Tasmanian AFL bid

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A Tasmanian AFL team is a proposed team that would join the Australian Football League (AFL). The proposal has the support of the AFL.[1]

Australian rules football in Tasmania

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Australian rules football has been played in Tasmania as long as the main land states with the first clubs formed in the early 1860s. The state hosted the national football carnival in 1924, 1947 and 1966.

The largest attendance at a football game in Tasmania was set at the 1979 TANFL Grand Final with 24,968 spectators watching Clarence defeat Glenorchy by three points at North Hobart Oval.

Proposals

1990s

Between 1994 and 1997 the bid was prepared for a Tasmanian team that involved the construction of a 30,000-capacity stadium at the Hobart Showgrounds in Glenorchy, at the cost of approximately $30 million.[2]

2008–2011

The AFL's continued rejection of the Tasmanian AFL team has raised significant controversy, with the Government of Australia launching a Senate inquiry in 2008 which AFL Commission CEO Andrew Demetriou and chairman Mike Fitzpatrick both declined to attend.[3] At the enquiry, Tasmanian senator Kerry O'Brien brought into question the AFL's commitment to the game in Tasmania, and stated that he believed that with continued neglect, the popularity of soccer could overtake Australian rules football in Tasmania.[4] There are already more children playing soccer than Australian rules football in Tasmania.[5]

The AFL argued that the New South Wales based participation numbers were in excess of that in Tasmania,[6] furthering their argument that a team in Western Sydney was a higher priority. The Senate enquiry found that insurmountable cultural barriers would make such a move non-viable.[7]

In April 2008, Tasmania's former premier Paul Lennon revived the push for an AFL team by travelling to AFL House in Melbourne where the latest bid was officially launched. Although Lennon subsequently retired in May, the responsibility of steering the bid went to Economic Development Minister Paula Wriedt. Wriedt said Tasmania only made the case for a Tasmanian team, and were not trying to beat the Gold Coast or Greater Western Sydney to be the 17th or 18th club.[8]

AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou has said: "They probably do deserve a team, we shouldn't dismiss the contribution that Tasmania has made to our game... They are absolutely entitled to put forward a proposal, but the commission has already decided where the 17th and 18th teams are going."[9]

The bid received a significant boost on 30 July 2008, with the announcement that the confectionery company Mars committed to being the proposed club's major sponsor.[10]

Some media commentators have speculated that the AFL holds Tasmania open as a soft target for relocation of struggling Melbourne clubs. In 2010, there was increased speculation due to North Melbourne's commitment to move four home games annually to Hobart's Bellerive Oval.[11]

2012–present

In April 2014, AFL deputy chief executive Gillon McLachlan said he supported a "single team representing Tasmania". He stated Tasmania would be the next team to join the AFL, but that this would not happen for at least a decade.[12]

The Herald Sun's Fox Footy 2015 Footy Fans Survey of 14,000 fans that covered a wide range of topics included a question asking "Where should the AFL invest its expansion resources?" The results for the particular question had 78.03% supporting Tasmania as the location the AFL should focus its expansion resources on with the next region New Zealand on only 8.75%.[13]

Supporters

Tasmanian news website and newspaper The Mercury has been a vocal supporter of the bid.[14][15] Kevin Sheedy has argued that Tasmania is not too small for an AFL team. He stated that population is irrelevant, and that a Tasmanian side could draw support from abroad in a similar way to the Green Bay Packers.[16] In 2008 Tasmanian bank MyState Financial offered $300,000 over three years in sponsorship of a team.[17]

Financial supporters

  • Tasmanian Government – $19,000,000 over 5 years (2015 deal with Hawthorn)[18]
  • MARS – $4,000,000 over three years (2008 proposal)[19]
  • Hobart City Council – $600,000 over 2 years (2014 deal with North Melbourne)[20]
  • MyState Financial – $300,000 (2008 proposal)[17]

Media supporters

Venues and travel

Left: Bellerive Oval would serve as the clubs home ground in Hobart.
Right: Tasmania's potential second ground, Aurora Stadium (York Park) in Launceston.

Due to the population split of Tasmania between Hobart and Launceston it has been proposed that a future Tasmania club use two home grounds Launceston and Hobart which are approximately 200 km apart.

References

  1. The Advocate – Decade wait for Tasmanian AFL team opportunity
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  6. Answers to questions: AFL – Mr Phil Martin (question 4)
  7. AFL tells Senate to mind their own business
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  11. Don't knock North for looking at Hobart, The Roar, Retrieved on 29 July 2010.
  12. The Examiner – No Tasmanian AFL team for at least a decade, says McLachlan
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  15. The Mercury – C’mon Tassie, we need a team effort
  16. 16.0 16.1 Tasmania not too small for an AFL team: Sheedy
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External links