Are Swans fans paranoid?
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Are Swans fans paranoid?
The condition that the payments outlined for each year of the 9 years would be counted as part of the Swans TPP even if Franklin did not play for the full 9 years, and thus is not paid for the full 9 years, is a condition imposed by the AFL as part of its approval of the deal between the Swans and Franklin. It is part of the agreement between the Swans and the AFL, not between the Swans and Franklin and therefore it is not relevant to the Industrial Relations Court.
"Dillon (AFL General Counsel) said the AFL acknowledged that the nature of the nine-year deal was an unprecedented commitment of TPP funds to a single player over such a contract length, and as a result it sought written guarantees from all members of the Sydney board as well as its senior management. These included:
? "An explicit acknowledgement that the long-term specific financial commitment over the nine-year agreement will apply to the Swans' total player payments for each of the nine years, regardless of how many years Franklin is available to play for the club."
AFL clears Buddy Franklin's $10m move
THE AUSTRALIAN OCTOBER 09, 2013 12:00AM
Cookies must be enabled. | The AustralianComment
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Everyone should be more worried about how good the Giants will be. They've got talent right across the field. Patton's out injured and then they unearth Cam McCarthy as a power forward who, with Cameron, kicked nine goals down in Canberra against the Suns. Ultimately, they will lose players because of salary cap pressures. It is scary to think where they will be in a few short years.Run2Live,Live2RunComment
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Thanks for researching the specifics. This just reinforces the idea that everything the Swans do falls into a special category according to the AFL and needing to have some targeted restrictive provisions. If the Swans had signed Frawey and O'Rourke after consecutive premierships the house would have come down on us. Surely it would have been seen as a rort of the system.The condition that the payments outlined for each year of the 9 years would be counted as part of the Swans TPP even if Franklin did not play for the full 9 years, and thus is not paid for the full 9 years, is a condition imposed by the AFL as part of its approval of the deal between the Swans and Franklin. It is part of the agreement between the Swans and the AFL, not between the Swans and Franklin and therefore it is not relevant to the Industrial Relations Court.
"Dillon (AFL General Counsel) said the AFL acknowledged that the nature of the nine-year deal was an unprecedented commitment of TPP funds to a single player over such a contract length, and as a result it sought written guarantees from all members of the Sydney board as well as its senior management. These included:
? "An explicit acknowledgement that the long-term specific financial commitment over the nine-year agreement will apply to the Swans' total player payments for each of the nine years, regardless of how many years Franklin is available to play for the club."
AFL clears Buddy Franklin's $10m move
THE AUSTRALIAN OCTOBER 09, 2013 12:00AM
Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
I think it would be great for GWS to be a successful club both on and off the field. It would be beneficial to both clubs to have the kind of state rivalry they have in SA and WA, and it doesn't seem to have hurt those clubs membership numbers at all, as they all are at record levels. It will bring more clout to NSW footy and make the AFL aware of the importance of NSW to the overall success of the code. I think the Giants can make the 8 this year and hope they do.Everyone should be more worried about how good the Giants will be. They've got talent right across the field. Patton's out injured and then they unearth Cam McCarthy as a power forward who, with Cameron, kicked nine goals down in Canberra against the Suns. Ultimately, they will lose players because of salary cap pressures. It is scary to think where they will be in a few short years.Comment
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I agree with you that the conditions imposed on the Swans in relation to the Franklin contract should in principle be applied on all clubs that recruit a RFA. However I have never read that to be the case for any other player and think that in fact it was a one-off applied to the Swans re Franklin on the basis of the extra-ordinary length and size of the contract (as the quote from the AFL Counsel that I provided above suggests)...... it should mean that all restricted free agent signings would come under the same provisions. RFAs Dale Thomas and Eddie Betts also signed multi year deals for big bucks with new clubs, albeit not on the order of Buddy's deal, but nothing was ever said that the deals had to be fulfilled to the end and included in the salary cap whether they played or not. Thomas especially, given his ankle injury, may not have been able to play out his contract and many had questioned Carlton's decision to sign him up on such a big contract given the situation. Yet, I cannot recall a mention that Carlton would he stuck holding the bag if Daisy had to retire.
I doesn't mean that it's not the case. Perhaps the Buddy provisions hold for all RFA contracts, yet it is odd that this matter only arose in relation to Buddy Franklin and the Swans.
There is an interesting article on AFL website today discussing the relative "success" to the recruiting clubs of each of the free agents (restricted and unrestricted) since free agency was introduced three years ago.
Who fired, who flopped? Free agency hits and misses - AFL.com.au
There have been eight RFAs other than Buddy: Brent Moloney, Brendon Goddard, Eddie Betts, Nick Dal Santo, Troy Chaplin, Danyle Pearce, Dale Thomas and Shaun Higgins. I don't recall there being much of a tussle or controversy over any of these (some in regard to Dale Thomas) and I don't think any of them have a contract longer than 4 years or will be any older than about 32 at the end. So no doubt these factors would be used to emphasise the special nature, and therefore the special conditions imposed, in regard to the Franklin contract.
However I was annoyed last year that the AFL did not impose the "Franklin condition" on the Bulldogs when they recruited Tom Boyd (who was still under contract to GWS) on an extraordinary trade deal involving a swap in which they gave GWS Griffen + pick 6 + paying some of Griffen's contract ($1million?). And then put Boyd, a 19-year-old who had played nine AFL games and kicked eight goals, on a seven-year, $7 million contract. Offering that sort of a deal almost certainly put all the other Vic clubs out of contention for Boyd's services. Surely the Bulldogs should have to wear the consequences in their TPP if Boyd turns out to be a flop and can't last 7 years, just as the Swans would have to do if Buddy can't fulfill his full nine-year contract?
Which is a long way of saying that I agree that the AFL does seem to think up special conditions specifically for the Swans, but not apply them to other clubs in similar circumstances.Comment
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I've been thinking along similar lines, but cannot think of any examples of what it could be.Twitter @cmdil
Instagram @conordillonComment

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