Pietmans
Senior List
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2007
- Posts
- 207
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- Location
- Adelaide
- AFL Club
- Adelaide
- Other Teams
- Norwood
It's interesting reading about this topic here. I always knew the non Port supporters didn't like us but the hate is unbelievable.............I'm sure you can justify it but at what expense.
I'm assuming you all have your sanfl sides you follow as well as the crows, so I was wondering if both SA AFL clubs became there own entity ie break away from the sanfl, as a result of this non-merger, how would you feel about this.
Your team and mine (AFL) would become stronger financially being free to re-negotiate with the sanfl or the SACA or whoever for a better stadium deal etc etc. The down side for my sanfl club is that it dies and for your sanfl club is the comp it plays it will become a lesser comp without the money generated by the AFL clubs and hence not be able to pay decent money to attract the better players etc etc.
A natural consequence would be that state leagues like the WAFL and the VFL become stronger than the sanfl. Not to mention that overall crowd numbers will reduce without the Port Adelaide Magpies competing.
I certainly don't expect any of you to suddenly not hate Port but I think it may be a case of cutting of your nose to spite your face.
Not that any of you have any real say in what happens but I'm just interested to hear your opinion if the above were to happen.![]()
As a Crows fan I think that breaking away from the SANFL licence/ownership would be a big positive. What was a good idea in 1990 is now different. In 1990 we all (except Port people) saw the SANFL as the be all and end all of SA football but now I think the AFL clubs are.
Also, I think that having Hawthorn for example make a profit of $2M and putting it in their back pockets whilst we make a similar profit and pay a divident out of it to the SANFL is a real competitve disadvantage. It could be argued that the SANFL uses those funds to develop football and therefore footballers in this state. However, that means we are helping to pay for the development of AFL players for all 16 (soon 17) clubs, not just the Crows and Power.
Collingwood, Hawthorn etc don't pay extra to develop the youth of Victoria, in fact all clubs support the U18 competition via AFL funding.
Can anyone imagine Manchester United paying a share of its profits to maintain a local Manchester league, simultaneaously taking funds it could have used to shore up its squad?
In the long term, I think the AFL has the right policy for the future of both AFL clubs - they should be divorced from the SANFL.
That definitely spells disaster for the local comp, including my beloved Norwood. But sometimes you just have to accept that the past was great but now its gone, and get on with the future. The future is AFL footy, not SANFL. It could be even greater than the illustious past!




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