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News Gold coast!!!

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blue_boys

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Just announced that we are playing one of our home games on the Gold Coast for the next two years!!!:confused::confused::confused::confused:

source is SEN but it sounds very official
 
Just announced that we are playing one of our home games on the Gold Coast for the next two years!!!:confused::confused::confused::confused:

source is SEN but it sounds very official

looks like i am up for a road trip!! oh yeah!!
 
looks like i was fooled into thinking it was about the CGFC.. ah crap...

but i can see judd.. ah crap. :(

just joking. don't ban me, :):thumbsu:
 

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here you go guys, some info for ya's. looks like $400,000 for the game against the crows. nice to see we made a healthy profit this year too.:)

Article

THE AFL is set to showcase three strong Melbourne clubs on the Gold Coast for the next two years in a bid to compete with rival codes and continue momentum in its newest growth area.

Richmond, Carlton and St Kilda appear certain to be playing home games at the Gold Coast Stadium at Carrara over the next two years in a bid to maintain high AFL interest before the start-up of the Gold Coast in 2011.


The powerhouse clubs will fill the void left by North Melbourne.
The league needed clubs to fill the gap left by the Kangaroos, who withdrew from the final year of their three-year contract to play three games on the Gold Coast next season.


The North Melbourne deal was for $1.2million from next year, which will now be shared equally among the Tigers, the Blues and the Saints.


The AFL is yet to finalise exact details of next year's fixture, but it is understood that Carlton will play Adelaide and St Kilda could play Brisbane on the Gold Coast after Collingwood pulled out after initially showing interest. The Magpies broke all home-attendance records at the MCG this season by averaging attendances of 65,000, which included games against non-Victorian clubs Fremantle, West Coast and Adelaide.


While the Pies were keen to promote their massive following in Queensland, they believed they could have disenfranchised members and reserved-seat holders had they elected to move a home game to the Gold Coast.


In the Tigers' case, the Melbourne home game they will lose next year would more than likely have been a Telstra Dome match against another Victorian club.


It is believed the Gold Coast fixtures will provide the Tigers with a better net financial result of at least $250,000 in additional revenue each year.


Richmond president Gary March was unavailable for comment yesterday, but it is understood the Tigers, without a major sponsor for 2009, will treat the Gold Coast as a vehicle for promotion and development of their supporter base outside Victoria. It is also an avenue to attract national sponsorship.


Next season a record number of Melbourne-based clubs will play home games outside Victoria.



Only Collingwood, Essendon and the Kangaroos, for the first time in more than a decade, will play all 11 home games at either the MCG or Telstra Dome.



Apart from the Gold Coast exposure for the Tigers, Blues and St Kilda, the Western Bulldogs appear set to again play home games in Darwin and Canberra, Melbourne will play at least one match in Canberra, and Hawthorn will again host four games in Launceston.



The Tigers are heading for a profit this season of about $700,000, while Carlton is expected to make more than $2million.



St Kilda's figure should be somewhere near break-even. In a compete about-face after shunning Tasmania as a home venue, the Saints, with a new administration and coaching staff, will head north instead of south to help its bottom line.



The Saints' experiment of playing home games in Launceston ended in 2007 after it played eight home games there between 2003 and 2006.



Carlton's desire to host games on the Gold Coast is based on building its national brand and for economic reasons.



As an example, when it hosted Brisbane at Telstra Dome in round eight in front of a crowd of 38,675, chief executive Greg Swann said it received a match return of just $26,700.



The Lions had requested a radical proposal to play Collingwood in consecutive matches next season in Queensland, which Brisbane claimed would have enhanced momentum for the code before the entry of the Gold Coast.



Heading the Lions' fixture wish list for seasons 2009 and 2010, was a bold plan to play the Magpies either side of a bye at the Gabba and Carrara.



Brisbane chief executive Michael Bowers yesterday said he was unaware of his club's exact involvement on the Gold Coast over the next two years, but welcomed it as a huge promotional tool for the code.



"As I've said before, the AFL wants to prepare the soil for the new Gold Coast club and we're prepared to be part of that promotion until they enter the competition in 2011," Bowers said.



"It's important that the AFL puts its best foot forward and the Lions should be playing a quality opposition. For us, it's a no-brainer. We want to be part of showcasing the game as an entree for the Gold Coast."



Interest in AFL on the Gold Coast has surpassed all expectation with expressions of interest from potential members now well in excess of 30,000, more than 10,000 ahead of the figure set to be established by next week when the consortium is officially approved by the AFL Commission as the 17th licence holder.
 
I saw another thread that listed our debt as $6M. I thought we were doing a little better than that on the debt repayment front. Anyone have details?
 

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