Not any more. All above salary cap exemptions no longer in place in the AFL. Could explain some of the Lions downfall but no impact on Sydney at this point.
The long game was applied for the Swans who were getting horrible crowds in the 80s and early 90s. Not so now.
NRL needs a bit more long term vision on crowds rather than a quick fix. Good stadium facilities as mentioned here recently is an important step, along with the other points outlined (transport, game day experience etc). The parra stadium investment and upgrades to ANZ and Allianz would give 3 quality stadiums for the Sydney teams to work on building crowd numbers over time. Chopping and changing home grounds for teams also wouldn't help. Fans need to identify with a location over time and make it their own.
Bullshit
The AFL just changed the name of COLA
It's now rent assistance or some shit
Plus the extra cola that SYD got (pre bullshit headline about COLA being stopped) is still payable to players like Bundy f**kloon because they were signed before cola was stopped .
So any player who was signed before 20016 or 17
Still gets COLA till their contract is finished .
There's the truth & there's the AFL media version of truth
http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-ne...ut-rent-subsidy-on-way-in-20140520-zrj5l.html
Sydney's controversial cost-of-living allowance will be removed by the start of the 2017 season but the AFL will compensate the Swans with a new rent subsidy, which the league will pay directly to footballers earning less than the average players' wage.
However, Greater Western Sydney appears to have been successful in its push to retain an additional $1 million in its salary cap, which the AFL will continue to support in recognition of the unique challenges faced by the Giants as they battle to establish themselves. GWS players will also receive the rental subsidy from the start of 2017.
The cost-of-living allowance that affords the two Sydney-based clubs an extra 9.8 per cent worth of salary cap room will be phased out - in the Swans' case over 2015 and 2016 - with all existing contracts, including Lance Franklin's, to be honoured going forward.
Instead the AFL will directly allocate an estimated $15,000 to every player on the lower side of the wage spectrum. By 2017 the qualification ceiling for rent subsidy is expected to include all footballers earning below an annual $300,000.
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