And Everyone Blamed Clive
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Why dio Bournemouth get such big crowds these days? Is it because they are winning the league?
Winner of Official 442 Comment of the day Award - 10th April 2017
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Razor Ramon
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+xAussies expand broadcast platform with Fox on-selling rights to Ten5th June 2017June 6 – Australian football, currently challenged by a slow moving reform process at federation level, has better news for stakeholders on the broadcast front with Ten Network announcing it has acquired the exclusive free-to-air rights to A-league and national team matches.Fox Sports controlled the rights as part of a record six-year $255.5 million deal concluded earlier this year. This included the free-to-air rights which it has on-sold to Ten in a reported $1.5 million a year deal.Ten will broadcast a Saturday evening A-League match, derbies, and all finals as well as Socceroos matches on multichannel One. Fox Sports will carry the vast bulk of live matches on its pay TV platform.The deal with Ten includes selected games streamed live on the Ten Play app, as well as Foxtel Go.The Ten deal rounds out the broadcast platform for Federation Football Australia (FFA) bringing a broader-based and wider promotional platform for the game as it grows in the sports-mad country. Fox brings the big money number.With the increase in TV money came a dispute between the Australian A-League club owners and the FFA with the clubs rejecting the annual A$3.25 million per club financial offer from the FFA last month. The clubs argue they should receive more money from the new A$56 million per season broadcast deal agreed with Fox.The FFA was already in dispute with clubs over representation on their board. Currently only 10 voters – the lowest of the 211 FIFA member nations – elect the FFA board. The clubs want more representation and FIFA has issued deadlines for the FFA to reform but they have been extended as no real common ground has been reached so far.The dispute over the TV money saw all 10 club owners walk out of a meeting with the FFA in Sydney. The new deal is a 40% increase on the previous agreement. The increase in the offer to clubs is 24%, up from the previous A$2.6 million per season. http://www.insideworldfootball.com/2017/06/05/aussies-expand-broadcast-platform-fox-selling-rights-ten/ If the $255.5m includes the $1.5m for in selling the rights to Channel 10, my maths tells me the deal is for only $42.58m per season, not the $56m everyone keeps talking about. Am i missing something? All of a sudden, we understand why the FFA is only wanting to guarantee an annual dividend of $3.25 mill per club, and retain about $10 mill in cash for administration (which is not over the top in my opinion). The TV deal is not the only source of revenue for the FFA I'm pretty sure it was mentioned that FFA total annual revenue from the A League is closer to $100m Can somebody clarify this point? This lack of clarity is probably the issue Owners claim it's a massive $x, FFA say it's only $y Yeh, I'd agree there is a lack of clarity, but...on this question the FFA might have a legitimate claim. They argue that a lot of the additional revenues are difficult to unpick and allocate out. For example, we know the FFA has had a major sponsorship with Hyundai since day one. The clubs might argue that the whole of that sponsorship belongs to the A-League, but the FFA might argue that the sponsorship goes back to the rebooting of new football in this country, and that is as much a general football sponsorship as it is a specific A-League sponsorship. Similarly, we know the FFA pocket all the revenue from finals. Once again, the A-League clubs might argue it all belongs to them, but the FFA might argue that they have created the hype and spectacle of the finals series, and it represent the pinnacle of football in this country, not just the endplay of the A-League, and at a minimum, hosting the finals has a lot of head office costs. There are probably other FFA revenues which are even more difficult to unpick. I don't favour one argument or the other, we probably don't have all the details, but I would say that a chunk of revenue must always be retained to run the competition, run various bits of infrastructure which support the competition (e.g. review panels, ref training, etc), and even more broader than that, contribute to infrastructure which ultimately benefits the league overall in terms of its quality (grassroots, ref education, promotion of the game, etc.) The FFA are guilty of smoke and mirrors over revenue. Of their $100m annual revenues about $75-$80m is estimated to come from the A league but as you say this is difficult to unpick exactly. The FFA have created a model that is unsustainable but the A League itself is sustainable if the A league gets the money it raises, not an unreasonable request and one that the AFC and FIFA support, the FFA has no automatic rights to keep any revenues raised, in fact the FIFA preference is for clubs to oragnise and run their own competitions. we will see if the owners have the balls to go it alone and cast the FFA adrift. If they do it will be good news for football in this country as a highly greedy and inefficient FFA and power hungry FFA will be forced in to major change. meanwhile the A league will go from strength to strength but MUST take a second divison with it otherwise the gap that opens up will never be bridged. If the FFA model is Unsustainable, then The A-league would of been broke already just like the NSL. The league is starting to get some financial stability and the owners want more money. The only thing I care about the A-league clubs is 3 things.... 1. The Salary cap to pay all the players. 2. Money to pay rent to the stadiums being used and money for the teams to travel and for hotel accommodations for the Away clubs. 3. Survival of the A-league. All this crap about scrapping the cap is stupid. The Salary cap exist for many reasons. One of them is for an even competition another is so Teams don't overspend. You are all happy in people putting 10 million in the A-league. so why don't you key board warriors go out there and Buy an A-league club yourselves? Why are people so Obsessed with Promotion and Relegation? Is that going to somehow make a huge difference and bring in 1 billion dollars a year in TV rights? 1. We don't need a salary cap. We need clubs that are sustainable. That means allowing clubs to reach their level, some will be big clubs and some will be small clubs. There is no need for a salary cap. We obviously need a distribution to all the clubs but don't you think the clubs can decide how much they should spend. This idea of equalization is like a mill stone around the league. 2. That's already happening, except some clubs do not know how to negotiate a stadium deal. To be fair to Brisbane Roar though the Qld government basically has a monopoly on Stadium use which doesn't look like ending soon. 3. I don't want a salary cap. I don't want an even competition. Think of the salary cap as a Tariff. As a Tariff it basically allows clubs to remain inefficient and wasteful, like many industries which were propped up in our economy. That is why a system of promotion and relegation is better, it weeds out inefficient and poorly managed clubs. It sorts out the wheat from the chaff. Instead of pegging our team to the worst in the competition we now peg our league to the best in the competition, it becomes an aspirational league. It doesn't mean you spend money you don't have, even leagues that don't have salary caps still have budgets and costs that they want to maintain or reduce. Do you think some Chairman will all of a sudden become irresponsible and drive their clubs into the ground. Some will and they get replaced, because they don't know what they are doing. It doesn't always mean spending the most on players or "buying a championship", it might mean the best academies or the best practices in the A-league. 4. Promotion and Relegation - it provides for more investment at all tiers. Investors might not want to buy an A-league club, they might want to buy an NPL or an NPL2 club or even lower and earn promotion that way (aspirational). It refreshes the league every season so that we have new teams entering and thereby increasing the base of clubs who have tasted the top level. It provides pressure for the players and the clubs to perform week in week out. This will surely take our football to the next level. It means scrapping hard for every point, fighting for draws, making clubs accountable. It will force those clubs who "cant buy a championship" to think of other ways to compete. In other words more innovation and guile. It punishes the weak and rewards those performing well. It falls in line with AFC and FIFA guidelines. These are just some of the things I can think off the top of my head, I am sure there are lots more. so.... you want a Scottish league? Seriously I have to laugh every time somebody plays the Scottish card Out of all the professional leagues in the world, only 2 will end up like Scotland. Us and Scotland We're unique, blah blah blah, but if we ever tried a different football model we'll end up like Scotland. Gimme a break! And this is the problem. We have a generation of Australians who do not know what sport is like without a salary cap in Australia. As far as I am aware it all started with the NRL and John Quayle, and for some reason all sports in Australia thought it was the be all and end all. For a sport like NRL and AFL it makes more sense because they have a limited playing pool. Australian football doesn't have that problem. The other misleading thing people don't realize about a salary cap is that any increases in revenue we receive from Fox are tied to the bargaining agreement struck by the players ie 90% of the cap now needs to be spent. I cannot for the life of me see a scenario where we have 1-2 teams dominating the A-league in a 16 team comp. Its always the doomsday scenario brought up, there are way more benefits than downsides. Look the priority is to Keep All 10 clubs alive.... Well at least all 9 Aussie Clubs. would it look good on TV on a Saturday night if Melbourne Victory Belted a Struggling Newcastle jets 8-0? I am curious now how would the finals will rate on 10s secondary channel. How many people would watch an A-league grand final live on One?
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pippinu
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+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
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Razor Ramon
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+xWhy dio Bournemouth get such big crowds these days? Is it because they are winning the league? EPL is a different beast Altogether. Bournemouth Play in an 11,000 seat stadium. They wouldn't be financially viable relying on ticket prices of their stadium. They also get money from selling Merchandise such as Shirts and scarves. Plus they would of got at least 80-90 million pounds in TV Prize money for finishing mid table in the EPL. are you suggesting we should bring teams to the A-league that have stadiums that hold 5-7,000 seats?
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Midfielder
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+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years...
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paladisious
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+xFuck me dead. Bans for anyone who degenerates the next thread into this same old shit please. Aussies Abroad is protected from derailment, why not other topics too? Literally had to scroll back to the top of the page to check what thread it was. If anyone has their pet topic to take conversation to, the "new thread" button is up there too. That said there's no apologies from the mod team for being especially vigilant in the hallowed Aussies Abroad thread.
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Razor Ramon
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+x+xRe the questions on incentives and contra, Timmy has basically answered it. We haven't heard all that much on what the benchmarks are for the FFA to earn the incentive payments in the 5th and 6th years of the deal. What we can say is that the dollars on offer are significant amounts in the scheme of things. Given what we've learned along the way about the massive say Fox has had in proceedings, we probably should not expect that those benchmarks will be easy to meet to get such a big pay day. On the contra, it's normal for all TV deals to have an element of contra, that is, a guarantee from the broadcaster that they will provide so much in the way of promotion of the product, for example, of the AFL's $2,5 billion deal, $200 million represents contra, so only $2.3 billion is cash. In the case of the A-League, I did read at one time that half of the $6 mill per annum was for promotion, and the other half was for the marquee fund. Now, this is the confusing bit, if the $3 mill for the marquee fund represents cash, i.e. a cash contribution to the salaries of marquees, then that actually represents an additional $3 mill in cash, it shouldn't be categorised as contra - but because they have categorised it as contra, it might mean that half of the contra is for general promotion of the A-League, and the other half can only be used to promote high end marquees (Pirlo, Cahill, Holman, etc). ps I was only kidding about Holman If $3m of contra is the actual cash for Timmys, Fox will be having the say as to who qualifies, not FFA at all. Even more highly doubt it will ever get used again if this is the case That 3 million should be used on Advertising or Grass roots, no on timmys superfund
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bluebird
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+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. An apt comment for your level of maturity / intellect If you ever agreed with me I'd rethink my stance
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pippinu
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+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever.
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And Everyone Blamed Clive
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+x+xWhy dio Bournemouth get such big crowds these days? Is it because they are winning the league? EPL is a different beast Altogether. Bournemouth Play in an 11,000 seat stadium. They wouldn't be financially viable relying on ticket prices of their stadium. They also get money from selling Merchandise such as Shirts and scarves. Plus they would of got at least 80-90 million pounds in TV Prize money for finishing mid table in the EPL. are you suggesting we should bring teams to the A-league that have stadiums that hold 5-7,000 seats? no
Winner of Official 442 Comment of the day Award - 10th April 2017
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Davide82
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+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc
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Nachoman
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+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,...
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Davide82
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+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play.
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And Everyone Blamed Clive
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+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play.
Winner of Official 442 Comment of the day Award - 10th April 2017
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Nachoman
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+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play. which team was that ?
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Davide82
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Aha sorry. Had a chance to play on same team as my best mate from high school who called me up and convinced me that 8 years away from playing properly would in no way affect my ability or fitness and I snapped up the offer as quick as i snap calves, groins and hamstrings!!
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Davide82
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+x+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play. which team was that ? Athelstone Soccer Club.
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Nachoman
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+x+x+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play. which team was that ? Athelstone Soccer Club. ah the stoners never played against your team , but we did have a couple of your players a few years ago come over to us when we got dumped down to div2
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Davide82
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play. which team was that ? Athelstone Soccer Club. ah the stoners never played against your team , but we did have a couple of your players a few years ago come over to us when we got dumped down to div2 Chances are I wouldn't know them as I'm talking 15 years ago aha
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Nachoman
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+xThe Tassie state fed bring in more than the SA one? Interesting. I'm guessing that's coz of SAs rather fractured football community where the amateur league, who is quite well to do in the scheme of things, refuses to align with FFA etc etc etc This... there needs to be unification , however they are poles apart at the moment... And you get situations where players from the FFA play for their respective team on Saturday and then go and play with another team in the amateur league on Sundays. Or the team Im associated with , has 3 mens teams in the Sunday amatuers and has 6 teams in the FFA womens competition,... Yeah I played Amateur league my whole adult life (FFA didn't exist when I was a junior) and am only this season playing in an FFA affiliated league for the first time. Well, trying to play. which team was that ? Athelstone Soccer Club. ah the stoners never played against your team , but we did have a couple of your players a few years ago come over to us when we got dumped down to div2 Chances are I wouldn't know them as I'm talking 15 years ago aha Josh Mc ?
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Razor Ramon
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+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then?
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pippinu
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Group: Banned Members
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+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? At one point in the 1960s, all three commercial channels were broadcasting VFL, so I would think the audience was split somewhat. From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, you could only see replays (two channels ran those on a Saturday night). Live broadcasts were introduced progressively from when South moved to Sydney in 1982, but for the next five years, there was only one live broadcast every second week, on a Sunday afternoon. Anyway, the FTA average in the modern age is closer to about 750k per game.
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Razor Ramon
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? At one point in the 1960s, all three commercial channels were broadcasting VFL, so I would think the audience was split somewhat. From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, you could only see replays (two channels ran those on a Saturday night). Live broadcasts were introduced progressively from when South moved to Sydney in 1982, but for the next five years, there was only one live broadcast every second week, on a Sunday afternoon. Anyway, the FTA average in the modern age is closer to about 750k per game. fair enough
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bohemia
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+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? +x+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? At one point in the 1960s, all three commercial channels were broadcasting VFL, so I would think the audience was split somewhat. From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, you could only see replays (two channels ran those on a Saturday night). Live broadcasts were introduced progressively from when South moved to Sydney in 1982, but for the next five years, there was only one live broadcast every second week, on a Sunday afternoon. Anyway, the FTA average in the modern age is closer to about 750k per game. Surprised you have made it this far without mentioning the VFA once. Which is kinda important, because VFL was played on Saturdays and VFA on Sundays - by law. The "only" live broadcast on every second Sunday was the Swans, because they were doing the job that was intended - getting the VFL around the legal restriction of playing Sundays in Melbourne by playing in Sydney instead.
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lebo_roo
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Group: Forum Members
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They had Tomi Juric on Have you been paying attention on Channel Ten on one of their segments. One of their big shows.
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paladisious
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Group: Moderators
Posts: 39K,
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? +x+x+x+x+x+x+xBlueballs, you're assuming better players will come out here just because the cap's gone. Where is your evidence. My evidence to the contrary is that most squads can't currently fill their marquee positions with higher quality players that you seem to think Syd/Melb will be able to fill a roster with. HHHHHMmmmmm me thinks you are caught in yesterdays thinking.... the league is evolving... faster than many including me believed.. Consider there are between 12 & 17 bids to join the A-League most have some form or other of government backing. Football is about to go through a bump IMO it has been cleverly set up by FFA [people will hate me for saying that] .... Football has many tribes and many don't watch the A-League which I think over the next two to three years will happen... my evidence is my experience in trends and charting which when I analysis them all indicate a bump... further evidence and better is the bids .... the current bids IMO are all everyone of them better than the original 8 teams who bid.... government backing would not be as forth coming if others aren't also looking at the same trend lines and models I am... . The so called ethnic issue is well understood by both the ethnic clubs and the current A-League clubs... so expect very professional and inclusive branding from these clubs and finally maybe not as much as it should but the non ethnic clubs are also starting to get remembered and respected something that did not always happen. In effect we need to grow the market base to a certain size ... then its all guns blazing... the trick is and its a very subjective judgement call is when to pull the pin. The difference between now and 4 years from now IMO will be huge ... BUT the planning needs to start now or very soon. Better than the 8 original bids? Well, the Knights only lasted two seasons, so it wouldn't be hard to beat their original bid. The Glory was already a very successful club at national league level 12 years ago, so most clubs will be hard pressed to show that (one or two can). The Victory was able to twice attract crowds of over 36k in only their second season, none of the current bids will get within coo-ee of that, perhaps ever. In fact, the Knights aside, all of the remaining original clubs have shown something at some point over the 12 years. To be honest, the Mariners are the only club any new bid can hope to get within coo-ee of in their first few season (in terms of metrics) - and they were quite successful on the field in the first decade. A lot of the government backing is one level of government hoping to get financial backing from the next level of government. It's a commonly used slight of hand, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Sorry man thats the way I see it ... Tis said their are three world languages, Maths, Music and Football [round style] I can honestly say I have never felt more confident about where we will be in 3 to 5 years than I ever have ... the maths models are very reliable ... very very very reliable ... Take the AFL as an example .... marketing folk would say in the Southern States AFL is in the mature stage of the product life cycle in that its so popular it near impossible for it not to loose market share ... the hope of the excellent management team at AFL house is to hopefully gain more in the emerging markets in the Northern states than it looses in the southern states. The South East Melbourne bid and the inclusive South Melbourne bid indicate that a crack has appeared in the once impenetrable defence the AFL had. AFL is not going to disappear and it will be around a long time... but the big question can in gain more in the northern states than it looses in the southern states... But enough on AFL back to Football ... I expect some impressive gains over the next few years... Things are not all that linear. Arguably, the VFL/AFL has been losing market share in Melbourne since the 1950s. The record for a home and away VFL game is still 99,256 set in Round 10, Monday 16 June 1958. Losing market share for 60 years, and yet it owns a billion dollar stadium and has a TV deal worth $2.5 billion. Around the same time 30,000 crammed into Olympic Park to watch Australia get thumped by Blackburn. I would also argue Hellas was at its most popular during the 1960s. In fact, get a load of Hellas' record home and away attendance: The VFL first cracked a 20,000 home and away average attendance in 1924. It would not reach it again until 1954. The AFL first reached a 30,000 home and away average attendance in 1997, and has been able to keep it above 30k ever since, despite some ups and downs, but most importantly, even with the inclusion of two new Northern clubs, the average as remained above 30k. But note, Melbourne's population is more than double now what it was sixty years ago, so the the game has grown while it has lost market share. What is a good benchmark for the A-League? It if can reach the VFL's average attendance set in 1921 of 16,325, then we'll know things have changed forever. did the vfl average 1 million viewers a week on tv back then? At one point in the 1960s, all three commercial channels were broadcasting VFL, so I would think the audience was split somewhat. From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, you could only see replays (two channels ran those on a Saturday night). Live broadcasts were introduced progressively from when South moved to Sydney in 1982, but for the next five years, there was only one live broadcast every second week, on a Sunday afternoon. Anyway, the FTA average in the modern age is closer to about 750k per game. Surprised you have made it this far without mentioning the VFA once. Which is kinda important, because VFL was played on Saturdays and VFA on Sundays - by law. The "only" live broadcast on every second Sunday was the Swans, because they were doing the job that was intended - getting the VFL around the legal restriction of playing Sundays in Melbourne by playing in Sydney instead. Don't let the truth get in the way of Peppa Pig ratings shitposting.
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Razor Ramon
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+xThey had Tomi Juric on Have you been paying attention on Channel Ten on one of their segments. One of their big shows. would it translate to good ratings on one?
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walnuts
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+xThey had Tomi Juric on Have you been paying attention on Channel Ten on one of their segments. One of their big shows. Saw that, was wondering if it was the first salvo in the cross promotion we've been sorely crying out for. Good start though, as you said it's one of the highest rated shows on TEN.
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pippinu
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+x+xThey had Tomi Juric on Have you been paying attention on Channel Ten on one of their segments. One of their big shows. Saw that, was wondering if it was the first salvo in the cross promotion we've been sorely crying out for. Good start though, as you said it's one of the highest rated shows on TEN. It's a very entertaining show.
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Enzo Bearzot
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