AFL Gather Round - now announced for Adelaide through 2026.

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Jul 2, 2010
38,075
36,347
Adelaide
AFL Club
Carlton
2024 Gather round Summary

Expected Attendance

The AFL says it is determined to make Gather Round an annual fixture and was open to Adelaide hosting the event again if the state follows through on spectacular attendance estimates. About 50,000 fans were expected to visit SA for the round, including 15,000 by car and the government estimated 115,000 passengers will pass through Adelaide Airport over the weekend in the busiest four days since the pandemic, with airlines adding 35 extra flights to Adelaide for the Gather Round. With Carlton fans having bought the most tickets of non-SA fans ahead of Collingwood, Geelong and Richmond.
A ticket to either of the weekend’s double-headers at Adelaide Oval granted a patron entry to both matches. Club membership entitlements were also not valid during Gather Round, with all club members needing to redeem or purchase a ticket to access any Round 5 matches.

Biggest travelling fan bases

Carlton, Collingwood, Geelong, Richmond (in alphabetical order)

TICKETS SOLD

  • Approx 170,000+ tickets sold
  • SA – 112,000 (67%)
  • VIC – 35,000 (20%)
  • REST OF COUNTRY – 13%
  • 152 PEOPLE FROM INTERNATIONAL
All but one of the Gather Round matches in South Australia were officially sold out ahead of Adelaide and Carlton kicking off the historic festival of footy on Thursday night.

There were 47,435 at Adelaide Oval on Thursday night to watch the Crows dismantle Carlton in a stunning start to the inaugural Gather Round

A bumper crowd of 42,134 turned out to enjoy an engrossing contest between Richmond and Sydney on Friday night. That figure was far greater than the number SA Premier Peter Malinauskas had hoped would provide further evidence Gather Round should remain in his state.

An AFL spokesperson told foxfooty.com.au the league was anticipating the Bombers-Demons game would not feature as many fans in the crowd as the Power-Bulldogs clash as the indication was Port Adelaide members had purchased a significant portion of the double-tickets available.

All in all #AFLcrowds were 204,335 over 9 matches at an average of 22,704 (or over 7 fixtures @ 29,191).



Television

Preliminary #AFLtvra#AFLtvratings aggregate audience of 5.239m for the round. This would be the 2nd highest round for the year behind the season opening round and the highest rating Foxtel overnight audience for the AFL in 2023.

The highest rating game overall was Friday nights Swans/Tigers which reach 1.12m viewers, while Thursday nights Blues/Crows fixture also topped the million viewer mark. Sunday nights Saints/Pies game was the best rating game on Foxtel with 292,000 watching on linear television.

Impact

The Adelaide Economic Development Agency provided the early figure of $85.8m in economic impact of the round but said on this was a conservative figure based on early ticket sales information of 200,000 tickets sold and 50,000 interstate visitor figures.

More than 115,000 passengers will pass through Adelaide Airport this weekend to experience the four-day AFL bonanza in South Australia which will see all 18 clubs play in nine sold-out games. The Friday specifically is the biggest of the event’s four days for the Adelaide Airport, with an anticipated 34,000 passengers flying into the city. An extra 35 flights into Adelaide have been added by Virgin Australia to accommodate the influx.

Hotels are enjoying the boon too, with the latest forward booking data showing there are more hotel rooms booked over the Friday and Saturday (91 per cent and 92 per cent respectively) of Gather Round than any other weekend before.

This surpasses the 90 per cent hotel occupation rate recorded during the March 2023 long weekend when Adelaide was revelling in the atmosphere of the Fringe Festival, sold-out world music festival WOMADelaide and Ed Sheeran’s blockbuster appearance at the Adelaide Oval.

According to National Australia Bank, the AFL’s inaugural Gather Round has been a smashing success for the city of Adelaide with $223 million spent across accommodation, restaurants, bars and pubs, and retail, according to NAB transaction data (Spend estimates taken from NAB merchant terminal data from 13 April 2023 to 16 April 2023 and compared to the same weekend in 2022 in Adelaide.). The event saw a 21% trading boost when compared to the same weekend the year prior, whilst bars in Adelaide Oval precinct alone saw a massive increase in money through the tills – up 175% on last year. Overall, spend on accommodation around metro Adelaide was up 50%, retail saw an increase of 30% and bars and pubs were up 13% when compared to the same weekend in 2022.

Cost

The AFL and South Australian government have not disclosed the amount handed to the league under the state’s major events budget. But given each club was handed $500,000 and each playing list $200,000 to add another round to the season — adding up to $12.6 million in base costs alone — it likely cost South Australia well over $15 million for the event.

Aftermath

According to the AFL, the inaugural ‘Gather Round’ has been an overwhelming success, with all nine games sold out, more than 220,000 fans attending matches across the Adelaide Oval, Norwood Oval and Mount Barker in the Adelaide Hills and tens of thousands of fans attending the footy festival on the banks of Torrens. More than 60,000 fans purchased tickets from interstate.

Malinauskas also made a public pitch to keep Gather Round in SA beyond the inaugural edition in 2023, saying the state's history as a sports-mad, football-loving population made it the ideal choice. By Sunday the AFL had confirmed that Gather Round would be held in SA for the next three years.

Across 2024, 2025 and 2026, Gather Round ... A festival of footy will be hosted exclusively in South Australia, with Adelaide Oval to be the central venue, with the intent from both the AFL and the SA Government to take regional matches in 2024 to the Barossa / McClaren Vale region.

As part of the three-year term, both the AFL and SA Government have also committed to establishing a community football legacy fund, that will benefit local footy clubs in the state beyond the weekend of matches.

References

 
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Having gone to the NRL magic round the previous 2 years, I genuinely don't think it would work in the AFL. 8 games is literally the tipping point for NRL and there games are 40 minutes shorter than ours. Not to mention the state of the playing surface come the Sunday afternoon. It's fun to speculate in theory but I genuinely don't think a weekend of 18 hours of AFL in one city is that appealing to begin with
 
Why would we ever consider copying what the nrl does?
 
If it were held in April in Perth (after the cricket season, but before the rains), you could go with:

Thursday Night: WACA Ground

Friday Night: Optus Stadium

Saturday Morning: Leederville Oval
Saturday Afternoon: WACA Ground
Saturday Night: Optus Stadium

Sunday Morning: Leederville Oval
Sunday Afternoon: WACA Ground
Sunday Twilight: Optus Stadium

Monday night: Optus Stadium

4 games at Optus, 3 at the WACA and 2 games at Leederville Oval to spread out the playing surface damage. All venues are central to Perth with good public transport connections for visiting fans.

You would have to presume for no team to have a home ground advantage, it would have to be a derby. But that would be a wasted opportunity of filling Optus Stadium for 2 separate games, instead of only 1.
 
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Premier Peter Malinauskas reveals SA’s bid to host an entire AFL round’s nine matches​

The Premier has revealed plans for a festival of footy, centred on Adelaide Oval, hosting all nine matches of an entire AFL round.

A festival of footy centred on Adelaide Oval would showcase all nine AFL matches in a single round next year, under South Australia’s bid for a proposed one-state carnival.

Revealing the state’s pitch for the April school holiday event, Premier Peter Malinauskas said it would incorporate grassroots footy at every level and, potentially, AFL games at suburban ovals.

Mr Malinauskas also revealed he had lobbied the AFL for a return of State of Origin football, declaring this would be “a huge success”, though it did not form part of SA’s single-state round bid.

The AFL is working to add an extra round to the home-and-away season next year, it was revealed on Tuesday, modelled on the NRL’s “magic round” in which all games are played in the one state.

Three states, including SA, have expressed interest in the nine-game carnival, for which the AFL has floated the prospect of double-headers and even triple-headers.

In an exclusive interview with The Advertiser, Mr Malinauskas argued SA could “put on a pretty amazing experience” by showcasing the upgraded Adelaide Oval and pointed out the state punched above its weight for crowd numbers.

“South Australia’s a footy state and we believe that by hosting the event outside of Victoria, and here in Adelaide, we can draw on crowds from both the west and the east coast,” he said.

“We can extend it to more than just a festival of AFL footy but incorporate grassroots footy at every level.

“Without going too much into our bid that we’re making to the AFL, we want this to be a comprehensive celebration of footy.

“I’m not going to foreshadow publicly the different components of our bid so that our opponents, or our competitors, can match it – but needless to say, this is an event that everyone could embrace.”

It is understood a $40m major events fund created in the June 2 state budget would be tapped into for the bid.

This would include assessing the economic benefit to the state before determining a financial offer to the AFL for hosting rights.

Adelaide Oval would be the festival of footy’s linchpin but Mr Malinauskas said other grounds could potentially be involved, opening the prospect of AFL games at suburban or regional ovals.

“There’s a lot of water to go under this bridge yet, and I understand the field is competitive, but we are having a red-hot go,” he said.

Asked whether the “festival of footy” would include a State of Origin game revival, Mr Malinauskas said he did not believe this was “on the cards for the AFL”.

“Personally, I think the time for State of Origin’s return has well and truly arrived. That’s my personal view, which I’ve made known to the AFL,” he said.

“It would be embraced. It is a shame that it was lost. But I think the (23-year) period between has ensured that if it ever returned, it would be more than just nostalgia, it would be a huge success.”

The SA/Victoria rivalry was considered the fiercest in State of Origin, drawing 91,960 to the MCG for a match in 1989 after SA had beaten the Big V for three successive years.

The final State of Origin match between Victoria and SA was played on May 29, 1999, at the MCG, where 26,000 fans saw SA lose by 54 points.

The AFL has been contacted for comment

 
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If it were held in April in Perth (after the cricket season, but before the rains), you could go with:

Thursday Night: WACA Ground

Friday Night: Optus Stadium

Saturday Morning: Leederville Oval
Saturday Afternoon: WACA Ground
Saturday Night: Optus Stadium

Sunday Morning: Leederville Oval
Sunday Afternoon: WACA Ground
Sunday Twilight: Optus Stadium

Monday night: Optus Stadium

4 games at Optus, 3 at the WACA and 2 games at Leederville Oval to spread out the playing surface damage. All venues are central to Perth with good public transport connections for visiting fans.

You would have to presume for no team to have a home ground advantage, it would have to be a derby. But that would be a wasted opportunity of filling Optus Stadium for 2 separate games, instead of only 1.
This works if you can find a weekend with a PH. For example, in WA do it on the WA day public holiday weekend.

Thursday 7pm
Friday 7pm

Saturday 2pm
Saturday 4.30pm
Saturday 7pm

Sunday 1pm
Sunday 3.30pm
Sunday 6pm

Monday 3.30pm
 
This works if you can find a weekend with a PH. For example, in WA do it on the WA day public holiday weekend.

Thursday 7pm
Friday 7pm

Saturday 2pm
Saturday 4.30pm
Saturday 7pm

Sunday 1pm
Sunday 3.30pm
Sunday 6pm

Monday 3.30pm

That’s a good idea.

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Although playing 1 game a day at each venue on the weekend, means it’s hard for a spectator to get to all three games on a day.

Perhaps instead, play 2 double-headers at 2 venues on Saturday. And a triple header on the Sunday.

And have Freo and Eagles play on Friday and Monday respectively as they can sell out Optus, whilst allowing games without Perth teams to be on the weekend and have a greater chance for travelling fans and random locals to attend.

So:

Friday 6pm - Optus (Freo vs a big supported team to sell out opening night)

Saturday 10pm - Leederville (GWS vs someone small)
Saturday 1pm - Leederville

Saturday 3:30pm - WACA (Gold Coast vs someone small)
Saturday 6:30pm - WACA (they have good lights for night games)

Sunday 12pm - Optus
Sunday 3pm - Optus
Sunday 6pm - Optus

Monday PH 5pm - Optus (West Coast vs someone to sell out closing night)
 

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I assume having a round of neutral games is a way to slowly expand the season, but without an uneven balance of home games.

If we were going to have a round of games at a neutral ground, I'd rather it be an opportunity to spread the game to the under represented areas.

Call it Regional Round and play a game each in Cairns, Townsville, Hobart (not North), Canberra, Darwin, Alice, Newcastle, Albury and Bendigo (or some variation of that).
 
I assume having a round of neutral games is a way to slowly expand the season, but without an uneven balance of home games.

If we were going to have a round of games at a neutral ground, I'd rather it be an opportunity to spread the game to the under represented areas.

Call it Regional Round and play a game each in Cairns, Townsville, Hobart (not North), Canberra, Darwin, Alice, Newcastle, Albury and Bendigo (or some variation of that).
Dont mind the idea, although the idea of magic round is having all AFL supporters in the one region so they can go to multiple games. Having afl fans spaced out in regional towns for games not only would not help with crowds, but the games at regional grounds aren't great to watch on TV. I like the idea of having:
1 game at blacktown, GWS must play this game
2 games at accor
2 games at spotless
4 games at scg
 
IMO if AFL does a magic round, it needs to be all at the one venue and it needs to be possible to attend all 9 games, similar to how the NRL one works.

Objectively I think Adelaide would be the best place to host it, it's a footy mad town with nothing much to do outside sporting events. I could see all four days being a sellout.

As for the matches if it's in Adelaide have the showdown on Thursday night (guaranteed sellout), double header on Friday with the first game at 5.05pm Adelaide time and the second game at 8.10pm Adelaide time, three games on Saturday and three games on Sunday all at Adelaide Oval.
 
NSW
Good Friday

Game 1: 3:20pm @ Spotless
Game 2: 7:50pm @Accor

Super Saturday at the SCG

Game 3: 1:10pm @ SCG
Game 4: 4:35pm @ SCG
Game 5: 7:50pm @SCG

Sunday:

Game 6: 12pm @Blacktown - GWS game
Game 7: 4:35pm Spotless
Game 8: 7:50pm @Accor

Easter Monday:

Game 9: 3:20pm @SCG
 
If state governments are silly enough to offer millions for this the AFL should take it. If NSW think it will work like NRL Magic Round they are mistaken. Our games are too long for triple headers. And only one big crowd puller (Swans) makes the other nights really tough.
Will be like AFLX or the GF parade on water.
 
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NSW
Good Friday

Game 1: 3:20pm @ Spotless
Game 2: 7:50pm @Accor

Super Saturday at the SCG

Game 3: 1:10pm @ SCG
Game 4: 4:35pm @ SCG
Game 5: 7:50pm @SCG

Sunday:

Game 6: 12pm @Blacktown - GWS game
Game 7: 4:35pm Spotless
Game 8: 7:50pm @Accor

Easter Monday:

Game 9: 3:20pm @SCG
They won't do Easter weekend, because of Easter Thursday being important to Brisbane, Good Friday being important to North and Easter Monday being important to Hawks bottom line.
 
I'd go:

2 @ SCG
2 @ Accor
1 @ Giants Stadium
1 @ Newcastle
1 @ Canberra
1 @ Albury
1 @ Blacktown

I'd spread it around no matter what state it is, i.e. SA

3 @ Adelaide Oval inc. Showdown
2 @ Norwood Oval
2 @ Alberton Oval
1 @ Prospect Oval
1 @ Elizabeth Oval

Edit: Wanted to do WA for the fun of it:

3 @ Optus
2 @ WACA
1 @ Bassendean Oval
1 @ Arena Joondalup
1 @ Rushton Park
1 @ East Fremantle Oval
 
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I'd go:

2 @ SCG
2 @ Accor
1 @ Giants Stadium
1 @ Newcastle
1 @ Canberra
1 @ Albury
1 @ Blacktown

I'd spread it around no matter what state it is, i.e. SA

3 @ Adelaide Oval inc. Showdown
2 @ Norwood Oval
2 @ Alberton Oval
1 @ Prospect Oval
1 @ Elizabeth Oval

Edit: Wanted to do WA for the fun of it:

3 @ Optus
2 @ WACA
1 @ Bassendean Oval
1 @ Arena Joondalup
1 @ Rushton Park
1 @ East Fremantle Oval
Spreading it around that much kind of defeats the whole purpose. Needs to be in the one city.
 
One city for the entire weekend. So visitors can get to all venues from their accomodation without moving.

One stadium per day. So visitors can go to all games in a day. Whilst not over using one playing field and destroying the turf.
 

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