No its not. See the list below. From 10th to 16th it's almost the same amount with a lot hidden behind the lists. Not sure on the calcs or what it also includes but there are basically 9 rich clubs and 7 middle earners and 2 poor clubs. Tassie will probably be in the middle ground but only with state government support for how ever long the contract is. I recon the AFL would prefer to add a 20th team on a path to the rich list to keep the balance rather than another mouth to feed.
2023 Distributions
1. Gold Coast ($25 million)
2. GWS Giants ($25 million)
3. Brisbane Lions ($18-19 million)
4. North Melbourne ($18-19 million)
5. St Kilda ($18-19 million)
6. Melbourne ($16 million)
7. Western Bulldogs ($16 million)
8. Port Adelaide ($16 million)
9. Sydney Swans ($16 million)
10. Fremantle ($11.5-12.5 million)
11. Carlton ($11.5-12.5 million)
12. Adelaide Crows ($11.5-12.5 million)
13. Geelong ($11.5-12.5 million)
14. Essendon ($11-11.5 million)
=15. Richmond ($10.5-11 million)
=15. Hawthorn ($10.5-11 million)
=15. Collingwood ($10.5-11 million)
=15. West Coast ($10.5-11 million)
That still doesn't answer my question. Your graph said Freo made $15m more, but got the same distro as the Crows or Geelong (who don't have pokies).
That commercial revenue clearly isn't clear cut profit, otherwise Freo would be receiving a lost less distro than these teams.
Remember, the WA clubs pay a royalty to the WAFL to pay for grassroots footy. The other AFL clubs don't do this and grassroots is funded by the AFL in all other states.
$1.84m. Still doesn't explain the $15m difference. But does that mean WA3 will have to pay that as well?
That'll, combined with the government and stadium deals, will give Canberra about a $6-7m annual leg up over WA3.




