by Dogwatcher » Thu Dec 04, 2008 12:33 pm
Footy needs OS market
THERE were wall to wall football identities at the AFL’s industry conference, Play On – The Future of Australian Football – In Focus, held in Melbourne last week.
With the national draft, at which Berri’s Rhys Stanley was picked up by St Kilda, to be held on Saturday, there was an undercurrent of tension surrounding the event.
Kevin Sheedy was there, as was Eddie McGuire, Neale Daniher, Brett Burton, Mark Williams and Gerard Whateley among a myriad of football and media types.
Listening to them talk, while watching the way they circulated around the room was one of the more fascinating parts of the conference.
All the pre-draft talk was of the two talents Jack Watts, taken by Melbourne, and Nick Natanui, who went to West Coast; while there were plenty of rumours circulating about the plight of Ben Cousins.
The conference speakers provided an interesting and sometimes left of centre look at the game of Australian rules football and where it must head if it is to continue to prosper.
The theme that seemed to resonate over the two days was that the AFL must expand or perish in this more challenging economic climate.
The phrase “four codes, one wallet” (referring to the Australian rules’ battle with the rugby codes and soccer for hearts and minds) was introduced on day one of the conference and expanded upon by former National Football League commissioner Paul Tagliabue.
Mr Tagliabue pushed the need for the AFL to expand overseas in order to increase the talent pool available to the game, as well as to take advantage of the financial riches that can arrive from taking the game into Asia and the Middle East.
It was a theme pushed by the very next speaker Ian McLeod, the current managing director of Coles supermarkets and the former head of the Glasgow Celtic Football Club, as well as by Peter Linford, the senior commissioner to South Asia for Austrade.
The question for country people, and grassroots football supporters in particular, is where does that leave us?
If the AFL directs its energies to further building markets in western Sydney, the Gold Coast and further a field to overseas nations, will there be less money in the pot for grassroots levels?
That question was not answered at the conference and it would seem football lobby groups at grassroots levels are going to need to continue to push to make sure funding comes our way to keep the game alive in their areas – the heartland of Australian rules football.
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