Kaboom, nice slapdown. lolBut no problem having David Rodan's kids in your Academy right?
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Kaboom, nice slapdown. lolBut no problem having David Rodan's kids in your Academy right?
That should be the starting point, yes.
Interesting take.
Not all clubs or their circumstances are equal. As one example, the way the fixturing works means a club like Collingwood are able to make much more revenue from games than probably any other club in the league. Do you think that is relevant to distributions?
It is interesting that people consistently argue that certain things should be equal but not everything.
That is just as wrong. If not worse.But no problem having David Rodan's kids in your Academy right?
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The reason why the northern states were asked by the AFL to open the Academies was to lessen the drain of Victorian draftees going to NSW and Qld and so they could develop their own players. However people like Eddie McGuire couldn't possibly let them have something Melbourne clubs don't have so they were able to pick players who fit a certain criteria such as Ugle-Hagen and Quaynor.That is just as wrong. If not worse.
The whole NGA concept is outdated. I would wager almost 99% of the kids who are in NGA's have been playing AFL since they were 6 years old.
Interesting take.
Not all clubs or their circumstances are equal. As one example, the way the fixturing works means a club like Collingwood are able to make much more revenue from games than probably any other club in the league. Do you think that is relevant to distributions?
It is interesting that people consistently argue that certain things should be equal but not everything.
Whatever doesn't suit me must be equal.
Whatever is benefiting me - don't change that. thanks.
Deflect! Deflect! Deflect!
Collingwood received $22m last year. Prime time powerhouses North and St Kilda got $26m, WB and Melbourne $24m. Not really relevant to the discussion.
Brisbane reported revenue of $92.5m, West Coast $92.6m. That places those two clubs third and fourth. One has pokies, one doesn't. One received $30m from the AFL, one $15m. Equalise Brisbane to an average distribution of $22m and it puts them at $84.5m which is 6th. Hardly Struggle St.
Amazing the lengths you guys will go to to deflect just because "we pay for the academies" was called out.
It's impossible for them to do that because there is an agenda where the AFL only wants certain clubs to benefit from NGA's in the same way some clubs have benefited from father/son picks and now all teams are getting them, the AFL are cutting the rorts.How hard is it to just put fair practices around FS/Academies. Keep the systems, make them costly and move on.
Using Dan Annable as an example this year, make so if we want him, he is essentially the only one we can get (As we won't have the draft capital of a lower club) and the other academy products go into the draft.
I'm leaving F/S out of this, it's a chook lotto spin of the wheel that all clubs have access too, some are just luckier than others. If it gets removed, whatever. We didn't have a good F/S for over a decade until we got lucky with the Ashcrofts/Fletcher.It's impossible for them to do that because there is an agenda where the AFL only wants certain clubs to benefit from NGA's in the same way some clubs have benefited from father/son picks and now all teams are getting them, the AFL are cutting the rorts.
The reason why the northern states were asked by the AFL to open the Academies was to lessen the drain of Victorian draftees going to NSW and Qld
I have my doubts the AFL had SA or WA in mind when they allowed the Northern Academies but in theory every time a player is drafted out of a academy it means another player isn't drafted out of Vic, SA or WA or wherever but the key being VicAcademies do next to nothing to prevent talent drain into NSW and Qld.
Just limit clubs to 3 top 40 matches in 5 years.Another simple solution.
If the Northern states want to keep their academy players for themselves, then both the clubs and the players should be excluded from the draft.
They can pick players via the old zone system and the other clubs can use the draft.
I have my doubts the AFL had SA or WA in mind when they allowed the Northern Academies but in theory every time a player is drafted out of a academy it means another player isn't drafted out of Vic, SA or WA or wherever but the key being Vic
Father/Son was a rort for the past 25 years because only Melbourne based clubs were able to benefit from father/son picks. Even now Will McCabe gets father/son by Hawthorn despite the fact he has lived in SA virtually his entire life and went through SA state teams. So not only do they recruit his Dad Luke from SA they then get access to his son the next generation.How is father/sons rule a rort?
It is such a luck of the draw thing and there is no predictably about it, but to suggest that certain clubs are benefiting is just fanciful.
It’s not like the Lions have any father sons on the horizon and I have no issue with any club that would ever benefit provided they pay a fair price.
But we don't. There are 16 NRL clubs, and 3 Union club up here, that have the majority of kids here in their pathways. As well as basketball. AFL just isn't attractive to most kids.Having access from Rd 2 onwards will still make it worth while for academies and still provide Northern clubs an advantage, Remember, you get all kids, not just NGA's to pick from.
Freo has had access from pick 40 for years, they still run and fund the programs with around a 1/3 of the distribution of the Northern clubs.
But there are elite talent pathways in every state. The Coates talent league clubs are stronger than northern academy clubs. We are only just competitive with them when all their private school kids are off playing private school footy.You fund nothing. It's like a billionaire's adult kid complaining that they are funding a holiday when it just comes straight from Dad's allowance and it's a holiday.
I just think the elite programs should be open to all kids in all states. Not just the Northern ones or ones that qualify for NGA. Access can remain with the rules and they should move to have the same rules for all clubs eventually or restricted by ladder position.
this is a really simple and naive thing to post mate.NGA and academy are the same. The only difference is we have to fund and run the academies whereas all you have to do with the NGA is an ancestry test.
blame the system not the clubs mateBut no problem having David Rodan's kids in your Academy right?
this is a really simple and naive thing to post mate.
Essendon is one of the most active in this space of the Melbourne clubs. We bring in the Essendon NGA's over most holidays, have programs both football and non football related and constantly help with the integration of these kids into more traditional football pathways. We recently held a try football day for 12 - 15 year olds that had over 150 register and attend.
Ive had it on good authority a team like St.Kilda does not offer as much and it shows despite them having more NGA's than any Melbourne based club (five I believe, Jack Peris, Josiah Kyle, Marcus Windhager, Mitchito Owens, Angus McLennan with two more going to other clubs, Cam McKenzie > Hawthorn, Bigoa Nguyon > Richmond).
So whilst you may think it's simply "an ancestry test", it's not. If you want the real root, it's having U18 programs in the elite football competition hidden under the banner of growing the game and then hand picking the best of the best each year.
Ifgrowing the game was the real intent, introducing Northern kids to Carlton, or Collingwood, or hell, Essendon then following what established football clubs would broaden the horizon of simply playing in my home state.
I can tell you Essendon was not one. Even if they were, they are actually putting in nowThe whole reason ngas went away was because clubs put zero resources into it and were just doing ancestry.com tests
I can tell you Essendon was not one. Even if they were, they are actually putting in now
Why are clubs funded?A number of reasons.
There were only 3 teams to hit $30m+; Brisbane, Gold Coast and GWS. Sydney were 6th with $24m.
It's spurious to play the 'we fund the academies' card when you have your hand deep inside the cookie jar. Average distribution per club outside NSW and Qld is $21m. Inside it's $31m.
Why are clubs funded?
Because most clubs income doesn't cover their expenditure.
Why do QLD clubs receive $31m?
It pays for the player TPP and off field soft cap. It also pays for our use of the local stadiums, owned by Stadiums QLD. Last I heard, a couple of years ago, it cost the Lions $1m per game to play at the Gabba. Payable to the QLD government via Stadiums QLD.
Another reason why northern clubs receive higher distributions.
We don't have as high membership numbers, pumping money in to our clubs. You know, because AFL isn't as popular here, isn't played by as many families and kids. Which is why fewer kids get drafted out of the northern states than Vic, WA or SA.
Where does the AFL distribution money come from?
The media rights deal.
It sure as **** is not coming out of Freo's or West Coasts pockets, so I don't know why you have your panties in a knot over the AFL's distribution.