Robbo Endorsed Caroline Wilson steps down as CFW at The Age

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i can think of quite a few tbh but that says more about the quality of football journalism in this state.

i thought sometimes wilson got too personally involved in her stories (i.e. north) but at the same time can understand that this was not always by her design but through other people attacking her in the media.

when i read sports journalism i want to relax and not think too much so i don't like her articles that much because you have to spend a fair but of time wondering who is briefing her and where the interests are.

Caro was about the business that is footy far more than any individual game of footy, more about those pulling the strings behind the scenes than those out on the ground, and many readers battled to understand where she was coming from.
Patrick Smith at The Aus was more like Caro than say Mike Sheahan. Sadly Mikes replacement shares few of the journalistic skills of the group that have lead the print media for the last decade plus.
 
I can't think of another journalist who has contributed more unsubstantiated Shite in a career.
o_Oo_Oo_Oo_O
Really? I get the hate from some people, but no.

Your North mate Purple for one, in less than half the years has made up heaps more shite.
Hutchy
Schtevo
Walphy.

10 seconds and I didn't even scratch the surface.
 
o_Oo_Oo_Oo_O
Really? I get the hate from some people, but no.

This is just one topic.


Roos must accept the inevitable ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 12-2-2007

“THERE is a sense of inevitability about the Kangaroos and their uncertain future which, despite a lack of leadership and some procrastinating by the AFL, is looking more and more certain by the day.”

“Although the club is pushing for another season in a bid to make up its mind about a Gold Coast move, the truth is that fewer and fewer North Melbourne people believe the club can survive in its current form.”

“One month ago, Glenn Archer was being touted as a significant and symbolic catalyst for the Kangaroos and their fight to survive in Melbourne… But now Archer even admits that his club's chances of survival as a Melbourne-based entity are increasingly slim. As a symbol, his value for the Arden Street push has dropped significantly.”

“More importantly, the club has secured a promise from at least 75% of its controlling shareholders that they will support a move to the Gold Coast after a last-chance 2008 should James Brayshaw's somewhat flimsy, if well-meaning, plan fail to reach its equally flimsy objectives.”

“You might argue, as the Kangaroos have, that Andrew Demetriou has shifted the goal posts in speeding up the proceedings but it has been clear for almost two years that Demetriou wanted 22 games a year in southern Queensland well before 2015.”

“It is difficult to imagine a greener pasture for the club than southern Queensland… the AFL has never been wealthier and more steadfast in its belief that the Gold Coast must be infiltrated for the competition to remain on top of the game.”

“…the Kangaroos need a much stronger administration, and more competitive playing list to become a powerful new-look club in a bid to win supporters in a new region. None of that is going to happen until the Kangaroos make a commitment.”

“But never have the Kangaroos had more to gain, never have they looked more vulnerable and never has an AFL second chance looked more attractive.”

“John Magowan, the acting club chairman, does not want to be the one to flick the switch but you get the feeling he knows that flicked it must be.”

“The AFL must tell the club the deal will be removed from the table by January if it cannot make up its mind and refuse the Brayshaw option. And Magowan, the reluctant chief, knows what he must do then.


Roos' powerbrokers soften Coast stance ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-30-2007

“THE Kangaroos' two most powerful shareholders, Bob Ansett and Peter de Rauch, have agreed to commit to a Gold Coast relocation within 12 months should the AFL accept James Brayshaw's one-year survival plan and it ultimately fails.”

“Acting club chairman John Magowan is believed to have secured 75 per cent of the club's shares, with the proviso that the AFL agrees to keep open its $20 million a year relocation package until the end of the 2008 season.”

“Under the Brayshaw plan, the Kangaroos will be given a year to reach a certain level of membership, boost the quality and quantity of their administration, secure a naming rights sponsor for Arden Street, improve corporate sponsorship and unite their board in a bid to be given another chance at survival.”

“Should the bid fail - as the AFL and key board members believe is inevitable - Magowan has secured an assurance from both de Rauch and Ansett, who control an estimated 40 per cent of the shares, to push forward to the Gold Coast.”

Roos face coast ban ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-27-2007

“THE AFL will consider redrawing the 2008 fixture and pulling the Kangaroos out of Gold Coast games should they reject the league's $100 million relocation offer.”

“In what would prove a historic and unprecedented move, The Age understands the AFL now believes it would be impossible to expand into the northern market with the Kangaroos next season if they choose to remain a Melbourne-based club. The AFL fixture would be altered to put in place games more attractive and saleable to the Gold Coast market.”

“While the league has a deal to play seven Kangaroos home-and- away games at Carrara over the next two seasons - worth a total of $2.8 million to the club - it already has broached the possibility of a financial settlement with the divided Kangaroos board.”

“(Gillon) McLachlan, who refused last night to comment on negotiations, is also the AFL's manager in charge of the fixture.”

“While Brayshaw's faction - which includes directors Ron Joseph and Brayshaw's elder brother Mark, who has chosen to support his brother's one-year survival plan - claims the club cannot hope to reach a decision without a concrete stadium agreement, the AFL believes the group is using the Carrara issue as a delaying tactic.”

“The AFL is continuing to consider legal advice regarding the shareholders (of the club)…”

“While Collingwood has put its hand up to step into the Gold Coast market on a part-time basis, next year's fixture would more likely be made up of a variety of clubs playing home games at Carrara.

Pies launch bid for coast deal ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-22-2007

“COLLINGWOOD has launched a radical plan to become the AFL's team on the Gold Coast with a proposal to play up to six games at Carrara as early as next season.”

“Magpies' president Eddie McGuire and his chief executive Gary Pert yesterday met AFL chiefs Mike Fitzpatrick and Andrew Demetriou and put forward the rival bid, assuring the AFL it would step into a new-look Gold Coast agreement should the Kangaroos reject the $100 million offer to move there.”

“The AFL did not totally reject revising next year's fixture given the reality that should the Kangaroos reject the league's proposal, their four games scheduled for 2008 would struggle to capture the hearts and minds of the Gold Coast public.”

“Should the, albeit left-field, offer by Collingwood be considered, the Magpies only interstate games would most likely take place at Carrara or the Gabba.”

Roos ask for an extra year ; FOOTBALL - AFL close to deal on Gold Coast stadium; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-21-2007

“THE Kangaroos have attempted to put off their historic relocation decision for 12 months, with acting chairman John Magowan yesterday asking the AFL Commission and its clubs to approve a one-year deadline extension for the club to build a survival plan in Melbourne.”

“However, The Age understands that even the anti-relocation faction on the Kangaroos' board has begun to seriously question whether the club could survive should it choose not to relocate.”

“The AFL also revealed to the clubs that it was on the verge of reaching a $120 million deal with the Queensland Government to fund the redevelopment of Carrara - a deal the Kangaroos have privately admitted could seal their decision to relocate.”

“Magowan, who is understood to be cautiously committed to the relocation proposal, indicated yesterday that his board had in principle accepted the terms of the AFL's package…”

“The Carrara deal involves a state government-led consortium that would follow a two-stage redevelopment worth a total $200 million and based on the Skilled Stadium model at Geelong, in which the first $120 million rebuilding would create an 18,000-seat venue and the second stage would create a 22,000-seat venue.”

“AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou revealed yesterday that he hoped to seal a deal with the Queensland Government in two weeks' time, a date which would coincide with the AFL's next large-scale meeting with the Kangaroos.”

“Demetriou said yesterday the state government's proposal hinged upon a fully Gold Coast-based club. He said should the Kangaroos vote against moving or should their shareholders reject the AFL's $3 million buyback proposal, work on a 17th licence would begin.”

Kangaroos pay price for dithering ; OPINION; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 11-04-2007

“While the AFL is not blameless, the club's board has failed to be decisive about the Gold Coast.”

“…but even the most bitter Kangaroos rivals agree on one thing - the club's astonishing achievement in finishing third during this difficult and strife-torn season. In fact, what the Kangaroos achieved in 2007 almost could be described as a miracle, given all they were up against.”

“Not only did the Kangaroos pay their players as a group between $500,000 to $750,000 less than most of their opponents, but they operated with a dedicated but virtually skeleton full-time group of football staffers, not to mention a further dedicated group of part-timers who clearly worked well beyond their wages.”

“Nothing will change next season unless the club commits to relocation and the brave but risky new Gold Coast world.”

“Since 1999, the club has tried to forge new markets in Sydney, Canberra and the Gold Coast... If it stays in Melbourne, where would it sell itself next?”

“Even when Glenn Archer, seen by some as a spiritual saviour, broke Wayne Schimmelbusch's games record in August, he could not draw a decent crowd worthy of his work for the club.”

“In truth, the club has fiddled while Arden Street has burned.”

“(The AFL created) a competitive balance fund with a series of strict guidelines - stipulations that clearly have not been met by the Kangaroos. Yet still the money has come in.”

“Should the Kangaroos choose to remain at Arden Street - and the smart money is on Demetriou getting his way and overseeing a relocation - the club faces an uncertain future and a decade of hard slog and drudgery simply to remain alive. And it will have wasted the AFL's time and caused immeasurable heartache and angst for its small but loyal band of supporters.”

Roos short on cap ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-03-2007

“THE Kangaroos are paying their players below the AFL's stipulated salary-cap requirements and have reneged on a pledge to plunge an extra $500,000 into their cash-strapped football department.”

“As the club continues to negotiate a potential relocation package to the Gold Coast with the AFL… frustrated AFL insiders have revealed that the Kangaroos' financial crisis remains so desperate that the required 92.5 per cent total player payments required by the league have not been met despite funding from the league.”

“…AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou and his commission have been working privately on the unlikely prospect of a 17th licence and are understood to have a potential consortium in place which has already conditionally raised $60 million.”

“Despite coach Dean Laidley's insistence upon a $500,000 injection into the club's under-resourced football department and the club's commitment to that, The Age understands that Laidley's overstretched staff will only receive an estimated 75 per cent of that next season.”

“(The AFL’s relocation package) includes eradication of the club's $4.25 million debt and a temporary Gold Coast zone, priority draft picks and a profitable new stadium deal along with bonuses for Melbourne-based members.”

“Given the Kangaroos' perilous finances, a reality delivered to the club again by the AFL three days ago, the 95 per cent salary- cap demand is effectively a Gold Coast clause.”

“…the AFL is understood to be considering a series of options in a bid to take on those North Melbourne shareholders opposing the move (to the Gold Coast).”

AFL splurges to tempt Roos ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-02-2007

“THE AFL has vowed to pay out the Kangaroos' $4.25 million debt and spend a further $3 million buying out its shareholders as part of the Gold Coast relocation package to be laid out today in further detail to the club.”

“Not only has the AFL vowed to plough millions of dollars to underwrite the Kangaroos' potential move, its package, while still not completed, is also expected to include:
-A written guarantee of between seven and eight home-and-away games in Melbourne.
-A special deal for the club's Melbourne members.
-A promise to ensure the club's on-field success in the short- term via priority picks, further potential to pick up uncontracted players and a Gold Coast zone.
-Continuing support of Arden Street as a permanent Melbourne training base for the club and the wider community.
-State-of-the art training facilities and an AFL-funded marketing team to promote the team in the increasingly tough Gold Coast market.
-The multimillion-dollar investment in establishing a team on the Gold Coast also includes the redevelopment of Carrara - still the AFL's preferred venue - with more than $300 million and a stadium deal based on Geelong's Skilled Stadium model, in which the Cats profit to the tune of $30 a spectator.”

“With the board still divided and apparently controlled by maverick shareholders, the AFL Commission also is considering a series of legal options in the event the club's private ownership structure stands in the way of a decision to move north.”

“However, even (Glenn) Archer and (Denis) Pagan have conceded in interviews this week that the club's survival in Melbourne is not certain and have called for more time.”

“But the AFL will reiterate to Carter and Head today that it needs a decision before the end of the year, and while it did not rule out extending the 30-day deadline agreed to by both parties, it seems clear a 17th club is a real possibility.”

“While the AFL has not directly threatened to withdraw its funding from the club, the Kangaroos would lose their Gold Coast match revenue - $1.6 million in 2008 - and have no guarantee that the special assistance from the AFL would continue.”

AFL in Gold Coast ultimatum to Kangaroos - we're going with or without you; Martin Boulton and Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-01-2007

“THE AFL has given the cash-strapped Kangaroos 30-days to agree to a permanent move to the Gold Coast - or the league will step up plans to establish a 17th team there from scratch.”

“The ultimatum to the Kangaroos board came during a two-hour meeting with AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou and chairman Mike Fitzpatrick.”

“ "The AFL is going to the Gold Coast and whether it's with the Kangaroos or anyone else we will be there," Demetriou said. "We will have no hesitation whatsoever in issuing a 17th licence." ”

“Demetriou told the club it had handled its business poorly over the past season, and did not rule out with- drawing the $1.4 million annual funding within two years.”

Extra teams AFL's plan B ; FOOTBALL - Demetriou warns Roos and offers alternative; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 11-01-2007

“AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou last night vowed to establish not only a 17th club on the Gold Coast but did not rule out an 18th club in Sydney beyond 2010 should the Kangaroos refuse to relocate to Queensland.”

“Demetriou left the Kangaroos directors under siege last night…”

“In his most meaningful confrontation with the club to date over the proposed relocation, Demetriou fell short of threatening the club but instead outlined its perilous financial circumstances and imposed a 30-day deadline upon the Kangaroos to reach a decision and promised to open negotiations regarding the proposed Gold Coast package.”

“With a majority of AFL clubs - including Sydney, the Western Bulldogs and Carlton - now prepared to oppose Collingwood and support the short-term prospect of a Gold Coast club, Demetriou vowed to make public the AFL's multi-million relocation package.”

“(Demetriou) told the North board he had been directed by the commission to admonish the club for its failure to comply with the special guidelines under its special assistance package and voiced his concern over its inability to appoint a new chairman.”

“(Demetriou) did not rule out withdrawing the Kangaroos $1.4 million annual funding within two years, accusing the club of failing to co-operate with the league's financial guidelines.”

“The club's lack of leadership and failure to face the prospect of relocation saw it appoint an independent consultant to deal with the AFL on the Gold Coast issue.”

“While North will make a small profit after the $2.6 million AFL 2007 injection, it still boasts a $4 million debt and has failed to put forward a business plan to the AFL nor kept the key financial executive Ian Anderson regularly informed of the club's finances.”

“It is that oversight that has empowered Demetriou to deliver the AFL's threat to cut the annual $1.4 million special funding to the club at the end of 2008. According to the commission, the Kangaroos have been negligent in meeting the criteria of that funding.”

“Coupled with the Kangaroos' alleged sloppy business performance is the fact that the club is privately owned and controlled by shareholders who have not put money into the club to make it sustainable in Melbourne and yet are preventing its proposed relocation.”

Pressure builds on Roos to move or lose funding; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 10-30-2007

“THE AFL is losing patience with the leaderless Kangaroos and is on the verge of threatening to withdraw its annual $1.4 million special funding of the club by the end of 2009.”

“(the AFL is) frustrated at the club's indecisiveness regarding its forecast relocation to the Gold Coast”

“Demetriou and the AFL Commission have moved to make it clear that league special funding will cease at the end of 2009.”

“The club has been told it could not survive without the AFL funding and is expected to run at a loss this season despite the annual financial boost”

“A final relocation decision would almost certainly take place in the coming weeks in the knowledge that the club could not survive without AFL support and that the league's proposed relocation package will not improve with time.”

“Ironically, the club's players and coaching staff, including Dean Laidley, are understood to strongly support the relocation in the belief they would no longer be forced to operate using relatively substandard training conditions.”

Roos draft allowances a no-go zone, say Pies ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 10-23-2007

“COLLINGWOOD has threatened to take the AFL to court should it proceed with a plan to grant the Kangaroos a Gold Coast zone as part of a relocation package.”

“With further negotiations between the AFL and the Kangaroos board scheduled over the coming days on the sensitive subject of a permanent move to Queensland by 2010”

“While the Kangaroos board remains divided over relocating, club directors Stephen Head and Andrew Carter are continuing to pursue the exercise with the AFL executive”

“The independently funded Gemba report into the club's future said the Kangaroos could not survive in Melbourne with their current Telstra Dome agreement and without extra AFL support. The club is funded to the tune of $2.6 million a year with $1.2 million of that amount coming from the competition's underwriting of matches played at Carrara”
 

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Good Friday to stay footy-free ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 10-13-2007


“At the commission's half-day meeting in Melbourne, the pressing and increasingly perplexing issue of the Gold Coast dominated the agenda, along with continuing financial woes of the Kangaroos.”

“the increasingly clear message is that the Kangaroos and their divided board could face drastic cuts to funding if they choose to remain at Arden Street.”

“The commission believes such a move would mean the club would be unlikely to survive beyond the present broadcast agreement that finishes in 2011.”

Roos a Gold Coast priority ; FOOTBALL - Draft picks part of relocation lure
The Age (Melbourne) 10-11-07

“PRESSURE is mounting on the Kangaroos to commit to a permanent move to the Gold Coast with the AFL having virtually completed its radical, multimillion-dollar relocation package to include priority draft picks and exclusive access to a local zone and uncontracted players.”

“But the AFL, which will continue to lay the foundation for its 2010 deadline at tomorrow's commission meeting in Melbourne, is losing patience with the club, which remains undecided and divided over whether to commit to the move the league regards as inevitable and crucial to the club's survival.”

“AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said last night that the club was aware of the broad details but not the specifics of the relocation package, which also includes the redevelopment of the Carrara Stadium to the tune of at least $300 million.”

“The unprecedented list of incentives would - according to the AFL - ensure the club's on and off-field long-term success with guaranteed funding, state-of-the-art facilities and massive draft and zone concessions sure to raise the ire of other clubs in the competition.”

“the prevailing view is that the league has been subtly working on the club's board via a series of unofficial talks in recent months.”

“Apart from the AFL underwriting each Gold Coast home game to the tune of $400,000 per fixture, the Kangaroos receive $1.4 million a year as part of the AFL's special assistance package. The Gemba report found that the club could not survive in Melbourne without that funding.”

Roos seek extra game up north; FOOTBALL
09-07-2007


“THE Kangaroos' Gold Coast push has received further momentum, with the club requesting an extra game at Carrara in 2008.”

“The club is awaiting the final release of an independent report into its future, with most observers believing the Roos eventually will relocate to southern Queensland”

“The push is said to have the support of coach Dean Laidley, whose club has performed well at its temporary Gold Coast base in 2007, along with Laidley's football department.”

Laidley stands firm in midst of club turmoil ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 08-30-2007


“Clearly the club is moving into crisis management mode given that it is certain to announce at the end of the season that it cannot sustain a long-term future in Melbourne without AFL support.”

“We (The Age) believe (the club) will ultimately decide to relocate to the Gold Coast.”

“Chairman Graham Duff has told The Age that move could prove more complicated and prolonged than the AFL is saying, but move it will and announce the move it must before the end of the year”

“our (The Age’s) understanding is that a significant number of the Kangaroos' playing and coaching staff would welcome the move.”

“The move north would guarantee the club's shoestring administration untold AFL assistance, ultimately vastly improved facilities, a warmer climate and - potentially - draft concessions.”

Report is set to confirm Roos' plight; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 08-14-2007

“A CONTROVERSIAL report into the long-term future of the Kangaroos is expected to cast significant doubt over the club's sustainability in Melbourne.”

“With several key figures at the club now believing the Kangaroos' best option is to relocate to the Gold Coast, the big question facing the club seems to be the timing and execution of such a move.”

Radio deals not as simple as the ABC ; Opinion; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 08-05-2007


“Next year, the AFL will move forward with at least four clubs boasting new coaches, an Essendon without Kevin Sheedy and, most likely, a Gold Coast-bound Kangaroos.”

Win Voss; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-28-2007


“Laidley, on the other hand, would welcome a new contract offer. He is the lowest-paid coach in the AFL and in charge of a team that almost certainly will relocate to the Gold Coast before the 2010 season.”

Dome writes off $1.5m loan to Roos; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-25-2007


“THE Seven Network-owned Telstra Dome rescued the Kangaroos from near-insolvency with an interest-free $1.5 million loan in 2002 as part of an arrangement that had the club transfer its social club facility and administration to the stadium.”

“the club's long- term future remains in the balance with private consultants soon to complete a feasibility study that will decide whether the club relocates to the Gold Coast by 2010.”

Laidley willing to look at deal ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-17-2007


“While some at the Kangaroos continue to have mixed feelings over Laidley's future, a potential problem for the club remains its uncertain future, with a group of consultants currently considering the best option, and the Gold Coast remains a likely scenario within the next three years.”

AFL picks tradition over twilight - for now; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson with Mark Duffield
The Age (Melbourne) 06-23-2007


“Yesterday's day-long talks… also devoted significant time to the Gold Coast question and the Kangaroos' likely relocation by 2010.”

'Home' away from home shows a state of disarray; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-29-2007


“the AFL is trying to fix two problems by relocating the Kangaroos to the Gold Coast

Kangaroos decide on four options for club's future ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-22-2007


“the investigation (into the club’s future) was taking place under a membership cloud”

“This is despite a full-scale player-instigated telethon earlier this month and another concerted push from both players and staff to lapsed members last week.”

“(one option is) permanent relocation to the Gold Coast.”

“the Roos are bemused at the lack of response from its past members.”

“Adding to the club's woes, the Kangaroos are operating without a marketing or sales manager, both of whom resigned from the club in the past fortnight.

Membership concern as Roos draw up plans for the future ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-18-2007


“KANGAROOS chairman Graham Duff last night conceded that the club's dwindling membership remained of "grave concern" as it embarked upon a three-month $300,000 strategic study into its future.”

“With almost every member of the club's board flying to the Gold Coast for a weekend's fact-finding mission and a day-long board meeting tomorrow”

“Duff was surprised and disappointed that Kangaroos supporters had failed to respond to the club's four-match winning streak”

“Yesterday's board meeting concluded that pleas from coach Dean Laidley and captain Adam Simpson - along with a telethon involving the club's entire senior list - had failed to significantly galvanise Kangaroos fans with the club on the brink of a momentous decision regarding its future location.”

“Without the club's new Gold Coast members the figures remain below 20,000.”

“The only bright note on the membership front was the club's effort in achieving 1700 Gold Coast-based members in a matter of months”

“But chief executive Rick Aylett admitted he was disappointed with the overall membership figures.”

“The weekend think-tank on the Gold Coast will include meetings with potential corporate sponsors and senior local government executives.”

Roos spend big on plan for future ; FOOTBALL - EXCLUSIVE; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-01-2007


“THE Kangaroos will approach David Crawford, an architect of the AFL's expanded national competition, to oversee a six-figure strategic plan into the future of the club and a possible relocation to the Gold Coast.”

“financial threats from the AFL and its chief executive Andrew Demetriou, who has continued to remind the club publicly that it is beholden to annual multimillion- dollar handouts from the competition.”

“The AFL Commission has instructed its key strategists, Gillon McLachlan and Andrew Catterall, to return to the board by the end of the year with a blueprint for a permanent presence on the Gold Coast.”

“it is clear that the commission believes that a united North Melbourne Football Club unencumbered by its current messy share structure would prove the ideal option to move to the Gold Coast, while retaining a presence in Melbourne with an agreed minimum number of games.”

“The Gold Coast Titans have made a big impact on the region in their National Rugby League debut season, and the AFL's concern is that the Kangaroos will not return to the Gold Coast for nine months after the Adelaide game.”

“(Chairman) Duff had conceded that the club would consider a move to the Gold Coast.

Roos to weigh up shift ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson and Samantha Lane
The Age (Melbourne) 04-28-2007


“THE Kangaroos will launch an investigation into a potential relocation to the Gold Coast with chairman Graham Duff not ruling out a permanent move beyond 2009 last night.”

“Duff… said he was on the verge of appointing a team of consultants to weigh up the club's prospects on the Gold Coast as a full-time venture.”

“Demetriou yesterday made explicit the AFL's desire to buy out the struggling club's existing shareholders and reiterated the league's goal that one match per week be played in Queensland by 2015.”

AFL draws plan for Roos' move ; FOOTBALL - EXCLUSIVE; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 04-27-2007


“THE AFL Commission has issued a six-month deadline to put together a definite plan to establish a second team in southern Queensland in the hope that the Kangaroos take up the relocation offer.”

“The Age understands that the game's governing body is rapidly losing patience with the club.”

“It is believed AFL executives Andrew Caterall and Gillon McLachlan have been charged with putting together a relocation plan which in turn will be transferred into a package.”

“A relocation package could include significant draft advantages in a bid to beef up a list such as the Kangaroos', along with a sustainable stadium deal, signage and other marketing advantages.”

“The ongoing mixed messages from both the AFL and the Kangaroos date back to November 2005, when a strategic meeting of the AFL commissioners first put the Gold Coast plan on the table.”

“While the league's governing body and the AFL executive have continued to debate the issue and push their plan forward, they have become increasingly concerned at the lack of unity at the North Melbourne Football Club, which has not only a board at odds with each other, but also shareholders.”

“Ongoing obstacles for the AFL include… the Kangaroos' refusal to accept what many at the AFL believe is a foregone conclusion.”

“The AFL will also look at scheduling advantages for a club that chose to relocate from Melbourne in a bid to retain its Victorian identity”

Gold Coast warms to Kangaroos; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 04-22-2007


“THE seemingly inevitable relocation of the Kangaroos to the Gold Coast gained further momentum after unofficial talks yesterday between the three most senior figures in the AFL and an influential local businessman.”

“More than 11,000 people packed Carrara to watch the Roos' stirring victory over the Brisbane Lions last night.”

“But the most significant development of the day may have been a breakfast meeting between AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick, chief executive Andrew Demetriou, commissioner Bob Hammond and John Witheriff, a lawyer with roles in the Gold Coast's economic, sporting and tourism communities, who urged them to act quickly to establish a full-time team there.”

“The Sunday Age believes the game's powerbrokers have strengthened their resolve regarding a full-time presence in the region and are looking to fast-track the Kangaroos' move north and increase the club's Queensland fixtures as early as next year.”

“(there is) internal strife and poor level of membership and corporate support at Arden Street.”

“Demetriou yesterday reminded all that the competition was ploughing $9.6 million annually into the Kangaroos and that the AFL and the 15 other clubs had every right to question their future direction if their shareholders were not prepared to personally invest in it.”

“ "If the AFL don't act, I think they will look back in 10 years and see that they wasted a magnificent opportunity," said Witheriff, a managing partner of Minter Ellison and chairman of the Gold Coast Economic Development Board.”

“the troubled club remains divided at board and shareholder level, with most regarding relocation as more than likely.”

AFL burning while commission fiddles; OPINION; Caroline Wilson, Award-winning football writer
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 04-22-2007


“Not one Kangaroos director - apart from Graham Duff, who is playing it safe and trying to hold together his feuding shareholders - will tell you that relocation is out of the question”

“The Kangaroos' membership and corporate support and dreadfully under-resourced administration will never survive in Melbourne without millions of dollars of AFL aid.”

“Now, at the start of a rich new broadcasting agreement, they have been handed a lifeline and a chance to control their own destiny to some significant degree.”

“Influential Gold Coast players want an AFL club and claim that the economy is growing at a rate comparable with an influx into the region each year about the size of the city of Ballarat.”

“What are the Kangaroos waiting for? What is the commission frightened of?”

Kangaroos board bickers as AFL weighs up taking control ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 04-19-2007


“As the Kangaroos try to secure their future, chairman Graham Duff's tenure is being destabilised by directors and shareholders.”

“Kangaroos shareholders Kerry Good and Peter Johnstone had summoned their old friend and AFL boss Andrew Demetriou to a meeting at Crown to discuss a possible AFL takeover at the club, a takeover first mooted in the last year of the strife-torn last months of Duff's previous board.”

“the club has been unofficially earmarked for relocation by the competition and whether or not the AFL buys the Kangaroos' shares the fact is it controls not only the club's bank balance but the fixture.”

“Demetriou let all those at Tuesday night's meeting, including director John Magowan, know that the AFL would not keep pouring $1.4 million a year into a club that could not control its own destiny or run smoothly.”

“In short, if the AFL wants to relocate the club it will find its most diplomatic way of doing so.”

“Although several key shareholders - not de Rauch - regard relocation as inevitable”

“And yet the Queensland shadow - or sunshine depending on your viewpoint - will hover over the club as long as its supporter base remains the lowest in the AFL.”

Kangaroos appear a disjointed mob after 'decisive' vote ; FOOTBALL - OPINION; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 03-04-2007


“The ailing club needs stability and direction instead of the air of division apparent after Wednesday”

“Having talked up the Gold Coast and talked down chairman Graham Duff before the election, Joseph insisted he did not want the presidency himself.”

“how on earth can anyone suggest the Kangaroos board is united?”

“Certainly no one is expecting instant answers but the Gold Coast situation remains the question mark on everybody's lips”

“A radical decision regarding relocation must not wait another two years or even one. And membership remains a massive concern.”

Roos ripe for AFL takeover; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 02-24-2007


“Most in the football world agree that the Kangaroos should be relocated immediately to the Gold Coast.”

“IF EVER there was an obvious solution to a club that has lurched in recent years from crisis to catastrophe as have the poor identity- seeking Kangaroos, then it is for the AFL to step in and buy it.
The Roos are ripe for the takeover and, as brutal as it sounds, there seems no other solution for a team with so poor a public profile, so little support and such desperately crazy political issues.”

“Surely Bob Ansett did not envisage such a circus when he set up his A and B-class share structure.”

“My colleague Robert Walls has argued strongly for immediate relocation to the Gold Coast and the truth is that most senior Kangaroos, informed commentators and AFL heavies agree with him.”

“North Melbourne must retain at least 10 games in Melbourne, accept that a state-of-the-art Arden Street is a pipe-dream and set up a base in Queensland with the full backing and steering of the AFL.”

“It is not enough for the commission to sit back and watch the club's problems continue to unfold.”

“Not only do the Kangaroos boast a hopelessly low profile and poor market brand, their problems are damaging the AFL brand just as Carlton's have done.”

“The Kangaroos are desperately short on hope and even the club's most senior people believe the AFL is its only saviour now.”

“The Age revealed last December that Andrew Demetriou had attended a Kangaroos board meeting and discussed a possible share purchase.”

“The Broncos are the reigning premiers, the Gold Coast Titans are proving a publicity machine and A-League soccer is on the rise around Australia. The Brisbane Lions have money in the bank but look likely to lose money again this year and the competition up north is growing fiercer by the minute.”

“Channel Ten and pay television have thrown their support behind the code in Brisbane and the Gold Coast and the competition is flush with cash.”

“The Kangaroos are ripe for the takeover. And the time for the AFL to act is now.”

Pro-Gold Coast Roo to stand ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 02-13-2007


“THE Kangaroos' proposed relocation to the Gold Coast moved a step closer to reality yesterday when club stalwart and life member Ron Joseph joined forces with brothers Mark and James Brayshaw to challenge for board positions.”

“Joseph, who is pro-Gold Coast and… the Brayshaws were keen to help steer the Kangaroos out of their current financial and political mess.”

“The trio will stand as the members' representatives on the currently divided board”

"The ultimate aim, of course, would be to remain a powerful, successful club at Arden Street," Joseph said yesterday. "But if it realistically cannot be achieved and you've got the AFL prepared to support you and work with you and the Gold Coast as an attractive venue, then you obviously have to look at it." ”

AFL eyes stake in Roos, but not for relocation ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 12-14-2006


“THE AFL has conceded it could buy a financial stake in the North Melbourne Football Club, but denied the move was part of a secret plan to push the cash-strapped Kangaroos out of Victoria.”

“(Andrew Demetriou) also rejected comparisons with the early 1980s when the then VFL organised its key sponsors and supporters to try to win control of the South Melbourne Football Club by buying memberships in a bid to move the club to Sydney.”

“The prevailing view remains that the Kangaroos, under the increasing control of the AFL, will relocate to the Gold Coast within five years and play games at Carrara and the Gabba”

“Three board members contacted by The Age yesterday seem resigned to the move as early as 2010.”

“While the Kangaroos remain on target to meet their 2006 budget, the club will still lose about $200,000. The planned start of the redevelopment of Arden Street remains months away.

AFL must block Michael deal ; OPINION; CAROLINE WILSON
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 11-26-2006


“The AFL Commission devoted several hours of heated debate last week to the issue of the Kangaroos' foray into the Gold Coast - at this stage a 10-game three-year deal - with opinion divided on whether the push into Queensland should come much quicker and faster.”

Roos to choose Gold Coast over Canberra ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 07-13-2006

“THE Kangaroos today look certain to confirm a shift from Canberra to the Gold Coast in a new three-year agreement that is expected to be largely funded by the AFL.”

“The AFL has been determined to not be seen as pushing any club towards the Gold Coast but AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou had made it clear that the southern Queensland market was a significant part of his vision and that, ultimately, his aim was for a home-and- away fixture in Queensland each week.”

“In reaching their decision today, the Kangaroos are expected to specify that any move should not be regarded as the first step in a longer-term relocation plan, despite calls for that from several sections of the football community, including prominent North Melbourne identities.

Draw of Carrara grows stronger for Kangaroos ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 03-24-2006

“THE Kangaroos' push into Queensland has taken a significant step forward with the AFL talking to North Melbourne chief executive Geoff Walsh and putting its strong position regarding AFL on the Gold Coast firmly on the table.”

“Demetriou said last month that the long-term plan for the AFL was to play a game every week in Sydney and Brisbane (or the Gold Coast) over the 22-week season.”

“The AFL boss did not rule out relocating a club or clubs to achieve this and the Kangaroos would be the obvious choice of the financially weaker Melbourne-based clubs”

“Near Carrara, the neighbouring Southport Football Club boasts vastly superior facilities to those at Arden Street and has indicated an interest in housing an AFL club permanently or temporarily.”
 
as I said Snake_Baker I get the hate.

And I am glad the Kangas stayed here, seriously.
But their was a big offer from AFL, and it was discussed by the club.

I'd be angrier at the muppets at AFL house and their concerted effort to relocate your club than be angry at one of their mouthpieces.

Can't knock your effort in constructing those posts either.
 
Good Friday to stay footy-free ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 10-13-2007


“At the commission's half-day meeting in Melbourne, the pressing and increasingly perplexing issue of the Gold Coast dominated the agenda, along with continuing financial woes of the Kangaroos.”

“the increasingly clear message is that the Kangaroos and their divided board could face drastic cuts to funding if they choose to remain at Arden Street.”

“The commission believes such a move would mean the club would be unlikely to survive beyond the present broadcast agreement that finishes in 2011.”

Roos a Gold Coast priority ; FOOTBALL - Draft picks part of relocation lure
The Age (Melbourne) 10-11-07


“PRESSURE is mounting on the Kangaroos to commit to a permanent move to the Gold Coast with the AFL having virtually completed its radical, multimillion-dollar relocation package to include priority draft picks and exclusive access to a local zone and uncontracted players.”

“But the AFL, which will continue to lay the foundation for its 2010 deadline at tomorrow's commission meeting in Melbourne, is losing patience with the club, which remains undecided and divided over whether to commit to the move the league regards as inevitable and crucial to the club's survival.”

“AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said last night that the club was aware of the broad details but not the specifics of the relocation package, which also includes the redevelopment of the Carrara Stadium to the tune of at least $300 million.”

“The unprecedented list of incentives would - according to the AFL - ensure the club's on and off-field long-term success with guaranteed funding, state-of-the-art facilities and massive draft and zone concessions sure to raise the ire of other clubs in the competition.”

“the prevailing view is that the league has been subtly working on the club's board via a series of unofficial talks in recent months.”

“Apart from the AFL underwriting each Gold Coast home game to the tune of $400,000 per fixture, the Kangaroos receive $1.4 million a year as part of the AFL's special assistance package. The Gemba report found that the club could not survive in Melbourne without that funding.”

Roos seek extra game up north; FOOTBALL
09-07-2007


“THE Kangaroos' Gold Coast push has received further momentum, with the club requesting an extra game at Carrara in 2008.”

“The club is awaiting the final release of an independent report into its future, with most observers believing the Roos eventually will relocate to southern Queensland”

“The push is said to have the support of coach Dean Laidley, whose club has performed well at its temporary Gold Coast base in 2007, along with Laidley's football department.”

Laidley stands firm in midst of club turmoil ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 08-30-2007


“Clearly the club is moving into crisis management mode given that it is certain to announce at the end of the season that it cannot sustain a long-term future in Melbourne without AFL support.”

“We (The Age) believe (the club) will ultimately decide to relocate to the Gold Coast.”

“Chairman Graham Duff has told The Age that move could prove more complicated and prolonged than the AFL is saying, but move it will and announce the move it must before the end of the year”

“our (The Age’s) understanding is that a significant number of the Kangaroos' playing and coaching staff would welcome the move.”

“The move north would guarantee the club's shoestring administration untold AFL assistance, ultimately vastly improved facilities, a warmer climate and - potentially - draft concessions.”

Report is set to confirm Roos' plight; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 08-14-2007


“A CONTROVERSIAL report into the long-term future of the Kangaroos is expected to cast significant doubt over the club's sustainability in Melbourne.”

“With several key figures at the club now believing the Kangaroos' best option is to relocate to the Gold Coast, the big question facing the club seems to be the timing and execution of such a move.”

Radio deals not as simple as the ABC ; Opinion; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 08-05-2007


“Next year, the AFL will move forward with at least four clubs boasting new coaches, an Essendon without Kevin Sheedy and, most likely, a Gold Coast-bound Kangaroos.”

Win Voss; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-28-2007


“Laidley, on the other hand, would welcome a new contract offer. He is the lowest-paid coach in the AFL and in charge of a team that almost certainly will relocate to the Gold Coast before the 2010 season.”

Dome writes off $1.5m loan to Roos; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-25-2007


“THE Seven Network-owned Telstra Dome rescued the Kangaroos from near-insolvency with an interest-free $1.5 million loan in 2002 as part of an arrangement that had the club transfer its social club facility and administration to the stadium.”

“the club's long- term future remains in the balance with private consultants soon to complete a feasibility study that will decide whether the club relocates to the Gold Coast by 2010.”

Laidley willing to look at deal ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 07-17-2007


“While some at the Kangaroos continue to have mixed feelings over Laidley's future, a potential problem for the club remains its uncertain future, with a group of consultants currently considering the best option, and the Gold Coast remains a likely scenario within the next three years.”

AFL picks tradition over twilight - for now; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson with Mark Duffield
The Age (Melbourne) 06-23-2007


“Yesterday's day-long talks… also devoted significant time to the Gold Coast question and the Kangaroos' likely relocation by 2010.”

'Home' away from home shows a state of disarray; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-29-2007


“the AFL is trying to fix two problems by relocating the Kangaroos to the Gold Coast

Kangaroos decide on four options for club's future ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-22-2007


“the investigation (into the club’s future) was taking place under a membership cloud”

“This is despite a full-scale player-instigated telethon earlier this month and another concerted push from both players and staff to lapsed members last week.”

“(one option is) permanent relocation to the Gold Coast.”

“the Roos are bemused at the lack of response from its past members.”

“Adding to the club's woes, the Kangaroos are operating without a marketing or sales manager, both of whom resigned from the club in the past fortnight.

Membership concern as Roos draw up plans for the future ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-18-2007


“KANGAROOS chairman Graham Duff last night conceded that the club's dwindling membership remained of "grave concern" as it embarked upon a three-month $300,000 strategic study into its future.”

“With almost every member of the club's board flying to the Gold Coast for a weekend's fact-finding mission and a day-long board meeting tomorrow”

“Duff was surprised and disappointed that Kangaroos supporters had failed to respond to the club's four-match winning streak”

“Yesterday's board meeting concluded that pleas from coach Dean Laidley and captain Adam Simpson - along with a telethon involving the club's entire senior list - had failed to significantly galvanise Kangaroos fans with the club on the brink of a momentous decision regarding its future location.”

“Without the club's new Gold Coast members the figures remain below 20,000.”

“The only bright note on the membership front was the club's effort in achieving 1700 Gold Coast-based members in a matter of months”

“But chief executive Rick Aylett admitted he was disappointed with the overall membership figures.”

“The weekend think-tank on the Gold Coast will include meetings with potential corporate sponsors and senior local government executives.”

Roos spend big on plan for future ; FOOTBALL - EXCLUSIVE; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 05-01-2007


“THE Kangaroos will approach David Crawford, an architect of the AFL's expanded national competition, to oversee a six-figure strategic plan into the future of the club and a possible relocation to the Gold Coast.”

“financial threats from the AFL and its chief executive Andrew Demetriou, who has continued to remind the club publicly that it is beholden to annual multimillion- dollar handouts from the competition.”

“The AFL Commission has instructed its key strategists, Gillon McLachlan and Andrew Catterall, to return to the board by the end of the year with a blueprint for a permanent presence on the Gold Coast.”

“it is clear that the commission believes that a united North Melbourne Football Club unencumbered by its current messy share structure would prove the ideal option to move to the Gold Coast, while retaining a presence in Melbourne with an agreed minimum number of games.”

“The Gold Coast Titans have made a big impact on the region in their National Rugby League debut season, and the AFL's concern is that the Kangaroos will not return to the Gold Coast for nine months after the Adelaide game.”

“(Chairman) Duff had conceded that the club would consider a move to the Gold Coast.

Roos to weigh up shift ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson and Samantha Lane
The Age (Melbourne) 04-28-2007


“THE Kangaroos will launch an investigation into a potential relocation to the Gold Coast with chairman Graham Duff not ruling out a permanent move beyond 2009 last night.”

“Duff… said he was on the verge of appointing a team of consultants to weigh up the club's prospects on the Gold Coast as a full-time venture.”

“Demetriou yesterday made explicit the AFL's desire to buy out the struggling club's existing shareholders and reiterated the league's goal that one match per week be played in Queensland by 2015.”

AFL draws plan for Roos' move ; FOOTBALL - EXCLUSIVE; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 04-27-2007


“THE AFL Commission has issued a six-month deadline to put together a definite plan to establish a second team in southern Queensland in the hope that the Kangaroos take up the relocation offer.”

“The Age understands that the game's governing body is rapidly losing patience with the club.”

“It is believed AFL executives Andrew Caterall and Gillon McLachlan have been charged with putting together a relocation plan which in turn will be transferred into a package.”

“A relocation package could include significant draft advantages in a bid to beef up a list such as the Kangaroos', along with a sustainable stadium deal, signage and other marketing advantages.”

“The ongoing mixed messages from both the AFL and the Kangaroos date back to November 2005, when a strategic meeting of the AFL commissioners first put the Gold Coast plan on the table.”

“While the league's governing body and the AFL executive have continued to debate the issue and push their plan forward, they have become increasingly concerned at the lack of unity at the North Melbourne Football Club, which has not only a board at odds with each other, but also shareholders.”

“Ongoing obstacles for the AFL include… the Kangaroos' refusal to accept what many at the AFL believe is a foregone conclusion.”

“The AFL will also look at scheduling advantages for a club that chose to relocate from Melbourne in a bid to retain its Victorian identity”

Gold Coast warms to Kangaroos; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 04-22-2007


“THE seemingly inevitable relocation of the Kangaroos to the Gold Coast gained further momentum after unofficial talks yesterday between the three most senior figures in the AFL and an influential local businessman.”

“More than 11,000 people packed Carrara to watch the Roos' stirring victory over the Brisbane Lions last night.”

“But the most significant development of the day may have been a breakfast meeting between AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick, chief executive Andrew Demetriou, commissioner Bob Hammond and John Witheriff, a lawyer with roles in the Gold Coast's economic, sporting and tourism communities, who urged them to act quickly to establish a full-time team there.”

“The Sunday Age believes the game's powerbrokers have strengthened their resolve regarding a full-time presence in the region and are looking to fast-track the Kangaroos' move north and increase the club's Queensland fixtures as early as next year.”

“(there is) internal strife and poor level of membership and corporate support at Arden Street.”

“Demetriou yesterday reminded all that the competition was ploughing $9.6 million annually into the Kangaroos and that the AFL and the 15 other clubs had every right to question their future direction if their shareholders were not prepared to personally invest in it.”

“ "If the AFL don't act, I think they will look back in 10 years and see that they wasted a magnificent opportunity," said Witheriff, a managing partner of Minter Ellison and chairman of the Gold Coast Economic Development Board.”

“the troubled club remains divided at board and shareholder level, with most regarding relocation as more than likely.”

AFL burning while commission fiddles; OPINION; Caroline Wilson, Award-winning football writer
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 04-22-2007


“Not one Kangaroos director - apart from Graham Duff, who is playing it safe and trying to hold together his feuding shareholders - will tell you that relocation is out of the question”

“The Kangaroos' membership and corporate support and dreadfully under-resourced administration will never survive in Melbourne without millions of dollars of AFL aid.”

“Now, at the start of a rich new broadcasting agreement, they have been handed a lifeline and a chance to control their own destiny to some significant degree.”

“Influential Gold Coast players want an AFL club and claim that the economy is growing at a rate comparable with an influx into the region each year about the size of the city of Ballarat.”

“What are the Kangaroos waiting for? What is the commission frightened of?”

Kangaroos board bickers as AFL weighs up taking control ; FOOTBALL; Caroline Wilson
The Age (Melbourne) 04-19-2007


“As the Kangaroos try to secure their future, chairman Graham Duff's tenure is being destabilised by directors and shareholders.”

“Kangaroos shareholders Kerry Good and Peter Johnstone had summoned their old friend and AFL boss Andrew Demetriou to a meeting at Crown to discuss a possible AFL takeover at the club, a takeover first mooted in the last year of the strife-torn last months of Duff's previous board.”

“the club has been unofficially earmarked for relocation by the competition and whether or not the AFL buys the Kangaroos' shares the fact is it controls not only the club's bank balance but the fixture.”

“Demetriou let all those at Tuesday night's meeting, including director John Magowan, know that the AFL would not keep pouring $1.4 million a year into a club that could not control its own destiny or run smoothly.”

“In short, if the AFL wants to relocate the club it will find its most diplomatic way of doing so.”

“Although several key shareholders - not de Rauch - regard relocation as inevitable”

“And yet the Queensland shadow - or sunshine depending on your viewpoint - will hover over the club as long as its supporter base remains the lowest in the AFL.”

Kangaroos appear a disjointed mob after 'decisive' vote ; FOOTBALL - OPINION; Caroline Wilson
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 03-04-2007


“The ailing club needs stability and direction instead of the air of division apparent after Wednesday”

“Having talked up the Gold Coast and talked down chairman Graham Duff before the election, Joseph insisted he did not want the presidency himself.”

“how on earth can anyone suggest the Kangaroos board is united?”

“Certainly no one is expecting instant answers but the Gold Coast situation remains the question mark on everybody's lips”

“A radical decision regarding relocation must not wait another two years or even one. And membership remains a massive concern.”

Roos ripe for AFL takeover; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 02-24-2007


“Most in the football world agree that the Kangaroos should be relocated immediately to the Gold Coast.”

“IF EVER there was an obvious solution to a club that has lurched in recent years from crisis to catastrophe as have the poor identity- seeking Kangaroos, then it is for the AFL to step in and buy it.
The Roos are ripe for the takeover and, as brutal as it sounds, there seems no other solution for a team with so poor a public profile, so little support and such desperately crazy political issues.”

“Surely Bob Ansett did not envisage such a circus when he set up his A and B-class share structure.”

“My colleague Robert Walls has argued strongly for immediate relocation to the Gold Coast and the truth is that most senior Kangaroos, informed commentators and AFL heavies agree with him.”

“North Melbourne must retain at least 10 games in Melbourne, accept that a state-of-the-art Arden Street is a pipe-dream and set up a base in Queensland with the full backing and steering of the AFL.”

“It is not enough for the commission to sit back and watch the club's problems continue to unfold.”

“Not only do the Kangaroos boast a hopelessly low profile and poor market brand, their problems are damaging the AFL brand just as Carlton's have done.”

“The Kangaroos are desperately short on hope and even the club's most senior people believe the AFL is its only saviour now.”

“The Age revealed last December that Andrew Demetriou had attended a Kangaroos board meeting and discussed a possible share purchase.”

“The Broncos are the reigning premiers, the Gold Coast Titans are proving a publicity machine and A-League soccer is on the rise around Australia. The Brisbane Lions have money in the bank but look likely to lose money again this year and the competition up north is growing fiercer by the minute.”

“Channel Ten and pay television have thrown their support behind the code in Brisbane and the Gold Coast and the competition is flush with cash.”

“The Kangaroos are ripe for the takeover. And the time for the AFL to act is now.”

Pro-Gold Coast Roo to stand ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 02-13-2007


“THE Kangaroos' proposed relocation to the Gold Coast moved a step closer to reality yesterday when club stalwart and life member Ron Joseph joined forces with brothers Mark and James Brayshaw to challenge for board positions.”

“Joseph, who is pro-Gold Coast and… the Brayshaws were keen to help steer the Kangaroos out of their current financial and political mess.”

“The trio will stand as the members' representatives on the currently divided board”

"The ultimate aim, of course, would be to remain a powerful, successful club at Arden Street," Joseph said yesterday. "But if it realistically cannot be achieved and you've got the AFL prepared to support you and work with you and the Gold Coast as an attractive venue, then you obviously have to look at it." ”

AFL eyes stake in Roos, but not for relocation ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 12-14-2006


“THE AFL has conceded it could buy a financial stake in the North Melbourne Football Club, but denied the move was part of a secret plan to push the cash-strapped Kangaroos out of Victoria.”

“(Andrew Demetriou) also rejected comparisons with the early 1980s when the then VFL organised its key sponsors and supporters to try to win control of the South Melbourne Football Club by buying memberships in a bid to move the club to Sydney.”

“The prevailing view remains that the Kangaroos, under the increasing control of the AFL, will relocate to the Gold Coast within five years and play games at Carrara and the Gabba”

“Three board members contacted by The Age yesterday seem resigned to the move as early as 2010.”

“While the Kangaroos remain on target to meet their 2006 budget, the club will still lose about $200,000. The planned start of the redevelopment of Arden Street remains months away.

AFL must block Michael deal ; OPINION; CAROLINE WILSON
Sunday Age (Melbourne) 11-26-2006


“The AFL Commission devoted several hours of heated debate last week to the issue of the Kangaroos' foray into the Gold Coast - at this stage a 10-game three-year deal - with opinion divided on whether the push into Queensland should come much quicker and faster.”

Roos to choose Gold Coast over Canberra ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 07-13-2006

“THE Kangaroos today look certain to confirm a shift from Canberra to the Gold Coast in a new three-year agreement that is expected to be largely funded by the AFL.”

“The AFL has been determined to not be seen as pushing any club towards the Gold Coast but AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou had made it clear that the southern Queensland market was a significant part of his vision and that, ultimately, his aim was for a home-and- away fixture in Queensland each week.”

“In reaching their decision today, the Kangaroos are expected to specify that any move should not be regarded as the first step in a longer-term relocation plan, despite calls for that from several sections of the football community, including prominent North Melbourne identities.

Draw of Carrara grows stronger for Kangaroos ; FOOTBALL; CAROLINE WILSON
The Age (Melbourne) 03-24-2006

“THE Kangaroos' push into Queensland has taken a significant step forward with the AFL talking to North Melbourne chief executive Geoff Walsh and putting its strong position regarding AFL on the Gold Coast firmly on the table.”

“Demetriou said last month that the long-term plan for the AFL was to play a game every week in Sydney and Brisbane (or the Gold Coast) over the 22-week season.”

“The AFL boss did not rule out relocating a club or clubs to achieve this and the Kangaroos would be the obvious choice of the financially weaker Melbourne-based clubs”

“Near Carrara, the neighbouring Southport Football Club boasts vastly superior facilities to those at Arden Street and has indicated an interest in housing an AFL club permanently or temporarily.”
Snake, I don’t think you’ve provided enough documentary evidence to support your case. LOL.
 
Can't knock your effort in constructing those posts either.

It's not my collection, I have taken it from the archive of another North supporter.

Wilson was an AFL sock puppet and the AFL version of a tabloid reporter. A manipulator.

Her primary legacy is that she filled the world up with more bullshit.
 
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It's not my collection, I have taken it from the archive of another North supporter.

Wilson was an AFL sock puppet and the AFL version of a tabloid reporter. A manipulator.

Her primary legacy is that she filled the world up with more bullshit.

& Norths future is as problematic as ever.
 
It's not my collection, I have taken it from the archive of another North supporter.

Wilson was an AFL sock puppet and the AFL version of a tabloid reporter. A manipulator.

Her primary legacy is that she filled the world up with more bullshit.
As I said, the real villain is the AFL though. They set the agenda, she writes it. But they set it.
 
Give me a call when you dont need a guarantee from your Dad (the AFL) to keep the doors open. No argument Mr Di Lena is going a great job.
The AFL own Docklands, an asset worth c. $1.25-1.5 billion. And will be worth a lot more, if Docklands is "monetised" by being utilised as a 365 day pa entertainment/convention venue -as the AFL plans.

The AFL only own it now because they agreed to such very generous financial returns (& no. of guaranteed AFL game there, c.42 pa) for the private owners/builders, so the latter was assured of good profits. The AFL forced NM, St K, & Footscray to move to Docklands; & to accept absurdly onerous financial "returns"from playing there ie with crowds less than c.21,000, these Clubs had to write a cheque to the Docklands owners (Cf Melb. Victory soccer club, who get paid very handsomely to play there , irrespective of their generally modest crowds).

These Clubs would only get a significant payout from the private Docklands owners if they attracted crowds of 40,000+. The Clubs have complained bitterly since, & the AFL has not publicly refuted the veracity of their claims of very shabby,inequitable treatment.

Despite this stadium burden, unparallelled in the AFL, NM has completely wiped out its debt, & has over 40,000 members.
It must strengthen its appeal in the outer N/NW of Melb. which is having a population boom (& better demographics for NM than the heavily migrant populated inner N/NW suburbs). This outer area is predicted to boom for another 30 years (due to abundant, relatively cheap land, & better transport links).
 
Caro didn’t need or desire to be loved or hated, only respected, and even the harshest of intellectual critics couldn’t deny her that respect. She was the only one left in the AFL media that asked the tough questions and kept asking them even it made her unpopular. The rest of the Fairfax and News journos are sycophants. Puppets of the AFL who refuse to challenge the League’s excess. Let’s not forget that in 2004 the AFL employed just 83 people. In 2011 it grew to 219. Then last year it had ballooned to 670! Most on monster salaries. On revenues of just $550m. You couldnt find a more bloated company of its type in the world. But Caro challenged the AFL. Challenged the culture. Challenged the inconsistencies. She was a news breaker and a good if not great writer. When was the last time Robbo broke a big story? And his writing, well, let’s just say some of his predecessors in that Great Press Club In the sky would be turning in their grave. At News you are taught to write to a 12 year old’s comprehension. Think Robbo skipped a few classes and settled for a 9 year olds.

The AFL industry is much poorer for Caro’s windback. We need more courageous, more tenacious, more provocative journalism to keep the bast@$%s honest. We don’t need fewer Caros, we need more.
Nailed it.

I will despair if we completely lose Wilson & Smith -on off-field issues, none of their sycophantic journalistic peers come close. Perhaps Tim Lane?
The Age & The Australian were "must reads" only for these two.

IMO, Wilson & Smith made three major "errors":-

. arguing in 2007 that NM should be killed off/transferred to GC (ala "we had to destroy the club, its history/culture, its devoted fan base, its contribution to AF & Docklands -in order to save it"-Vietnam).
A partial excuse for them is that no one could really predict in 2007 the massive population boom Melb. is experiencing (100,000+ net pa) -but this certainly does not justify their anti-NM stance in 2007.
Much of the boom is occurring in the once sparsely populated outer N, NW, & W. suburbs. NM, if it is smart enough, can cultivate this growing N & NW area re membership.

. never confronted the AFL for losing significant marketshare in Vic., WA, SA, & Tas to soccer/basketball/computer games/internet etc. Conversely, AFL executive salaries & job nos. were rising strongly.
(Too sensitive a topic even for them?).

. never went hard enough against the AFL re the destruction, since the late 90's, of Tas. GR AF, & the Tas. AFL recruitment goldmine.
 
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I really disliked her during 2007 for obvious reasons.

Now looking back, she was clearly getting fed information day in day out to push North to the Gold Coast.

Any other journo would have done exactly the same.

Give me her any day over someone like Sam McClure. Yuck.
 
She was being hand fed by AFL on North and Essendon issues, no doubt. Can’t blame her for having such a good source.

But like most of her views she made it personal and won’t listen to other views. I’m talking more the North issue which in the end Caro was nothing more than a desperate vehicle for AFL and really no better than some flogs on here. Even Rohan Connolly once referred to her habit of taking it personally.

I still actually enjoyed some of her other articles but I’ve never ever seen a chief writer in any sport take 5 weeks leave during the actual season, that was a complete joke.
 
o_Oo_Oo_Oo_O
Really? I get the hate from some people, but no.

Your North mate Purple for one, in less than half the years has made up heaps more shite.
Hutchy
Schtevo
Walphy.

10 seconds and I didn't even scratch the surface.

We ain’t to fond of that lot either, but she was particularly caustic towards north for a long time.
 
as I said Snake_Baker I get the hate.

And I am glad the Kangas stayed here, seriously.
But their was a big offer from AFL, and it was discussed by the club.

I'd be angrier at the muppets at AFL house and their concerted effort to relocate your club than be angry at one of their mouthpieces.

Can't knock your effort in constructing those posts either.

Snakes point is those articles contain countless examples of opinion disguised as fact and for a long time destabilised a club, can’t ever forgive that
 
(sigh), I thought she was gone....:rolleyes:




It is almost two decades and six Carlton coaches ago that I made my first telephone call as the soon-to-be-installed chief football writer of The Age.

The call was to Ken Hunter, the champion Carlton half-back of the 1980s who, by late 1998, was working in a marketing role at Carlton and United Breweries. Mobile phones back then were still a back-up mechanism and it was with a sinking, sick feeling that I asked the CUB reception to put me through.

Depression was not at that time a word generally used in connection with the coverage of AFL. Nor was mental illness. My vague knowledge of Hunter's personal story involved the term "nervous breakdown" and the emotional collapse he suffered at the end of his playing career after pivotal roles in three Carlton premierships in seven years.

It was a story he had never told and I wanted him to tell it. To me. After a frank if - hopefully - sensitive conversation, the quietly spoken Hunter told me he would think about it.
  • On a personal note it marked the start of a job in which I promised myself I would remain for two full football seasons, never thinking I would make a long-term go of it. The sports editor who appointed me, Garry Linnell, departed that role one week before I began and I remember his successor confessing he was uncomfortable attaching the label "chief football writer" to an early story because some of the male colleagues in sport were a bit put out by me having the title.

    This is not to say I doubted myself as a journalist, just that the position for a mother of three small children seemed too demanding and high profile. I wondered if The Age's then editor in chief had installed me in the job as a marketing move. He denied it. Sam Newman called after my appointment was announced. "I've got your first headline," he said (prophetically), "What the hell does Caroline Wilson know about football?"

    My long-time colleague and friend Gerard Healy and the late David Hookes took calls for two nights on their evening 3AW program Sports Today on the perils of a woman doing the job - only a handful of callers were vaguely positive - although Eddie McGuire, who had just controversially become president of Collingwood, was enthusiastic and completely encouraging.

    Perhaps it's this industry's forgiving nature or - as Ed pointed out the other day - that we are more aligned regarding the game than we realise, but there have honestly been times when I have called him regarding a story over the years unable to remember whether we were friends or enemies that month.

    I do remember the sick feeling calling him one night to convey that we were running a column the following day questioning whether his time might almost be up at Collingwood - that was shortly before the Malthouse-Buckley deal was done - and the spray that followed. That same sinking feeling has punctuated all 19 football seasons.

    And Ed's disappointed and then outraged reaction was only to be outdone by Malcolm Blight's response when calling him to suggest he was about to be sacked as coach of St Kilda. Actually throw in Grant Thomas, Mark Thompson and Andrew Demetriou times 10.


    I still remember my disbelief the day I heard the Carey rumour and that night tracking down North Melbourne stalwart and then player manager Ron Joseph as he consoled over a bottle of red his client and close friend Anthony Stevens.

    And trying to feign a straight face when the relatively new AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick - snapping after one too many illicit drug questions - threatened to end the interview unless we changed the subject. So I asked him what he hoped would be his legacy. The AFL had "no choice" he responded but to expand to an 18-team competition and he planned to install a new team first on the Gold Coast but then in Sydney the following year.

    Next season Jake Niall - who broke the news (correctly!) of James Hird's departure from Essendon and the season-long bans inflicted upon Hird's former charges courtesy of the Court of Arbitration for Sport - returns to The Age to take over this job and continue this team's unique and independent coverage of the game. Another clear and not so distant memory was the late afternoon Jake and I both learned independently but virtually simultaneously that Michael Voss had been sacked by Brisbane.

    Clearly good stories are often not happy ones. There was the Carlton salary cap cheating that went on to haunt the club for more than a decade, the shameful truth behind the Melbourne tanking affair - preceded by the day Dean Bailey was sacked after a player revolt against management went pear-shaped, Ahmed Saad's positive drug test, the David Schwarz and Daniel Ward gambling debts, the Adam Ramanauskas cancer battle, the Andrew Lovett St Kilda sacking and - for Terry Wallace anyway - Sydney's backflip on that secret deal in favour of Paul Roos.

    The late Bailey, fresh from his sacking press conference, was putting boxes into the boot of his car as I walked past and wished him well. "Don't stop digging," he said. The eulogy delivered in Bailey's honour by his friend and colleague Phil Walsh was an emotional showstopper and it is still difficult to process that Walsh himself would die at the hand of his son some 16 months later, 12 games into a senior coaching career. Trying to make sense of that tragedy and do it justice remained one of this job's greatest challenges.

    Sydney's pioneering chairman Richard Colless revealed his battle with depression as did, most poignantly, Scott West along with his semi-regular night-time journeys to the top of the Shrine where he attempted to make sense of his existence. And the AFL footballer's battles with anxiety and self doubt were outlined with instructive if poignant honesty by Mitch Morton, Mark McVeigh and reigning Brownlow medallist Shane Crawford, who stated he'd happily hand over his Brownlow to have his old life back.

    Ken Hunter returned to Carlton as part of the Ian Collins-led coup over John Elliott. The latter had overseen years of systematic salary cap cheating but Collins couldn't save the club from a record AFL punishment and divisions and the blame game that continued for years to haunt the club. Mandy Hunter, too, was recruited by Collins in late 2002 to work with disgruntled members and stakeholders and she remained with the Blues until 2014.

    I called her this week to thank her for showing faith two decades ago. She and Ken are retired now, grandparents, who spend three months of each year in Italy. We reflected on their football club and its unique politics and ongoing battle to attract the support commensurate with its past might.


    And upon the significance of Ken Hunter's story, which incidentally for me launched an entertaining, generally productive if occasionally turbulent relationship with the ambitious, dynamic then AFL Players Association boss Demetriou, who would go on to run the AFL for 11 years.

    Demetriou pretty much took over the organisation from the time he became the game's football boss under Wayne Jackson. In a pivotal power play Bill Kelty and Ron Evans had championed Demetriou over the other big contender Brian Cook, who had political backing of his own and who became in any event one of the most important figures in the modern game's history.

    I have no doubt having covered sport in other countries and lived for several years in the UK that Australian rules is the world's greatest football code. The game itself, its champions and the intriguing and varying cultures of its clubs are its greatest strengths. And its enduring lifecycles, led by such notable families as the Kennedys, the Danihers, Watsons and the Abletts to name just four.

    And the changing tide of champions. Demetriou, strong-armed by his chairman, launched a short-lived investigation into the state of the Victorian clubs not long after West Coast's 2006 premiership marked the eighth non-Victorian premiership in 10 years. Three of those were achieved by the Brisbane/Leigh Matthews dynasty with the Lions threatening to become so powerful the Victorian clubs blocked their benefits.

    Now football in Queensland is an endangered species and Gillon McLachlan faces a backlash from the non-Victorian clubs regarding the unfairness of having to travel to the MCG to play on a rival's home turf. Since that West Coast flag in 2006, only one interstate club - Sydney in 2012 - has held up the cup although this is largely due to Hawthorn's and Geelong's dominance since 2007.

    And the cultural scrutiny of the AFL, which crystallised when executives Simon Lethlean and Richard Simkiss were forced out this year, continues to haunt McLachlan. Although this must gall him given Demetriou's leadership style, the truth is the game has a long way to go.

    But it has come so far. Even five years ago I did not see the AFL Women's competition coming, never believing the league would champion such a seemingly risky venture. Nor a woman club president and certainly not at Richmond.

    And what a story the Tigers delivered in 2017. McLachlan joked at the start of the finals that he would take a one-year holiday in 2018 if Richmond won the flag. But there was a touch of the America's Cup and Bob Hawke around Swan Street on the last Saturday night of the football season.

    After the fact, the AFL chief described it as the most unlikely premiership in his memory. He was not being derogatory. Personally and I hope without bias I have not seen a club in those 19 years in this role light up a September the way Richmond did. Nor a player dominate a season like Dustin Martin.

    Another AFL commissioner commented some years ago to me that he hoped I realised I had one of Australia's best jobs. At the time it seemed condescending but on reflection there was some truth in the observation.

    And a privilege to write on a full-time basis for The Age the newspaper I first joined as a recently married sportswriter back in 1989. Now as the mother of three grown-up children in their 20s it's time for something different. But a lifetime's barracking - for the story - will continue.

    *Caroline Wilson will continue as a weekly columnist and podcaster with The Age during the 2018 AFL season.

I thought just maybe there was a chance the world could start spinning once again
 
Caro has guts.

But also is one of the more actively vindictive sports journos going around.

At least she can write, isn't a drunk and can string a sentence together.

Heck, even Don Burke wanted to lick her back - so she can't be all bad.
 
Undoubtedly 2007 was her low point where she was basically a PR stooge for North to the Gold Coast which she was not only advocating but also as a fait accompli (she was doing this on Footy Classified as well). On one of the Footyology podcasts during the year (I forget whether it was Rohan Connolly or Mark Fine) they called out how biased she was on this issue.

Overall though despite her flaws - being too close the AFL probably the worst but who isn't amongst the footy media? - she did pretty well in the role and I still respect her views on Footy Classified (even if I disagree with them a fair bit). This is contrast to dolts like Robbo and Jon Ralph and bores like Jon Pierik who I don't care what they think at all.
 
(sigh), I thought she was gone....:rolleyes:




It is almost two decades and six Carlton coaches ago that I made my first telephone call as the soon-to-be-installed chief football writer of The Age.

The call was to Ken Hunter, the champion Carlton half-back of the 1980s who, by late 1998, was working in a marketing role at Carlton and United Breweries. Mobile phones back then were still a back-up mechanism and it was with a sinking, sick feeling that I asked the CUB reception to put me through.

Depression was not at that time a word generally used in connection with the coverage of AFL. Nor was mental illness. My vague knowledge of Hunter's personal story involved the term "nervous breakdown" and the emotional collapse he suffered at the end of his playing career after pivotal roles in three Carlton premierships in seven years.

It was a story he had never told and I wanted him to tell it. To me. After a frank if - hopefully - sensitive conversation, the quietly spoken Hunter told me he would think about it.
  • On a personal note it marked the start of a job in which I promised myself I would remain for two full football seasons, never thinking I would make a long-term go of it. The sports editor who appointed me, Garry Linnell, departed that role one week before I began and I remember his successor confessing he was uncomfortable attaching the label "chief football writer" to an early story because some of the male colleagues in sport were a bit put out by me having the title.

    This is not to say I doubted myself as a journalist, just that the position for a mother of three small children seemed too demanding and high profile. I wondered if The Age's then editor in chief had installed me in the job as a marketing move. He denied it. Sam Newman called after my appointment was announced. "I've got your first headline," he said (prophetically), "What the hell does Caroline Wilson know about football?"

    My long-time colleague and friend Gerard Healy and the late David Hookes took calls for two nights on their evening 3AW program Sports Today on the perils of a woman doing the job - only a handful of callers were vaguely positive - although Eddie McGuire, who had just controversially become president of Collingwood, was enthusiastic and completely encouraging.

    Perhaps it's this industry's forgiving nature or - as Ed pointed out the other day - that we are more aligned regarding the game than we realise, but there have honestly been times when I have called him regarding a story over the years unable to remember whether we were friends or enemies that month.

    I do remember the sick feeling calling him one night to convey that we were running a column the following day questioning whether his time might almost be up at Collingwood - that was shortly before the Malthouse-Buckley deal was done - and the spray that followed. That same sinking feeling has punctuated all 19 football seasons.

    And Ed's disappointed and then outraged reaction was only to be outdone by Malcolm Blight's response when calling him to suggest he was about to be sacked as coach of St Kilda. Actually throw in Grant Thomas, Mark Thompson and Andrew Demetriou times 10.


    I still remember my disbelief the day I heard the Carey rumour and that night tracking down North Melbourne stalwart and then player manager Ron Joseph as he consoled over a bottle of red his client and close friend Anthony Stevens.

    And trying to feign a straight face when the relatively new AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick - snapping after one too many illicit drug questions - threatened to end the interview unless we changed the subject. So I asked him what he hoped would be his legacy. The AFL had "no choice" he responded but to expand to an 18-team competition and he planned to install a new team first on the Gold Coast but then in Sydney the following year.

    Next season Jake Niall - who broke the news (correctly!) of James Hird's departure from Essendon and the season-long bans inflicted upon Hird's former charges courtesy of the Court of Arbitration for Sport - returns to The Age to take over this job and continue this team's unique and independent coverage of the game. Another clear and not so distant memory was the late afternoon Jake and I both learned independently but virtually simultaneously that Michael Voss had been sacked by Brisbane.

    Clearly good stories are often not happy ones. There was the Carlton salary cap cheating that went on to haunt the club for more than a decade, the shameful truth behind the Melbourne tanking affair - preceded by the day Dean Bailey was sacked after a player revolt against management went pear-shaped, Ahmed Saad's positive drug test, the David Schwarz and Daniel Ward gambling debts, the Adam Ramanauskas cancer battle, the Andrew Lovett St Kilda sacking and - for Terry Wallace anyway - Sydney's backflip on that secret deal in favour of Paul Roos.

    The late Bailey, fresh from his sacking press conference, was putting boxes into the boot of his car as I walked past and wished him well. "Don't stop digging," he said. The eulogy delivered in Bailey's honour by his friend and colleague Phil Walsh was an emotional showstopper and it is still difficult to process that Walsh himself would die at the hand of his son some 16 months later, 12 games into a senior coaching career. Trying to make sense of that tragedy and do it justice remained one of this job's greatest challenges.

    Sydney's pioneering chairman Richard Colless revealed his battle with depression as did, most poignantly, Scott West along with his semi-regular night-time journeys to the top of the Shrine where he attempted to make sense of his existence. And the AFL footballer's battles with anxiety and self doubt were outlined with instructive if poignant honesty by Mitch Morton, Mark McVeigh and reigning Brownlow medallist Shane Crawford, who stated he'd happily hand over his Brownlow to have his old life back.

    Ken Hunter returned to Carlton as part of the Ian Collins-led coup over John Elliott. The latter had overseen years of systematic salary cap cheating but Collins couldn't save the club from a record AFL punishment and divisions and the blame game that continued for years to haunt the club. Mandy Hunter, too, was recruited by Collins in late 2002 to work with disgruntled members and stakeholders and she remained with the Blues until 2014.

    I called her this week to thank her for showing faith two decades ago. She and Ken are retired now, grandparents, who spend three months of each year in Italy. We reflected on their football club and its unique politics and ongoing battle to attract the support commensurate with its past might.


    And upon the significance of Ken Hunter's story, which incidentally for me launched an entertaining, generally productive if occasionally turbulent relationship with the ambitious, dynamic then AFL Players Association boss Demetriou, who would go on to run the AFL for 11 years.

    Demetriou pretty much took over the organisation from the time he became the game's football boss under Wayne Jackson. In a pivotal power play Bill Kelty and Ron Evans had championed Demetriou over the other big contender Brian Cook, who had political backing of his own and who became in any event one of the most important figures in the modern game's history.

    I have no doubt having covered sport in other countries and lived for several years in the UK that Australian rules is the world's greatest football code. The game itself, its champions and the intriguing and varying cultures of its clubs are its greatest strengths. And its enduring lifecycles, led by such notable families as the Kennedys, the Danihers, Watsons and the Abletts to name just four.

    And the changing tide of champions. Demetriou, strong-armed by his chairman, launched a short-lived investigation into the state of the Victorian clubs not long after West Coast's 2006 premiership marked the eighth non-Victorian premiership in 10 years. Three of those were achieved by the Brisbane/Leigh Matthews dynasty with the Lions threatening to become so powerful the Victorian clubs blocked their benefits.

    Now football in Queensland is an endangered species and Gillon McLachlan faces a backlash from the non-Victorian clubs regarding the unfairness of having to travel to the MCG to play on a rival's home turf. Since that West Coast flag in 2006, only one interstate club - Sydney in 2012 - has held up the cup although this is largely due to Hawthorn's and Geelong's dominance since 2007.

    And the cultural scrutiny of the AFL, which crystallised when executives Simon Lethlean and Richard Simkiss were forced out this year, continues to haunt McLachlan. Although this must gall him given Demetriou's leadership style, the truth is the game has a long way to go.

    But it has come so far. Even five years ago I did not see the AFL Women's competition coming, never believing the league would champion such a seemingly risky venture. Nor a woman club president and certainly not at Richmond.

    And what a story the Tigers delivered in 2017. McLachlan joked at the start of the finals that he would take a one-year holiday in 2018 if Richmond won the flag. But there was a touch of the America's Cup and Bob Hawke around Swan Street on the last Saturday night of the football season.

    After the fact, the AFL chief described it as the most unlikely premiership in his memory. He was not being derogatory. Personally and I hope without bias I have not seen a club in those 19 years in this role light up a September the way Richmond did. Nor a player dominate a season like Dustin Martin.

    Another AFL commissioner commented some years ago to me that he hoped I realised I had one of Australia's best jobs. At the time it seemed condescending but on reflection there was some truth in the observation.

    And a privilege to write on a full-time basis for The Age the newspaper I first joined as a recently married sportswriter back in 1989. Now as the mother of three grown-up children in their 20s it's time for something different. But a lifetime's barracking - for the story - will continue.

    *Caroline Wilson will continue as a weekly columnist and podcaster with The Age during the 2018 AFL season.

I thought just maybe there was a chance the world could start spinning once again

Just wait until the book comes out, followed by the mini-series and the movie.
 
Its hard to snap at Essendon and North fans for criticising Caro surely? She threatened their very existence (literally in North's case)

She never apologised to James Brayshaw for turning a doomed club around into a profitable business
 

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