TY24
Cripps and Bloods
All 3 breaks and pre-game?Triple the Big Coast Energy budget
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All 3 breaks and pre-game?Triple the Big Coast Energy budget
All 3 breaks and pre-game?
WC have lots of money, this isn't news. I keep hearing about how WC don't need a priority pick because of all the resources we have available. Which would be great if we were Manchester City. Or Geelong.
So what can we actually use our Scrooge McDuck vault for to improve the team?
We can't go over the salary cap, nor can we spread it out over 50 players instead of 40.
The soft cap is $7.7m. Still about $2m lower than what it was pre covid.
As I understand it if we spend an extra $500k we pay a 200% tax, so would be handing $1m to the AFL.
Is it worth it? If we bring in 2 or 3 more assistant coaches or development staff or whoever will it make a big impact? Is there any area other than the playing list that there is a glaring weakness that can be improved just by throwing money at it?
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Good PR but not materially significant. A bit likle ASKICK in 'developing states' - numbers not substance. Lots of free school,clinics etc but they dont translate into players - just free childminding for schools.Not sure if this would fall under the soft cap, and would expect it would be a very expensive excercise, but could we set up an academy internationally? Currently there is no formal AFL framework for international academies, and thus there is no priority access to players should we set one up, however you'd hope the loop hole of Cat B might come into play, of which we would get first dibs.
Crystal balling the academy could be set up in one place e.g. South Africa, England and or US. Could offer something akin to Clontarff where we are offering a sporting sponsorship, that also provides for your education. This would tap into young athletes talent with transferable skills from rugby, soccer, athletics etc.
Alternatively we go to the AFL offering a partnership (money/development staff) to help grow/develop international talent, providing we get first access to players that go through this program
Currently the AFL has youth programs in:
NZ
South Africa
- KiwiKick: A junior program similar to Auskick, run in schools across the country.
- Over 35,000 registered participants as of 2020.
- AFL New Zealand supports school competitions and talent pathways
Ireland
- AFL South Africa runs school-based programs in provinces like Gauteng and North West.
- Focus on youth development and community engagement.
US
- AFL Ireland supports junior development and school clinics.
- Strong ties to Gaelic football make AFL skills highly transferable.
Europe (France, Netherlands, Germany)
- USAFL runs youth clinics and modified rules programs like Ausball.
- Some schools and community clubs offer AFL as part of PE or after-school sport.
PNG
- AFL Europe supports Auskick-style programs and junior development in select schools.
- Events like the ANZAC Cup and Champions League include youth engagement.
South Africa and NZ the obvious choices for me to partner wth the AFL on.
- AFL PNG runs extensive junior competitions and school programs.
- PNG has produced elite AFL talent and regularly competes in the International Cu
Just trying to think what would not fall under the soft cap, and think dropping say $10Million over a period of time might provide access to talent we are unlikely to see in the current AFL International pathways set-up.
I also get both options are long term and expensive that may provide nothing, but I rarely if ever see us being part of the cohort of recruiters that go to the US to find the next Mason Cox etc, or Ireland to find the next Zach Tuohy which I think falls under the Salary Cap, but is something we should be invloved in.
I don't disagree that is what it is currently, but that is that because no clubs have been invested previously. it would probably cost a club bewteen $5-$6M to set-up, followed by between $1-2M per year to run, for what is unlikely to see a result for 5-6 years. High risk I get that, but there is no doubt in my mind at the very least we should be a part of the AFL trips internationally looking for talent, along with keeping tabs on players who chose other sports at 15 or 16 who were on the elite AFL pathways to see if they'd come back. Once again not sure if this fits under soft cap spendingGood PR but not materially significant. A bit likle ASKICK in 'developing states' - numbers not substance. Lots of free school,clinics etc but they dont translate into players - just free childminding for schools.
Actually, what we should be doing is dropping membership & ticket prices - it should be comparable to the MCG clubs, not the exorbitant prices we pay now.
If the club can't spend the war chest, they shouldn't be screwing over fans.
I think our relative poor drafting to the decade to end of 2020 is the largest reason why we're in the position we are.I don't think it's a coincidence that we dropped off a lot after the softcap was introduced.
I think our relative poor drafting to the decade to end of 2020 is the largest reason why we're in the position we are.
The reduction of the Soft Cap would undoubtedly have contributed, but I don't think it's the prime factor.
WhichUnfortunately, $500k might get you 3 reasonable staff members on $165k. If you sign them on three year deals, it ends up costing the club $6mil ($1.5mil in salary & $4.5mil in AFL tax), which equates to more than $666k per staff member per season.
or the indirect approach - a sophisticated social media campaign to drive the news agendahire some hitmen and send em to the various media outlets in vic perhaps ?
Spending would eat into the juicy profit margin and potentially cost Niz meeting his kpis.
Nobody really wants that.
First post for me - long time lurker and fmr member of the now defunct EFH website. I come in peace (do I need to say that as a WCE Fan?) and overall have always enjoyed the rebuild and development phase of Eagle's list builds.****Snip
2015: pick 21 for Redden, Partington, Cole, Mutimer, M Allen
2016: Venables, Rotham, Rioli, Waterman
2017: Brander, O Allen, Ryan, Ainsworth, Petruccelle, Brayshaw
2018: O'Neill, Foley, B Williams, Cameron
2019: pick 16 Kelly, Jamieson, Johnson late picks
2020: pick 18 Kelly, Edwards, Winder late picks
Slim pickings most years.
The Swans academy programme including pre selection training programmes, ongoing selection sessions and ongoing training and culling are all on a fee paying basis. The Swans gain revenue as a buisness.I don't disagree that is what it is currently, but that is that because no clubs have been invested previously. it would probably cost a club bewteen $5-$6M to set-up, followed by between $1-2M per year to run, for what is unlikely to see a result for 5-6 years. High risk I get that, but there is no doubt in my mind at the very least we should be a part of the AFL trips internationally looking for talent, along with keeping tabs on players who chose other sports at 15 or 16 who were on the elite AFL pathways to see if they'd come back. Once again not sure if this fits under soft cap spending
Not sure if that’s the answer but I like the lateral thinking.Not sure if this would fall under the soft cap, and would expect it would be a very expensive excercise, but could we set up an academy internationally? Currently there is no formal AFL framework for international academies, and thus there is no priority access to players should we set one up, however you'd hope the loop hole of Cat B might come into play, of which we would get first dibs.
Crystal balling the academy could be set up in one place e.g. South Africa, England and or US. Could offer something akin to Clontarff where we are offering a sporting sponsorship, that also provides for your education. This would tap into young athletes talent with transferable skills from rugby, soccer, athletics etc.
Alternatively we go to the AFL offering a partnership (money/development staff) to help grow/develop international talent, providing we get first access to players that go through this program
Currently the AFL has youth programs in:
NZ
South Africa
- KiwiKick: A junior program similar to Auskick, run in schools across the country.
- Over 35,000 registered participants as of 2020.
- AFL New Zealand supports school competitions and talent pathways
Ireland
- AFL South Africa runs school-based programs in provinces like Gauteng and North West.
- Focus on youth development and community engagement.
US
- AFL Ireland supports junior development and school clinics.
- Strong ties to Gaelic football make AFL skills highly transferable.
Europe (France, Netherlands, Germany)
- USAFL runs youth clinics and modified rules programs like Ausball.
- Some schools and community clubs offer AFL as part of PE or after-school sport.
PNG
- AFL Europe supports Auskick-style programs and junior development in select schools.
- Events like the ANZAC Cup and Champions League include youth engagement.
South Africa and NZ the obvious choices for me to partner wth the AFL on.
- AFL PNG runs extensive junior competitions and school programs.
- PNG has produced elite AFL talent and regularly competes in the International Cu
Just trying to think what would not fall under the soft cap, and think dropping say $10Million over a period of time might provide access to talent we are unlikely to see in the current AFL International pathways set-up.
I also get both options are long term and expensive that may provide nothing, but I rarely if ever see us being part of the cohort of recruiters that go to the US to find the next Mason Cox etc, or Ireland to find the next Zach Tuohy which I think falls under the Salary Cap, but is something we should be invloved in.
2015: pick 21 for Redden, Partington, Cole, Mutimer, M Allen
2016: Venables, Rotham, Rioli, Waterman
2017: Brander, O Allen, Ryan, Ainsworth, Petruccelle, Brayshaw
2018: O'Neill, Foley, B Williams, Cameron
2019: pick 16 Kelly, Jamieson, Johnson late picks
2020: pick 18 Kelly, Edwards, Winder late picks