The AFLPA proposed to the AFL a 17 round season when the Gold Coast and West Sydney teams are established.
Here is how I think the AFL should structure its season when there are 18 sides in the competition.
17 round season where every side plays everyone once. Every team gets 8 or 9 home games, with home games rotated between clubs on a season by season basis.
At the end of round 17 the post season starts with the top 8 sides playing each other.
Each team plays every other remaining side once, with the fixture reversed from where they played the first time during the season. For example if Hawthorn play Sydney in Sydney, the return fixture would be played in Melbourne.
Premiership points from the first half of the season are carried over into this series, with the ladder continuing based on the results.
Once the top 8 sides have all played each other, the top 4 sides play off in preliminary finals, with the winners to play off in the grand final. (This could be changed to the top 2 sides go straight into the grand final, I'm not too bothered. But I think prelim finals are great and it would be a shame to get rid of them. It also prevents the grand finalists being decided a number of weeks out from the game.)
In total there are 26 weeks of football, the same that are played at the moment. (17 in regular season, 7 in post season, 2 weeks of finals).
Advantages of this system include:
Reducing long drawn out seasons for sides languishing at the bottom of the ladder.
Fair and equitable draw with everyone playing every side once before the post season starts, and then all the teams vying for a finals spot play each other twice, both home and away.
The 7 week post season plus finals results in more high quality football being played. This would result in greater gate revenues and higher television broadcast rights revenue, and a greater spectacle of the game.
Allows bottom 10 sides the chance for an extended pre-season, allowing them to have a better shot at bouncing back the following season, and would stop players missing football when they're going in for early operations. (ie. reduce tanking)
Increased revenues for clubs participating in the post season. They could sell post season memberships, which would be extremely popular as everyone jumps on board when their club is doing well. There would be some rule that regular season members get preference over finals tickets ahead of post season members only.
Disadvantages:
Bottom 10 sides miss out on 2-3 games of revenue. This should be subsidised by the AFL, they make that much money off the clubs through TV rights, they should help the clubs out more.
Less games for television, however this would mean foxtel just miss out on the post season. I'm sure the free to air channels would be happy to make up the difference when they're going to get 9 weeks of post season football.
thoughts everyone? i think it's a very different system, but it would be a great one... would lift the standard of our game to another level...
Here is how I think the AFL should structure its season when there are 18 sides in the competition.
17 round season where every side plays everyone once. Every team gets 8 or 9 home games, with home games rotated between clubs on a season by season basis.
At the end of round 17 the post season starts with the top 8 sides playing each other.
Each team plays every other remaining side once, with the fixture reversed from where they played the first time during the season. For example if Hawthorn play Sydney in Sydney, the return fixture would be played in Melbourne.
Premiership points from the first half of the season are carried over into this series, with the ladder continuing based on the results.
Once the top 8 sides have all played each other, the top 4 sides play off in preliminary finals, with the winners to play off in the grand final. (This could be changed to the top 2 sides go straight into the grand final, I'm not too bothered. But I think prelim finals are great and it would be a shame to get rid of them. It also prevents the grand finalists being decided a number of weeks out from the game.)
In total there are 26 weeks of football, the same that are played at the moment. (17 in regular season, 7 in post season, 2 weeks of finals).
Advantages of this system include:
Reducing long drawn out seasons for sides languishing at the bottom of the ladder.
Fair and equitable draw with everyone playing every side once before the post season starts, and then all the teams vying for a finals spot play each other twice, both home and away.
The 7 week post season plus finals results in more high quality football being played. This would result in greater gate revenues and higher television broadcast rights revenue, and a greater spectacle of the game.
Allows bottom 10 sides the chance for an extended pre-season, allowing them to have a better shot at bouncing back the following season, and would stop players missing football when they're going in for early operations. (ie. reduce tanking)
Increased revenues for clubs participating in the post season. They could sell post season memberships, which would be extremely popular as everyone jumps on board when their club is doing well. There would be some rule that regular season members get preference over finals tickets ahead of post season members only.
Disadvantages:
Bottom 10 sides miss out on 2-3 games of revenue. This should be subsidised by the AFL, they make that much money off the clubs through TV rights, they should help the clubs out more.
Less games for television, however this would mean foxtel just miss out on the post season. I'm sure the free to air channels would be happy to make up the difference when they're going to get 9 weeks of post season football.
thoughts everyone? i think it's a very different system, but it would be a great one... would lift the standard of our game to another level...