If a two vic club merger worked & the AFL ended up with a big 5, I think you’d have other small clubs accepting that it is a possibility.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It's bizarre that Fitzroy was more concerned with preserving their location than other factors. They had bounced around without a home for decades and their location stuck between Carlton and Collingwood is a major reason why they never developed a big supporter base.
Taking advantage of the Western suburbs would be ideal.
So there was no certainty of success for a merged Melbourne – Fitzroy or Footscray – Fitzroy.
I really enjoy your posts on Fitzroy as they mention a lot of information about the Roys that I wasn't aware of. I was only 10 when they merged so my only memories of them are in the death knells when everyone just felt bad about the position they were in. Who were Fitzroy's rivals prior to that? Us? Did the support base mostly come from around the Fitzroy area or significantly around St Kilda also? Given most of the Melbourne teams follow a straight path out loosely following train lines from their home suburb, did Fitzroy have a heartland similar to what Collingwood had through Northcote, Preston, Heidelberg, etc.?Fitzroy was at the Junction Oval (St Kilda Cricket Ground) between 1970 and 1984 (after St Kilda left at the end of 1964), Fitzroy stalwart Arthur Wilson used to say that was impossible to choose as Fitzroy's true home between the Brunswick Street Oval and the Junction Oval, where the club had its last genuine era of team success. The Junction Oval was also where the club maintained a strong community identity, and attracted decent crowds which was easily accessible via public transport.
Fitzroy were forced to move from the Junction Oval in 1984 as part of VFL's ground rationalisation policy, beginning the process of the Club depending on other clubs such as Carlton and Collingwood (their traditional rivals) to generate significant revenue from a home ground.
It could have possibly worked in the right circumstances.
Fitzroy had good support in their Nth/East zone - Doncaster, Templestowe, Montmorency, etc.I really enjoy your posts on Fitzroy as they mention a lot of information about the Roys that I wasn't aware of. I was only 10 when they merged so my only memories of them are in the death knells when everyone just felt bad about the position they were in. Who were Fitzroy's rivals prior to that? Us? Did the support base mostly come from around the Fitzroy area or significantly around St Kilda also? Given most of the Melbourne teams follow a straight path out loosely following train lines from their home suburb, did Fitzroy have a heartland similar to what Collingwood had through Northcote, Preston, Heidelberg, etc.?
I think club songs are the hardest thing about mergers. Colours and emblems are doable for some clubs - I think South Melbourne and St Kilda, Bulldogs and North, Melbourne and Fitzroy in terms of colours and emblems could’ve worked.
Melbourne Lions.
But the club songs would’ve had to have maintained enough of the original lyrics and sound from each club to make it work. Tough.
I asked ChatGPT.It is tough!
Melbourne Lions
We are the boys from old Melbourne
We wear the colours, red, gold and blue
We will always fight for victory....
Keep your eye on the red, gold and blue...
Win or lose we do or die
In defeat we'll always try
Melbourne, Melbourne, the club we hold so dear
Premiers we'll be this year.
It would have been better for Fitzroy had they just moved to Brisbane in 1987, which almost happened, with the exact same squad, staff and brand, rather than just handing their brand over to The Bears with a few Fitzroy players in 1997.It would have made more sense to merge Melbourne based sides rather than relocate
Western Roos
South Melbourne Saints
Melbourne Lions
it would have built up the supporter bases of the smaller clubs. Relocation has probably not resulted in South Melbourne support following the Swans, nor Fitzroy with the Lions.
The same failure would probably result with North moving to Tassie
Or to Tassie?It would have been better for Fitzroy had they just moved to Brisbane in 1987, which almost happened, with the exact same squad, staff and brand, rather than just handing their brand over to The Bears with a few Fitzroy players in 1997.
It would have been better for Fitzroy had they just moved to Brisbane in 1987, which almost happened,
with the exact same squad, staff and brand, rather than just handing their brand over to The Bears with a few Fitzroy players in 1997.
But the squad split up at the end of 1996, and Fitzroy lost their Lions branding and is only an amateur club, today. It's too bad they couldn't have pushed for a move again if they couldn't pull a Western Bulldogs style revival, instead of just handing their brand and some players to The Bears. I never heard about The Canberra move proposal in 1996, should have pushed for that instead, and maybe just stuck with "The Lions" as their name.That's easy to say in hindsight. However the Fitzroy board's preference was (in order)
1. Continue as a stand alone entity in Melbourne. (i.e. Fitzroy Lions)
2. Merge with a Melbourne based club so that Fitzroy supporters could still watch their team more 5-6 times a season. Three serious attempts were made..Melbourne Lions 1986, Fitzroy Bulldogs 1989, North Fitzroy Kangaroos 1996)
3. Relocate interstate partially or wholly. Three were seriously considered. (Sydney Lions 1980, Brisbane Lions 1986, Canberra 1996 - proposal to play 7 home games was put to the AFL)
The AFL did that with their intellectually owned property rights. Fitzroy still exists in its own right in Melbourne, still representing the suburb of Fitzroy, as it did when it was formed 140 years ago in 1883.
But the squad split up at the end of 1996,
and Fitzroy lost their Lions branding and is only an amateur club, today.
It's too bad they couldn't have pushed for a move again if they couldn't pull a Western Bulldogs style revival, instead of just handing their brand and some players to The Bears.
The AFL knocked it back.I never heard about The Canberra move proposal in 1996, should have pushed for that instead, and maybe just stuck with "The Lions" as their name.
If Canberra had have gotten Fitzroy, wouldn’t the competition have had 17 teams in the 90s instead of the 16 they wanted at the time?
Hadn't thought of that. With Fitzroy in Canberra, you'd have had the national competition truly set until the NT ever perhaps became a viable option.Late nineties they could have added port Adelaide and a second Sydney team. Could have capitalised on the merger mayhem in the NRL super league
Late 2000 added Tassie and Gold Coast.
Had the AFL been more supportive instead of white anting they could be in a much better position now
Hawks in Tassie got begrudging support. The main reason hawks went there? Made money rather than lose it playing at telstra dome. But that’s a whole other story