am Bays wrote:Ronnie wrote:amber_fluid wrote:Aerie wrote:Yep, the league was kicked from pillar to post since 1990 and in the last decade it has been hijacked.
35,000 to our Grand Finals still tells me there is a heartbeat though.
Would there be any viability in running the Men's League competition from October to January?
Free tickets will always inflate the numbers
A number of grounds would not be available for starters
Exactly, immediately rules out Glenelg, Norwood, Prospect and Adelaide as venues
seven team comp if that's what Aerie wants
Definitely not what I want and the only reason for the suggestion. I'll preface all the below with IF the SANFL could get a salary of around $1 million plus for it's league squads per season and the clubs were financially sustainable with that, then I wouldn't be worried about changing anything. But, the fact the salary continues to go down, a number of clubs are struggling even after we've sold Football Park and the AFL licences and got all the riches from that, and the competition is continually being eroded (as per a number of comments in this thread), then unless something changes, who knows what it might end up? Not many seem optimistic.
I guess the question is, is the SANFL Men's League competition a product that could sustain itself commercially, regardless of the hindrance, or help, of AFL involvement?
The possible benefits:
- A wider number of players available
- A chance for players to earn in winter/summer (as many do when they play in the NT)
- Players and spectators could play/enjoy local footy as well as play/enjoy SANFL level
- SANFL clubs focus purely on development during winter season (Women/U16/18/Reserves (U21?)
- A distinction between the League comp and Development comps
- Better weather for spectators, therefore bigger crowds
- Better ground conditions without all the other traffic and wet weather
- The club rooms being used for extra months of the year
- No AFL Reserves teams and a shorter, 14 round home and away season with final 4
- No competition with the AFL (either media or spectators)
- Potential broadcast income if the product is appealing enough
The hurdles (mostly to do with the change in how things have always been done):
- The main one, does switching the time of year create enough finances to increase investment in the players, clubs and competition?
- A drop in patronage (league crowds) during the winter, with essentially only friends and family interested in attending juniors and womens
- Ovals used as cricket* (see below)
- Due to the heat, games would need to be played in the evenings
- Traditional pre-season lost
- Are players wanting and capable, if the money is incentive enough, to play 2 (shorter) seasons a year
- Competition with cricket, AFLW, NBL, A-League
*The cricket shouldn't be hard to move. Unley is used for 3rd/4th grade - flick. Prospect are a basket case, merge. Woodville and Glenelg move to St Clair and Camden or merge with other clubs. The SANFL GF to be held at night on Australia Day each year, with the reluctance of cricket to play on that day, drop out and drop in the pitch for one SANFL game on Adelaide Oval each year, the Grand Final. So with that problem solved and with each South Australian SANFL club with full access to their ovals for training and playing 12 months a year...