Kong
Hall of Famer
- Oct 11, 2007
- 32,308
- 17,062
- AFL Club
- Essendon
If only the AFL could control independent bodies like Etihad Stadium the way they do the clubs.
Kind of ironic, actually.
Kind of ironic, actually.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Due to a number of factors, support for the current BigFooty mobile app has been discontinued. Your BigFooty login will no longer work on the Tapatalk or the BigFooty App - which is based on Tapatalk.
Apologies for any inconvenience. We will try to find a replacement.
Do North really lose money even if they draw a crowd of 30,000 at Etihad, Tas? I suppose similar for St Kilda and Footscray, too?
That's appalling if true.
Whatever your views on how far equalisation should go, I think it's completely unacceptable that clubs are forced into financial arrangements where a crowd of 30,000 at their home ground (with a capacity of 55k) still equates to a loss and, at the very least, that needs to be remedied. Fast.
So we essentially come back to doing what we can to reduce the effectiveness of the richer clubs rather than fixing the root cause.
Fix the stadium deals, and let clubs do what they like. If they can't thrive on a level playing field, stadium-wise, then it's their problem. It seems to me that fixing the stadium deals would just remove the ready-made excuse poorer clubs have for wanting to weaken richer clubs rather than sorting out their own backyard.
Do North really lose money even if they draw a crowd of 30,000 at Etihad, Tas? I suppose similar for St Kilda and Footscray, too?
That's appalling if true.
Whatever your views on how far equalisation should go, I think it's completely unacceptable that clubs are forced into financial arrangements where a crowd of 30,000 at their home ground (with a capacity of 55k) still equates to a loss and, at the very least, that needs to be remedied. Fast.
Log in to remove this Banner Ad
Agreed. Sofa king glad the paddlepop is departing though. We will stomach the watermarks if it means the proper guernsey comes back.Yeah, the watermarks look shit.
Well that's not very nice. You'll hurt their feelings if you're not careful.nah i reckon the paddlepop lion suited the pack of twats
It's not "a bit" more money. North lose money from a 30,000 crowd at Etihad. We profit from a 10,000 crowd. Fair stadium deals and a special distribution find for fixture inequalities is all the equalisation we need. Anything more is about restricting top clubs and therefore their players rather than improving bottom clubs. It's the AFLPA cutting off its nose to spite its face.
But the people/clubs at the top are an obstacle for the people/clubs at the bottom of the pile improving their situation. The rich people/clubs are better positioned to take advantage of opportunities that would benefit the poorer people/clubs. If an investment opportunity came up but it needed $1mil to be invested up front a club like the Bulldogs would be unable to exploit it, but a club like Essendon could do it with the spare change behind the couch. It seems a simplistic example but think about housing investment; some people are making billions of easy, almost risk free money investing in houses but that is totally out of the reach of the majority of the population.It's the problem with a lot of the arguements people have for communism and equality in our society. It's all about bringing the top down and raising the bottom slightly but what you get is a more equal but in the end a lesser product. People need to realize it should not be about limiting or penalizing the top but remove the obstacles that exist that stop the poorer clubs from Reaching a higher level.
Compared to other potential income streams it would be just a little bit more money. How much would a club with a good Etihad deal like us make from games compared to sponsorships, memberships, assets such as pokies etc? Equalisation wont happen if half the clubs are miles behind the rich ones when the rules are made fair. While they are crawling their way to where the rich clubs are today, the rich clubs will have moved miles more ahead. The AFL (assuming they actually believe in equalisation and are determined to make it happen, and aren't just paying lip service) would need to greatly accelerate the growth of the poorer clubs or slow the growth of the rich clubs if the poor clubs are ever going to catch up.
But the people/clubs at the top are an obstacle for the people/clubs at the bottom of the pile improving their situation. The rich people/clubs are better positioned to take advantage of opportunities that would benefit the poorer people/clubs. If an investment opportunity came up but it needed $1mil to be invested up front a club like the Bulldogs would be unable to exploit it, but a club like Essendon could do it with the spare change behind the couch. It seems a simplistic example but think about housing investment; some people are making billions of easy, almost risk free money investing in houses but that is totally out of the reach of the majority of the population.
There will always be some inequality between the rich people/clubs and the poor ones but it needs to have more to do with the abilities of the agents involved rather than the financial situation they inherit from the forebears. It's totally unfair to the players and fans that a poor club like the Bulldogs might have quite a brilliant CEO but be dirt poor and likely to remain that way, while a club like us could have an utter muppet in charge and still be able to grow.
(Disclaimer: not actually a communist)
Are the rules not exactly the same for memberships? For sponsorships? Pokies? There's your level playing field. If you're not good enough to capitalise, that's your problem.
It only took them 2 decades of sustained sucess to get them to that stageHawthorn completely dismantles that argument.
No, we must bring the successful clubs down and stifle advancement.Are the rules not exactly the same for memberships? For sponsorships? Pokies? There's your level playing field. If you're not good enough to capitalise, that's your problem.
Hawthorn completely dismantles that argument.
Was at that game.2004:
Hawthorn 7.11 (53) Port Adelaide 15.15 (105) MCG 11,682 Sunday, 18 July
11,682 to a home game.
OK, let's use the basket case example:
http://www.aflmembershipnumbers.com/st-kilda-membership-numbers.html
17,696 in 2002 - lowest ebb this century
31,906 in 2009 - 80% increase in 7 years on the back of moderate success
39,021 in 2010 - further 22% in a year on the back of a narrow GF loss bringing it to a total of a 121% increase in 8 seasons.
On-field success is cyclical (only Richmond and the expansion clubs haven't made a PF since 2000, and only Carlton and Melbourne haven't made 2 or more in that time if I'm not mistaken (the second half of that stat is off the top of my head)) and even total rabbles can capitalise to that massive extent.
Come 2025, when they take ownership of the staduim then this goes away. MCG will be forced to do a better deal as the AFL will use Eithad as a bargaining tool (it already does). Question is, can St Kilda, North, Bulldogs survive for another 10 years?
And where are they now? In debt with a playing list in tatters. I bet they didn't blow all the cash they made during the late 2000s on the footy department, and they actually made some wise investments; yet what do they have to show from a more successful decade than us? Nothing. Sustainable finances take more than just a few grand finals appearances to achieve and I suspect most of the poor clubs will never get there without outside assistance.
Your argument was that membership needs to be equalised. I proved that even a complete rabble like St Kilda can have an incredibly good membership base (more than Big 4 club Richmond that year incidentally. Only 1-2k behind Carlton). If they can't sustain it, if they waste their money moving their training base to Antarctica or wherever it is now, do we need to equalise that as well? Why don't we draft CEOs and presidents every year? Or even better, why don't we go truly equal, and put 18 pieces of paper into a hat and pick the premier that way?
What I'm trying to get at is by 2025 most teams will be on the same stadium deal in melbourne (ie get 25 k patrons get x $$$) no matter who the team is.Well they can because I suspect the AFL won't allow them to fold. But better stadium deals won't automatically make the league equal (or close to equal, that identical clubs BS that the Collingwood flog was on about is a fantasy dreamt up as an excuse to maintain the status quo).
The argument was never that membership needs to be equalised. More members help but if you have debt and a shitty stadium deal, when the glory days are done and the members close their wallets you are left with debt and a shitty stadium deal. Fixing the stadium deal and doing nothing else allows the club to start paying off the debt but while that is happening clubs like ours keep growing and the gap keeps widening (just a bit slower than before).
Becoming truly equal is neither possible nor desirable, there will always be the human factor which will keep things interesting and unpredictable.
Are the rules not exactly the same for memberships? For sponsorships? Pokies? There's your level playing field. If you're not good enough to capitalise, that's your problem.
Well they can because I suspect the AFL won't allow them to fold. But better stadium deals won't automatically make the league equal (or close to equal, that identical clubs BS that the Collingwood flog was on about is a fantasy dreamt up as an excuse to maintain the status quo).