Crowd talk
Wednesday, 13 December, 2006 - 3:30PM
Despite being in just its second season, the Hyundai A-League is one of the best attended football leagues in world football, an amazing statistic that belies the popular belief that the atmosphere at Australian football matches is incomparable to that in Europe or South America.
The best attended football league in the world is Germany’s Bundesliga, home to former Mariners defenders Michael Beauchamp and Dean Heffernan, which drew an average of 40,775 spectators to their league fixtures throughout its 2005/06 campaign.
England’s Premier League is a close second (33,875), with Spain’s La Liga (29,029), Italy’s Serie A (21,968) and France’s Ligue 1 (21,576) each trumping the likes of the Hyundai A-League in terms of their average gates, as one would expect.
Elsewhere around the world, Mexico’s Football League is the best attended non-European league, averaging 24,970 per match in 2006, while Japan’s J-League is the flagship competition in Asia, averaging 18,292 each game of their most recent season.
In total, the Hyundai A-League ranks 17th in terms of football league average attendances worldwide, higher than a host of world football superpowers including no less than Portugal, Sweden and the Czech Republic.
The top-tier leagues of 2006 FIFA World Cup finalists Switzerland, Ukraine, Poland, Croatia and Serbia & Montenegro all average less than the current Mariners average home attendance of 9,544.
ccmariners.com.au looks at just how the crowds at Bluetongue Central Coast Stadium compare to the landscape of attendances around Australia and around the globe.
Australian Premier Leagues
AFL
2006 Average Attendance 35,250
The AFL is not only Australia’s best attended national sporting league, it is also second only to Germany’s Bundesliga and the United States’ NFL in terms of the best attended leagues of any sport in the world. Turnstiles at AFL grounds in Australia clicked more than 6 million times throughout 2006, more than double the amount of its nearest national rival – Rugby League’s NRL. The largest attendance of the 2006 AFL season was an astonishing 97,431, which saw the West Coast Eagles defeat the Sydney Swans in the showpiece event at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
NRL
2006 Average Attendance 16,485
Australia’s premier Rugby League competition, the NRL, attracted an average of 16,485 spectators to their matches in 2006, some 5,000 more than the inaugural Hyundai A-League season. The Hyundai A-League only marginally trailed the NRL in terms of finals attendances last season, with the Hyundai A-League’s second week finals matches recording similar numbers to the NRL’s equivalent: Hyundai A-League – 47,806, NRL – 52,988. The largest NRL attendance of 2006 was 79,606, who were on hand for September’s Grand Final at Telstra Stadium in Sydney.
NBL
2004/05 Average Attendance 3,665
The NBL, Australia’s top-flight Basketball competition, is the only Australian sporting competition to include teams from both Singapore and New Zealand. Amazingly, the competition’s most northern Australian club, the Cairns Taipans, have to travel only 1,500 kilometres further to play the Singapore Slingers compared to the Perth Wildcats. Currently in its 29th season, the NBL records the lowest average attendance of any of Australia’s major sporting leagues, only marginally above the Hyundai A-League’s lowest crowd-pulling club, the New Zealand Knights.
Worldwide Football Leagues
K-League
2005 Average Attendance 11,258
Korea’s K-League has long been flagged as Asia’s premier competition and, certainly, their record in Asia’s premier club competition, the AFC Champions League, would suggest so (K-League clubs have won six of the past eleven AFC Champions League titles). The K-League, only just behind the Hyundai A-League in terms of average attendances, has featured several footballers of Australian fame in its 13 year history, including fringe Socceroo Ahmad Elrich and current Newcastle Jets striker Milton Rodrigues.
Portugese Superliga
2005/06 Average Attendance 10,600
Portugal’s top-tier competition is home to three of the giant clubs of Europe – Benfica, Porto and Sporting Lisbon, each of whom have tasted significant success in Europe previously, not least Porto who claimed the 2004 UEFA Champions League. The Superliga has been home to some of Portugal’s all-time greatest players, including FIFA World Player of the Year winner Luis Figo, Manchester United starlet Cristiano Ronaldo and veteran international Rui Costa. Despite this, the Superliga averages crowds notably less than the Hyundai A-League, with the majority of clubs drawing less to their games than the Mariners do to Bluetongue Central Coast Stadium.
Belgian Jupiler League
2005/06 Average Attendance 10,293
Belgium’s Jupiler League has been a hotbed for emerging Australian football talent for decades now, with the likes of Frank Farina, Paul Okon and even the Mariners’ own Tony Vidmar beginning their overseas careers with Belgian clubs. Anderlecht and Club Brugge are unquestionably Belgium’s two largest and best supported clubs, while the likes of Lierse (former club of the Melbourne Victory’s Archie Thompson), Sint Truidense and Beveren struggle to draw attendances totaling five figures with any consistency.
Swiss Super League
2005/06 Average Attendance 7,993
The showpiece football competition in Switzerland is home to several current Socceroo stars, including Scott Chipperfield, Mile Sterjovski and Ljubo Milicevic. The former two play with Switzerland’s most dominant club – FC Basel, who, based in the Swiss city of the same name, have dominated the Super League in recent years. Despite boasting many FIFA World Cup stars throughout the competition’s ten clubs, crowds in Switzerland are not particularly strong, with FC Schaffhausen a poignant example – rarely nudging their Stadium’s 7,300 capacity.
League of Wales
2005/06 Average Attendance 268
Unquestionably one of the most amazing league’s in terms of attendance in the football world today – the League of Wales draws an unbelievable 268 people to their matches on average. Due in some part to the country’s three largest clubs – Cardiff City, Swansea City and Wrexham playing in England’s lower leagues, the League of Wales attendances are among the worst of any top-flight football league in the world, a baffling statistic given Wales’ enormous history and standing in the world game.
Top 20 Attended Football Leagues
1 – Bundesliga (Germany), 40,775
2 – Premier League (England), 33,875
3 – La Liga (Spain), 29,029
4 – Football League (Mexico), 24,970
5 – Serie A (Italy), 21,968
6 – Ligue 1 (France), 21,576
7 – J-League (Japan), 18,292
8 – League Championship (England), 17,616
9 – Primera Division (Argentina), 17,363
10 – Premier Super League (Turkey), 16,799
11 – Eredivisie (Netherlands), 16,789
12 – Premier League (Scotland), 16,174
13 – Major League Soccer (United States), 15,220
14 – Bundesliga 2 (Germany), 13,124
15 – Campeonato (Brazil), 12,385
16 – Premier League (Russia), 11,792
17 – Hyundai A-League (Australia), 11,627
18 – K-League (Korea Republic), 11,258
19 – Super League (China), 10,600
20 – Superliga (Portugal), 10,600