These discussions are quite healthy but can come from just purely personal rather than business. Some people watch a lot of sport, AFL, Soccer (A League, Premier League, La Liga etc), NFL, NBA, NRL, NHL, MBL. Goes on and on, and the more sports you look at the plethora of different modules used to create even competition and as pointed out, financial benefit to the club and league.
From the AFL perspective. North as mentioned recently subsided with their debt, however a complete basketcase on field. There was also mention of their lack of growth and ROI which is a valid point. Saints are similar except their financial side is poorer.
If you’re to make the decision or have the belief that there are too many teams in Victoria. It’s good to set a precedent on what you’re looking at, not just tunnel visioning on result. Whats the process.
North for example, what do we look at? Talent on the list, coaches to develop talent, the priority picks to help them become more competitive. The financial result, so how much profit, ROI, growth market, etc.
It is unfair to pick on sides who are currently in a slump rather than an ongoing recession in my opinion, which is also an important focal point.
It’s hard to gauge what will happen but looking at what happened, what’s happening and what realistically will happen is a good outcome of guiding a decision.
The other point is people who simply don’t care about changing the games or teams unless it’s obvious, say with University. “The traditionalist”.
There are many ideas with regulation leagues and divisions and the fact is that none are good, or bad ideas. It’s just going to be interesting the approach the AFL continue to take to better market the game and continue consistent growth within and outside of Australia. The market and possible future of football is still highly untapped. There is no reason the sport couldn’t become even more global.
From the AFL perspective. North as mentioned recently subsided with their debt, however a complete basketcase on field. There was also mention of their lack of growth and ROI which is a valid point. Saints are similar except their financial side is poorer.
If you’re to make the decision or have the belief that there are too many teams in Victoria. It’s good to set a precedent on what you’re looking at, not just tunnel visioning on result. Whats the process.
North for example, what do we look at? Talent on the list, coaches to develop talent, the priority picks to help them become more competitive. The financial result, so how much profit, ROI, growth market, etc.
It is unfair to pick on sides who are currently in a slump rather than an ongoing recession in my opinion, which is also an important focal point.
It’s hard to gauge what will happen but looking at what happened, what’s happening and what realistically will happen is a good outcome of guiding a decision.
The other point is people who simply don’t care about changing the games or teams unless it’s obvious, say with University. “The traditionalist”.
There are many ideas with regulation leagues and divisions and the fact is that none are good, or bad ideas. It’s just going to be interesting the approach the AFL continue to take to better market the game and continue consistent growth within and outside of Australia. The market and possible future of football is still highly untapped. There is no reason the sport couldn’t become even more global.