I may be stating the bleeding obvious here, but the thing about discretionary distributions is that they're discretionary. There was no legal basis for them and were handed out based on the AFLs whims at the time.
I'm not sure what basis you think any legal action would have been successful. "It's not fair" generally doesn't work in the courts, and in any case the AFL could have pointed to a genuine assistance package that was rejected.
To be honest, at the time I was opposed to the relocation attempt, but in hindsight given how atrociously run the Suns have been I'd have to say I was wrong.
So what? From memory wasn't there a big TV deal that got signed around that time which resulted in a big increase to clubs?
You seem to have a warped idea of what the AFL actually is.
An AFL club is essentially a shareholder of a corporation. The 18 clubs nominate and elect AFL commissioners who control the development funding for the entire sport.
Clubs have the power to veto ANY decision by the commission by a 2/3 majority.
The AFL don’t own and have a overarching control over AFL clubs like you are implying. The only ones they do are GWS and GC because the AFL commission own a % of them.
The AFL commission can’t just stop paying dividends to a single shareholder because they feel like it...