're usually trying to relocate players as well as sign them, we need the incentive. Considering where our home ground and training facilities are too, the COL is a lot higher if the players are to live close to their place of work.
                      And I'm not arguing about the cost of living loading either. Sydney IS a more expensive place to live than other Australian cities.
                      All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. - Edmund Burke

                      Comment

                      • goswannie14
                        Leadership Group
                        • Sep 2005
                        • 11166

                        Originally posted by erica
                        And I'm not arguing about the cost of living loading either. Sydney IS a more expensive place to live than other Australian cities.
                        Except for Darwin.
                        Does God believe in Atheists?

                        Comment

                        • erica
                          Happy and I know it
                          • Jan 2008
                          • 1247

                          Doesn't GWS get this COL as well as us?

                          All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. - Edmund Burke

                          Comment

                          • DamY
                            Senior Player
                            • Sep 2011
                            • 1479

                            Swans salary cap concessions

                            Yeah they do

                            Comment

                            • iigrover
                              Warming the Bench
                              • Sep 2005
                              • 245

                              Originally posted by liz
                              Demetriou defends Swans

                              Not on the agenda for review in the near future.
                              Looks like Demetriou has been rolled by the loud mouthed Melbourne commissioners.

                              Comment

                              • Red
                                Foreign Correspondent
                                • Jan 2003
                                • 651

                                Originally posted by iigrover
                                Looks like Demetriou has been rolled by the loud mouthed Melbourne commissioners.

                                http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsartic...4/default.aspx
                                Well, it's only a review at this stage.

                                I wonder though, if they found the difference in COL is even higher now, if they'd actually raise the allowance? That may teach Kennett & co a lesson.
                                To all those people who waited 72 years to see a South Melbourne/Sydney Swans premiership HERE IT IS!!

                                Comment

                                Working...