- Moderator
- #1,451
If the AFL was fair dinkum about an equitable competition, they would find a way.
Everything comes with a tradeoff. Giving up the right to a final every week came at a small cost, but prelims were sacrosanct.
In 2002, the AFL in its annual report noted
During negotiations with the MCC we were not able to substantially change the condition of our 1989 agreement between our respective organisations which requires us to play 1 game per week at the MCG during the finals.
The new agreement does, however, allow us to “bank” finals so that during any three year period, we will average four finals at the MCG each year including a Preliminary Final and a grand Final.
This agreement was challenged by the then Premier of South Australia, Mike Rann who complained to the ACCC who advised that since the AFL, MCC and MCG Trust were not competitors they could not be in voliation of competition law.[7]
Prelims and Grand Finals were considered sacrosanct by the Victorian Government.
Demetriou said the AFL had offered the MCC financial compensation in return for giving up the automatic preliminary final, but, for the MCC, it was not simply a matter of financial compensation. Demetriou said the preliminary finals were a key to the selling of the MCC’s corporate packages and boxes, not to mention its membership, while the Victorian Government – which has a substantial hand in the development of the MCG – believes the preliminary and grand finals have “a massive economic impact” on the Victorian economy and wishes to retain them in the state.[6]
To allow prelim finals to move was something else, as the league noted in 2005.
Finals scheduling
After lengthy negotiations, we successfully concluded a new agreement with the Melbourne Cricket Club and the MCG Trust regarding the scheduling of finals at the MCG. The key elements were:
- Removing the requirement to play one preliminary final per year at the MCG in the event that two non-Victorian teams earn the right to host a preliminary final in their home states.
- Ensuring all preliminary finals in Victoria are played at the MCG.
- Allowing greater flexibility to bank finals in weeks one and two, with the clause amended to ensure that 10 matches are played over five years.
- Delivering an additional four premiership season games to the MCG each year, taking the number of matches played to 45.
- Delivering 14 Collingwood home and away games to the MCG
- The AFL making the MCG available for other major sporting events on a limited basis.
- Scheduling any representative football matches in Melbourne at the MCG.
Its unlikely the Victorian Government would accept compensation or any other inducement to give up the Grand Final.
As for replays or additional grand finals, the MCC believes its entiteld to ALL grand finals.
‘I would have thought the contract’s fairly clear, Gough said. The grand final is played here and if it happens that there are two versions of it, then it makes no difference whether it’s version one or version two. That is why we always keep the ground in reserve for an extra week in the event of a draw, and that will be the case again next year.





