Don't make it about me.
The AFL - a national competition? (split thread)
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Controversial opinion time, but I think there is too many teams, Victorian teams specifically. There is 18 teams, 10 of which are Victorian. 16 teams was the perfect equilibrium in my opinion.
I genuinely think GWS have a serious future in Sydney, but Gold Coast I'm not so sure about.
but surely teams like North Melbourne and St Kilda need to go in order to make it a more nationalised competition.
Personally I'd be down for Carlton to go. I know they have a bigger supporter base but theyve been an absolute shambles for so long.
EDIT: Also I genuinely don't think there is enough talent for 18 teams.Last edited by longmile; 25 June 2020, 11:06 PM.Comment
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Controversial opinion time, but I think there is too many teams, Victorian teams specifically. There is 18 teams, 10 of which are Victorian. 16 teams was the perfect equilibrium in my opinion.
I genuinely think GWS have a serious future in Sydney, but Gold Coast I'm not so sure about.
but surely teams like North Melbourne and St Kilda need to go in order to make it a more nationalised competition.
Personally I'd be down for Carlton to go. I know they have a bigger supporter base but theyve been an absolute shambles for so long."You get the feeling that like Monty Python's Black Knight, the Swans would regard amputation as merely a flesh wound."Comment
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Controversial opinion time, but I think there is too many teams, Victorian teams specifically. There is 18 teams, 10 of which are Victorian. 16 teams was the perfect equilibrium in my opinion.
I genuinely think GWS have a serious future in Sydney, but Gold Coast I'm not so sure about.
Once GWS and Gold Coast have established themselves in the next 10 years, then the next change of teams will be relocation of a melbourne club to tassie.
This will be a titantic shift, because then it will be 9 vic, 9 non-vic, and the non-vic clubs can form voting blocks to get through the reforms a lot of us have been harping on for years.
Thats the most likely scenario.
Alternative realities is that we get some hard arse like Peter V'Landy's in to run the show, and he gives norf and st kilda the flick in his first year.Comment
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There is a thread on BF called "The younger generation is just not that into you" and that title sums up footys greatest challenge.
Footy is like Japan. It is the best game on earth and Japan is the greatest country on earth (we are like fourth or something) but
both have dwindling populations. The older footy followers who are dying off are just not being replaced by new ones. There are
a bunch of reasons. Smart phones and social media are near the top of the list. Economic inequality is in there too. Anyway, the
gist of it is that footy just has way too much competition now for the hearts, minds and the money of the population.
It's fighting a battle that it will never win. The teens and twenty somethings of today just don't care. I'm with Bob Dylan on this
one. In twenty or thirty years they are going to running the shop. We'll all be hiding out somewhere trying to not get what
the new coronavirus of that time is called. The sooner the AFL accepts reality, regroups and cuts four teams from Victoria the
better. They are already the walking dead.Comment
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There is a thread on BF called "The younger generation is just not that into you" and that title sums up footys greatest challenge.
Footy is like Japan. It is the best game on earth and Japan is the greatest country on earth (we are like fourth or something) but
both have dwindling populations. The older footy followers who are dying off are just not being replaced by new ones. There are
a bunch of reasons. Smart phones and social media are near the top of the list. Economic inequality is in there too. Anyway, the
gist of it is that footy just has way too much competition now for the hearts, minds and the money of the population.
It's fighting a battle that it will never win. The teens and twenty somethings of today just don't care. I'm with Bob Dylan on this
one. In twenty or thirty years they are going to running the shop. We'll all be hiding out somewhere trying to not get what
the new coronavirus of that time is called. The sooner the AFL accepts reality, regroups and cuts four teams from Victoria the
better. They are already the walking dead.Comment
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I wonder whether the Soccer word cup in Australia will have a deleterious affect on AFL?
I could have specified AFLW but I'm trying to think of the game in a holistic way.Last edited by Ruck'n'Roll; 28 June 2020, 01:33 PM.Comment
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There is a thread on BF called "The younger generation is just not that into you" and that title sums up footys greatest challenge.
Footy is like Japan. It is the best game on earth and Japan is the greatest country on earth (we are like fourth or something) but
both have dwindling populations. The older footy followers who are dying off are just not being replaced by new ones. There are
a bunch of reasons. Smart phones and social media are near the top of the list. Economic inequality is in there too. Anyway, the
gist of it is that footy just has way too much competition now for the hearts, minds and the money of the population.
It's fighting a battle that it will never win. The teens and twenty somethings of today just don't care. I'm with Bob Dylan on this
one. In twenty or thirty years they are going to running the shop. We'll all be hiding out somewhere trying to not get what
the new coronavirus of that time is called. The sooner the AFL accepts reality, regroups and cuts four teams from Victoria the
better. They are already the walking dead.Comment
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Not the case with fans in Victoria. They can't get enough of it and I did read recently TV audiences are way up. It is a religion down here. You just have to see how many women's team have sprung up in recent years. They hardly have enough grounds to play games. A lot of women's games are being played on private and public school ovals.
options to spend their time and limited money (due to stagnant wages growth, high housing costs & increasing unemployment)
on. Footy in Melbourne may be an exception as you point out though. It seems to me that interest in what was the major summer
sport, cricket, is way down. Union and the A League are really struggling, likewise the NBL. With League I can't tell. It always
seemed to exist in it's own belligerent bubble even before the bug came along. The endless squabbles between broadcasters and
the different sporting leagues over money say to me that all is not well when it comes to audience numbers, though possibly
that is also partly due to the broadcast industry changing.Comment
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There are some interesting comments from Andrew Pridham in today's SMH re what he sees as the very real threat AFL in the
northern states faces from Peter V'landys and the re-born NRL. He sees them as a formidable and increasingly powerful competitor,
as most of the people and money that has left rugby union has gone to the NRL, and implies Gill & co down in Melbourne are over
estimating the strength of Australian rules in the northern states. Worth a read.Comment
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There are some interesting comments from Andrew Pridham in today's SMH re what he sees as the very real threat AFL in the
northern states faces from Peter V'landys and the re-born NRL. He sees them as a formidable and increasingly powerful competitor,
as most of the people and money that has left rugby union has gone to the NRL, and implies Gill & co down in Melbourne are over
estimating the strength of Australian rules in the northern states. Worth a read.
Whether anything has been changed will only show when things return to something approaching normality and unlimited crowds are allowed back in the stadiums.
None of that is to say that the AFL can afford to take its eyes off the ball in the Northern States. But I'm not convinced much under the surface has really changed."You get the feeling that like Monty Python's Black Knight, the Swans would regard amputation as merely a flesh wound."Comment
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There are some interesting comments from Andrew Pridham in today's SMH re what he sees as the very real threat AFL in the
northern states faces from Peter V'landys and the re-born NRL. He sees them as a formidable and increasingly powerful competitor,
as most of the people and money that has left rugby union has gone to the NRL, and implies Gill & co down in Melbourne are over
estimating the strength of Australian rules in the northern states. Worth a read.Comment
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