I was born in the 70s and I lived for footy.
I played as often as I could, and I listened to games on the radio, watched highlights and was generally engaged with my club, obsessed even. I was in the majority as well, most kids my age, most people I knew, even older where the same.
Nowadays, with kids, even adults under say 25, that level of commitment and engagement is the exception, not the rule.
Most people take it or leave it as far as the AFL goes, some have a passing interest, I would put it to you that most people do not really care.
I feel like the glory days of the AFL are over. Crowds when you compare apples with apples over time will decline, and ratings will continue to go down as well. This is especially true with these two things when you adjust for population growth.
The AFL is in trouble, maybe not now, but in the future this comp will be battling, and the reason is that rusted on supporters are a dying breed. Plastic corporates like Gil running the show do not help either just quietly.
I played as often as I could, and I listened to games on the radio, watched highlights and was generally engaged with my club, obsessed even. I was in the majority as well, most kids my age, most people I knew, even older where the same.
Nowadays, with kids, even adults under say 25, that level of commitment and engagement is the exception, not the rule.
Most people take it or leave it as far as the AFL goes, some have a passing interest, I would put it to you that most people do not really care.
I feel like the glory days of the AFL are over. Crowds when you compare apples with apples over time will decline, and ratings will continue to go down as well. This is especially true with these two things when you adjust for population growth.
The AFL is in trouble, maybe not now, but in the future this comp will be battling, and the reason is that rusted on supporters are a dying breed. Plastic corporates like Gil running the show do not help either just quietly.