Imagine Freo play North Home & Away in Perth next season at Optus?Absolute disgrace that the AFL allow and actively encourage this..
The melting would be radioactive (and rightfully so mind you, but gosh I'd love to see it).
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.
AFLW 2024 - Round 9 - Indigenous Round - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
Imagine Freo play North Home & Away in Perth next season at Optus?Absolute disgrace that the AFL allow and actively encourage this..
Think they will always get the team they play down in Bunbury as the away gameImagine Freo play North Home & Away in Perth next season at Optus?
The melting would be radioactive (and rightfully so mind you, but gosh I'd love to see it).
And why would the AFL do that? The AFL would want more games in WA to lessen the bickering from WC & Freo about travel.AFL should say no or tell them to pick elsewhere! somewhere actually NORTH
So, North are doing this to alleviate travel concerns for Freo and WC?Some of the comments here are genuinely laughable.
Proud of the club for pulling the available levers to increase revenue, whilst thinking outside the box to alleviate travel concerns that plague this league.
"that's the geographic reality of being Perth. I don't agree that we should try and square it away"...What do you mean by "inequity"?
Of course Perth has to travel more, that's the geographic reality of being Perth. I don't agree that we should try and square it away, it's part of the realities of variance that cities being building up due to geographic and economic factors happen. The very fact that Perth is an isolated and growing city both necessitates travel but also is the reason why the club can be a strong club in the first place. If you took the city of Perth and dumped it halfway across the Nullabor, the travel to the east would be less, but you wouldn't have a team, because you wouldn't have a city, because there's no reason for a city to have developed in the Nullabor. West Coast and Fremantle were both aware of the geograhpic realities of being Perth as they entered the competition.
I agree it's unfortunate that your players are away from their families more often. But in the interests of sporting fairness, what proof do you have that it influences match results?
There have been numerous studies done on home ground advantage and they all find that the majority of home ground advantage is through noise of affirmation impacting umpiring (and maybe player effort) from crowds offering support. The bigger the crowd, and the the bigger the difference between home and away supporters in the ground, the greater influence it has. Footballistics wrote a chapter on this (a book about AFL published in 2018), or you can literally just google any of the litany of academic research on the various global sports that played without crowds under Covid e.g. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10653546/
Even if I were to agree that more travel is a disadvantage (not that I necessarily do), at the same time, you can't decontextualise the fact that such increased travel is resultant of other factors that also contribute to home ground advantages, such as the ability to build a bigger stadium and have more fans attend the game, due to the growth of the city due to the very same isolated geographic factors. You can't claim one and ignore the other.
And I disagree because I believe that the biggest inequity is the fact that by virtue of being forced to play in stadiums with increased capacities, many Melbourne-based teams cannot create a home-ground advantage by only attempting to sell home game tickets to supporters of their teams. (And a smaller factor of ground familiarity, in the Dogs' home games their opponents are typically familiar with Docklands to some extent, but the Dogs are completely unfamiliar with interstate venues. Plus MCG finals in terms of ground familiarity too - we played Hawthorn at their home ground with more Hawks fans in our final this year, I get we didn't have to travel, but we clearly had a disadvantage depsite being the nominal home team).
No Melbourne team is allowed to prevent an away Geelong fan from purchasing a ticket if the seat is unsold, the AFL does not let them because it aims to maximise revenue, though Geelong can effectively prevent an away team fan from going to the game into Geelong - there is no capacity to buy a membership or a cheap face-value ticket at Kardinia as you can at many Docklands and MCG games. The same is broadly true for interstate teams, though I will concede far fewer people intend to fly between the cities than drive between Melbourne and Geelong. The Dogs would love to be able to have a stadium where we can essentially sell out the crowd with only Dogs fans and we do to an extent in Ballarat. The AFL has prevented us playing a home game at the Whitten Oval in recent years even though it's up to AFL hosting standard.
With regard to the unfairness of the big Melbourne clubs getting their fixture preferences - yes, I agree with that, but that's a pro-big-Melbourne-club bias, which impacts both the small Melbourne clubs and the interstate clubs. It's not inherently anti-interstate club.
I mean sure but I don't see how that's any different than being an equal part of the league providing context to the competition in it having interest because clubs are considered relatively equal."that's the geographic reality of being Perth. I don't agree that we should try and square it away"...
As is the fact your team is in a state with to many teams, yet I'm sure you agree it should be squared away by your club getting given more money than others.
So you don't think travel should be evened up a little because of geography but you think the WB should be given more money than others because their in a place with to many teams.I mean sure but I don't see how that's any different than being an equal part of the league providing context to the competition in it having interest because clubs are considered relatively equal.
If you don't think we should get money, why stop there? Why not, remove the salary cap and allow the richer clubs to buy better players?
Why stop there - South West Pelicans has a nice ring to it!
But if we're going to consider geography as something that needs to be equalised, it's only fair to consider geography's impact on all elements of how it influences the sporting competition beyond just travel.So you don't think travel should be evened up a little because of geography
No, it's nothing to do with where we're located. It's to do with the fact that we're providing context to an equal competition with 18 teams without relegation and that necessitates some level of equal footing. We understand this from a footballing sense with a salary cap and a draft. The same principles could hold true financially that would result in the fact, that for the same reason we want to make the league equal through a salary cap, we should also want to make the league equal financial in that all 18 teams can host 11 home games with a reasonably strong home ground advantage and if they desire, through a consistent home venue.but you think the WB should be given more money than others because their in a place with to many teams.
Why stop there - South West Pelicans has a nice ring to it!
As a tax payer from WA your already propping up Victoria.Mixed feelings on this, would rather not see my tax money going to help prop North Melbourne up, but hey, it’s an extra game in Perth, and I guess as a paying AFL customer, I already do pay to prop up the teams that don’t make money without additional top ups.
Brings things in line with the SA teams and an arrangement like this was pretty much the only way it was going to happen.
There isn't two sides to this argument though.There are pros and cons. It’s fine to have the argument, but you should acknowledge both sides.
Vic clubs travel less but also have much less home ground advantage.
My club as an example - since the end of COVID we’ve played 68 H&A games.
We’ve won 43%, which is a fair representation of where we are at.
Of the 68, only 18 have been in Vic against interstate opposition - so true home ground advantage. Average of 6 games per season.
We’ve actually won 56% of these, for very good reason - home advantage.
We’ve had 33 games against Vic opposition, for a 43% win rate. Exactly in line with our overall success.
We’ve travelled interstate 16 times, or just over 5 times per year.
I’d bump that 5 trips up to 10 if it meant 10 true home games against interstate opposition, for sure. We’d be much better off.
As a tax payer from WA your already propping up Victoria.
There isn't two sides to this argument though.
Vic clubs get to spend the majority of the season in their own state and play away games at their home ground.
There is an indisputable advantage to that, you can complain and try to argue against it all you want but you'd be wrong.
Yes, but we also play home games against clubs who share our ground. eg Richmond v Hawthorn.There isn't two sides to this argument though.
Vic clubs get to spend the majority of the season in their own state and play away games at their home ground.
There is an indisputable advantage to that, you can complain and try to argue against it all you want but you'd be wrong.
But isn't this equaled out by the very same disadvantage in reverse when you're hosting teams with your own home game to the opposition that doesn't have to travel?Vic clubs get to spend the majority of the season in their own state and play away games at their home ground.
There is an indisputable advantage to that, you can complain and try to argue against it all you want but you'd be wrong.
Either North or Melbourne would be a good case.On behalf of (most) Victorians we would be happy to see the Kangaroos, Demons, Bulldogs and Saints permanently relocated elsewhere.
Doesn't matter, still an advantage over WA teams having to fly across the country every 2nd weekYes, but we also play home games against clubs who share our ground. eg Richmond v Hawthorn.
Etc, etc.....
I had a stroke reading this.But isn't this equaled out by the very same disadvantage in reverse when you're hosting teams with your own home game to the opposition that doesn't have to travel?
Mixed feelings on this, would rather not see my tax money going to help prop North Melbourne up, but hey, it’s an extra game in Perth, and I guess as a paying AFL customer, I already do pay to prop up the teams that don’t make money without additional top ups.
Brings things in line with the SA teams and an arrangement like this was pretty much the only way it was going to happen.
Tourism.Why?
So again, you would've been perfectly fine with Richmond folding and leaving the AFL instead of selling games to Queensland over a decade ago?I couldn’t care who is getting the extra home game or who is losing it. You should not be allowed to sell home games to another teams home state. It just should not happen.
What happens if the saints want to sell a game, and Melbourne and the dogs? It just should not be permitted to anyone.