Power Raid
We Exist To Win Premierships
No. I think you'll find AFL were very generous in their help. Deny it all you like but you can't change facts....
The game has been played out yet so lets agree to disagree for now
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AFLW 2024 - Round 10 - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
No. I think you'll find AFL were very generous in their help. Deny it all you like but you can't change facts....
And 15 of 19 have finished their careers elsewhere, no-one comes close to these numbersLeigh Mathews says let homesick draftees go in the pre-season draft and for Queensland and NSW players earning less than a set amount to get paid extra directly from the AFL.
http://www.afl.com.au/news/2014-06-24/leigh-lethal-on-gohomers
The extra sounds like a modified COLA and fits in with what I have argued in regards to COLA.
"Statistics show the four northern state clubs are still most at risk of losing players to homesickness, with 96 percent of drafted players coming from outside Queensland and New South Wales.
The Lions have been particularly hammered in recent years, with figures gathered by advocacy group The Lion's Roar showing 10 of their past 19 first round draft picks left for homesickness."
How much evidence do people need to show that something needs to be in place to support retention in Queensland and NSW?
See if you can follow the highlighted section. Article claims that Qld and NSW have a high percentage of recruits from outside QLD and NSW. Article then states that Lions have had a tough time recently, with a high turnover of players. Poster then requests COLA for the Swans....
Typical....
When both Brisbane and Sydney had bonuses, both had a retention allowance of approximately 10% of the salary cap. Sydney had an extra 5% for a cost of living allowance. When Brisbane's was cut, Sydney's allowance was reduced to 9% and re-branded as a COLA.
I'd like to think so.Sydney and Brisbane will likely be knocking the AFL's door down so it would be in their interests to at least have something to offer them. If you were particularly callous you could always point the finger at the AFLPA and say "we tried to help you out but THEY wouldn't let us". I'm sure the AFL are above such things, aren't they???
If I can direct you to a post earlier in this thread where Roylion indicates that Sydney already has a retention allowance:
If you read the article and the thread, we are the only club in an expansion state that does not have some form of retention allowance. So to restate from my earlier post, even when we were winning, had cutting edge facilities and a retention allowance we were losing players. We just need some ability to stop new players being able to go home, and often to the club of their choice, after their first contract is up, usually with a substandard recompense. If we keep being a feeder club there is little chance of us ever being successful.
I'd like to think so.
The AFL do need to look at player retention in the NSW & Qld markets. If a club is constantly losing good young talent like Brisbane is then it creates a double-headed beast.
1. The club is uncompetitive, as such the local press don't give them column space, they are a running joke to locals and you can't convert people to follow AFL.
2. It becomes increasingly difficult for the club to market itself. Now Brown has retired if you walked into a pub in Brisbane and spoke to non-AFL fans and asked them to name more than one Lions player you'd find at least a 50% fail rate. At the moment now Brisbane has really one marketable face for the Queensland market in Daniel Rich, Rockliff might be our best player but he's never going to be the face of our club, in the same way players like Griffin & Mitchell have never been the face of their clubs, Mr Average just doesn't cut it in marketing. No marque player who do you advertise? GWS have found this out since Falou left, a bunch of no names you can get away with in AFL heartland, but emerging markets, no way.
Sydney have a cost of living allowance.
It's called that...but its actually a retention allowance. And perhaps also works as an "attraction allowance".
I don't disagree with the allowance at all. However I'm amazed that all of all the clubs in developing markets, Brisbane are the only ones not to have a such an allowance.
You had one but were successful so it was removed.Sydney and Brisbane both have retention issues with the go home factor, Sydney also have the cost of living on top of that.
4 games per year.Under a major sponsorship deal with Tasmania... that's 5 home games interstate per year.
If I can direct you to a post earlier in this thread where Roylion indicates that Sydney already has a retention allowance:
If you read the article and the thread, we are the only club in an expansion state that does not have some form of retention allowance. So to restate from my earlier post, even when we were winning, had cutting edge facilities and a retention allowance we were losing players. We just need some ability to stop new players being able to go home, and often to the club of their choice, after their first contract is up, usually with a substandard recompense. If we keep being a feeder club there is little chance of us ever being successful.
Some clubs don't have a great track record with retaining Aboriginal players, does that mean they should have an allowance ? I'd love to have a KPF allowance, because we can't ******* get near one for love, nor money.
You can avoid drafting Aboriginal players in that case, there's still plenty of talent to choose from and you can be competitive without Aboriginal players on your list. Queensland and NSW can't avoid drafting players for interstate if they want to remain competitive, the talent is there hence the Academy system exists. In recent times, the Bulldogs have drafted a large majority of their players from Victoria (from memory, the last first round pick from interstate was Christian Howard from SA?) which mitigates the go-home factor; something those Queensland and NSW clubs can't do and remain competitive.
Way to selectively quote. You didn't lose the players last year for money, so why would a retention allowance help in anyway ?
I do appreciate your point, which is why I suggested an alternative, extra rookie spots for Qld based players for you. Again, selective quoting and ignoring the actual issues here.
I think that you will find that Port were only getting some of the money that, but for a cra** stadium deal, was theirs in the first instance.
The AFL will give Port $1 million each year until 2013, and lend the SANFL another $9 million to give Port an extra $6 million, plus $3 million to Adelaide from 2012-14. Both bodies previously gave Port a combined $5 million in 2009.
But you don't know if they were all offered extra money that they every single one would still have left? You mentioned some reasons why in your post like developing or giving games to youngsters on our list when in fact Docherty played 13 out of 22 games in 2013, Yeo played 19 games, Longer played 4 (remember that he's an undeveloped ruckman) and Polec only played 1 game but was injured for much of the season and when he was starting to get fit again in the reserves, he'd get injured again. Karnezis I admit wasn't given much game time, and probably had a big say in why he left. But apart from him, I don't see how we didn't give those players game time.
You also mentioned the "crazy and wacky trading strategies" but that doesn't affect those players because none of them were there when the so called "Crazy Vossy" trading happened. As for the staff being in place, we had some great staff on board during the early 00's (including the Lamberts who we lost to GWS, probably our most significant loss staff wise) and we still lost players during that time. You also need to be able to afford the staff, which we weren't really in the position to do.
Your idea of extra rookie spots for Queensland based players already exists and is currently ongoing (QLD and NSW clubs are allowed to register up to 3 players from their home state as category B rookie players). But the talent base isn't there for that to be much of an advantage (again, an argument for the Academy system).
See if you can follow the highlighted section. Article claims that Qld and NSW have a high percentage of recruits from outside QLD and NSW. Article then states that Lions have had a tough time recently, with a high turnover of players. Poster then requests COLA for the Swans....
Typical....
No. I wrote "How much evidence do people need to show that something needs to be in place to support retention in Queensland and NSW?" Nothing about the Swans.
In an ideal world, I'd love to see a system where a player can be traded anywhere - however that won't ever happen.
Eddie McGuire calls a rival president for making some salient points about the competition "a hall of fame hypocrite".
Eddie McGuire says crowds are down because there are too many spuds playing AFL footy.
Eddie McGuire says a powerful club should play on Good Friday.
Eddie McGuire says it is stupid to re-write or go and look at the origins of our competition.
Eddie McGuire doesn't like academies for Sydney or Queensland clubs.
Well, welcome to another big week in footy, or the gospel according to Eddie McGuire.
No Eddie, this arrow's not for you, but for the AFL who cave in to you and your black and white demands again and again - so compliant against the might of Collingwood and its media-happy President that they check with you before they make their every move. Man up AFL. You run the competition, not Eddie. And Eddie, stop misusing your power.
Garry Lyon's response was "Phwoar. But he's a spokesman for the competition!"
That's the whole problem, the AFL has decided to pump tens of millions into the Western Sydney market, but to fund it has removed funding from the Brisbane market.I live about 15 minutes from Springfield which was to be the new home base for the Lions. The vast majority of people around here would struggle to name one current Lion. Particularly with Brown retiring. The media coverage is minimal and the Lions just aren't on the radar. There's a huge amount of work to be done if the AFL is really serious about growing the Lions brand. Not sure if they really have been in the last few years.
That's the whole problem, the AFL has decided to pump tens of millions into the Western Sydney market, but to fund it has removed funding from the Brisbane market.
Why? It happens all the time in the US where players are viewed as an asset as they should be.
I think any young prospect hoping to nominate for the ND and go on to play in the AFL should understand that it's a peiviledge to do so no matter where that may be and that you are committing yourself to the system of being a tradeble asset until such a time as you qualify for free agency.
Yep. Free Agency culture has swung the needle even further the players' way. We even had a young star player (Wingard) recently being lauded for his courage in telling GWS if they drafted him he'd leave at the end of his first contract. The power needs to swing back to the drafting club just a little. Once they're drafted I think a few little hurdles need to be put up to make it just that little bit more difficult for young players to get to the exact club they want after their initial contract.The players have been given too much power in this instance IMO.