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OT - Why NRL clubs need to play at big stadiums Gus Gould Column

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3,022
http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...d-to-play-at-big-stadiums-20140315-hvj4a.html

The Brisbane Broncos attracted a crowd of more than 42,000 fans to their Friday night clash at Suncorp Stadium.
Is it any wonder Sydney teams are finding themselves faced with the dilemma of leaving historical suburban home bases to play in the larger stadiums?
Fanatical: The Broncos' supporter base is the envy of other clubs.
Fanatical: The Broncos' supporter base is the envy of other clubs. Photo: Getty Images
Fans protest. We get locked in a time warp from a period in our lives we cherish. In truth we look back on these memories with rose-coloured glasses rather than with any real clarity or honesty.
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I loved Kogarah Jubilee cheering my favourite team. I loved the Sunday trek to other suburban grounds: Brookvale, the old North Sydney Oval, Henson Park, Leichhardt, Redfern, Belmore, Lidcombe, Parramatta, Cronulla, Penrith, the old Sports Ground or the mighty SCG. Great days indeed.
However, there is a commercial reality to the business of sport these days that cannot be ignored.
If fans want their team to be competitive; actually, if fans want their club to SURVIVE, then they must understand the landscape has changed.
When I was growing up, the major rugby league competition was based exclusively in Sydney. It was district versus district: Manly, Norths, Easts, Souths, Wests, Newtown, Balmain, St George, Cronulla, Canterbury, Parramatta, Penrith.
In 2014 these district clubs compete with much larger areas such as New Zealand, Melbourne, Brisbane and North Queensland. Rugby League these days also competes with other professional codes, which are well funded and well organised.
So, when your club decides to move its home game from the suburbs to the big stadium, rather than sitting back and scoffing at all the empty blue seats you can see in the background of your television screen, why not look for ways we can fill those seats?
Why wouldn’t we want Dragons and Tigers playing in front of 50,000 fans on a Sunday afternoon in Sydney? Instead of boycotting the event and watching on TV, ask yourselves WHY your club decided to move to a larger stadium?
Did they do it just to annoy people? Or is there a financial reality to this move that will ultimately determine your club’s very existence.
Almost three years ago, it’s fair to say the Panthers’ existence was seriously threatened. Actually, we were headed over a waterfall.
When the new board and management finally started to turn the big boat around and head for smoother waters, we began the process of determining what kind of club we wanted the Penrith Panthers to become into the future; to ensure it was never again in this precarious position.
We visited a number of the major sporting clubs around the country. During this last off-season, our management team travelled overseas to USA, England and Dubai, studying major sporting franchises and venues.
We now have a master plan for the next 15 years. Everything planned for Panthers is designed to be of major benefit to our growing regional city of Penrith: our hospitality club, community and sporting precinct at Mulgoa Road, Penrith; plus our junior league and professional football programs at Panthers.
Despite travelling around the world in our search for answers, there was no greater inspiration to us than that of the Brisbane Broncos.
When we visited the Broncos, chief executive Paul White and coach Anthony Griffin could not have been more accommodating.
They showed us every facet of their business, their venue and game-day management, their game development programs for rugby league in south-east Queensland, and their highly professional player development programs specifically designed for the Broncos.
I won’t go into the specifics of the information revealed, however I can give you a brief comparison between the Broncos and Panthers at that time.
The Broncos were on target for 30,000 fully ticketed members, with expected growth to 35,000 over the next few seasons. The Panthers had fewer than 5000 ticketed members.
The Broncos were generating more than three times the revenue of the Panthers. They were attracting three times the game-day attendance numbers. Their merchandise sales were off the scale compared to Panthers.
At Panthers home games, our corporate entertainment area seated on average about 280 people to a great pre-match function. The Broncos would cater for more than 3000 people in similar function areas at each home game.
The Broncos were budgeting for a significant profit. The Panthers' football program would lose more than $5 million that year.
At the end of our visit I distinctly remember heading back the airport in the taxi with my head spinning. I was travelling with Panthers Group CEO Warren Wilson. I turned to him and said, “Can you believe we are in the same competition as those guys?” Warren simply shook his head and replied, “We have some work to do”.
The thing that struck us though, was our potential and our responsibility to our area. The Penrith junior league stretches from Blacktown to Katoomba and from Hawkesbury to Wallacia. It’s the largest junior league nursery in the world. Why wouldn’t we want this vast rugby league heartland to be represented by a football club that was as big, as recognisable, as financial and as successful as the Brisbane Broncos?
We wanted Panthers to be a source of inspiration and aspiration for the west. We wanted Panthers to be used as a platform for governments and corporates to engage with the people of the west and provide them with the support, the facilities, education and employment opportunities they deserve.
That’s our dream. We can deliver these outcomes for the community.
However, we cannot hope to be the club we want to be, if we continue to draw only 10,000 fans to home games every week. The business of supporting community needs and rugby league is expensive, let alone trying to maintain a respectable profile in the NRL.
Over the next five years we’re taking one home game each season to Bathurst. We believe we have a strong responsibility to nurture and develop the game of rugby league in neighbouring country areas.
We’ve also had discussions with five major cities around Australia and overseas, all of which can guarantee financial packages significantly greater than what we currently earn from home games at Penrith.
In recent times the Panthers have suffered the lowest home-game attendances in the NRL, lowest membership numbers in the NRL, lowest merchandise sales and lowest sponsorship yield. Compounding the lowest membership numbers, inexplicably an average of only 50 per cent of our members (season ticket holders) bothered to attend home games.
In the honesty stakes, we acknowledged, based on external research commissioned by the NRL, Penrith was also one of the poorest game-day experiences.
Last weekend we introduced significant changes to our stadium, along with other game-day initiatives, all of which were previously unimaginable at Panthers.
The most noteworthy was the transformation to stadium branding and signage. Corporate sponsorship is now at an all-time high. We achieved our best-ever result in merchandise sales, our membership numbers have soared in sharp contrast to declining numbers elsewhere, there are new food and beverage options, prices have been overhauled, Kidz Korner was an overwhelming success; even the revamped Panther cheer-girls were a hit with fans young and old. We’re even trialling apps that will enable fans to order and pay for food and drink on mobiles and go to designated pick up areas to collect. This isn’t an NRL initiative - it’s ours - and there is much more to come.
Of course we had complaints. Some people dislike change. What we are most proud of, however, is the overwhelming response from fans has been very positive and upbeat. There are even those who may not be thrilled with some of our choices, but commented favourably that they respect our ambition.
We all understand that all things will not please all people, but unless we can create a game-day experience that attracts new fans, we are resigned to having to move games to other venues.
We don’t want to move our home games, but could be forced to travel afar unless there is a dramatic shift in the attendances at our current home.
Ideally, we would love the west to have a new modern stadium, equipped with state-of--the-art facilities and quality corporate hospitality attractions. I’m sure the crowds would come and our business would be then strong enough to deliver on our other goals for the city of Penrith and the community.
Until such times as that becomes a possibility, we have to get on with the reality of survival.


Read it all Gus where are the Panthers going to play which larger stadium nothing in there to say, except we will play a game at Bathurst
 

carcharias

Immortal
Messages
43,120
Lost me when he mentioned his favourite team as a kid.
That explains a lot of his hatred toward us over the years.
I am not going to watch footy at Homebush and I won't be taking my kids either.
It is not where I like to watch the game.

Finals I can cop.
 

Quigs

Immortal
Messages
34,816
You know what Gus and Co and 'youse'.

I just have a hunch that the Cronulla Sharks would be an absolute powerhouse if they were the only club in the states capital city. If they were sponsored by the only newspaper in the state and also sponsored by the free to air TV Station that broadcasts their game every farkennnnn friday night.

Oh and throw in a high powered bottomless pit of a business supporters club .

I live in the State of Qld and it never ceases to amaze me how Qld-ers love following winners. If the sides a dud or going bad they are quick to become fair weathered fans.

Seen it with the sookarh, the basketball, the netball, the cricket. Over and over again.

What restores my faith is that there are a lot of league fans north of the Tweed that absolutely detest the Donkeys and all they stand for, especially those that follow the Tits and the Cows. They see the real picture of league in Qld.

I was talking to a bloke the other day and we got around to rugby league. I asked him who he follows. He said he wasn't into league much, but he follows anyone who is playing Brisbane.
 
Messages
3,224
Further to Quigs:

Comparing Brisbane to any other club is a worthless exercise. Apples and oranges.

Brisbane has a population of approx. 2.2 million and Sydney approx. 4.6 million. If we had two teams in Sydney the crowds and supporter membership would see a significant growth in numbers. 1 team -v- 8 (Tigers and Penrith = 1)

Brisbane is roughly half the size in population so if there were 4 teams in Brisbane, I wonder how the membership, sponsorship and crowds would be for each team?

Dear Goose - it's not rocket science.
 

Blues Riff

Bench
Messages
3,350
The Penrith area has a population of over a million, so it's not that far fetched to aspire to Brisbane standards. It's great that we have a long term strategy for survival, not to simply move games to a bigger stadium, but to actually out-grow the suburban park. This can only be done by building a professional organization from the ground up.
People can ridicule Gus' 5 yr plan for the team and 15 yr master-plan for the organization, but at least we're looking beyond next season.
 

Weaponhead

Coach
Messages
10,997
Riff, what you have said is fair enough re planning and the lack thereof that has characterised the Sharks shambolic existence.

Penrith seem to be building well. They had a number of issues with debt and Gould and Wilson seem to be addressing the issues well.

People here will have issues with the comparisons to Brisbane given they have every natural advantage possible.

Back to the Sharks, we have a choice - get bigger or get smarter. If we do neither we are stuffed.
 

Blues Riff

Bench
Messages
3,350
Yeah fair enough.
I don't know much about the Sharks management, but that's where it has to start.
 

Blues Riff

Bench
Messages
3,350
Actually the football club no longer needs financial assistance from the leagues club.

edit ... anyway there's more knowledgeable people than myself discussing this article in the Panthers section. Good luck to you.
 
Last edited:

Card Shark

Immortal
Messages
32,237
Gus is so good..... Just ask him.

I agree he's done well but that story is not about moving to bigger stadiums, it's about Gus & Penrith.
 

Blues Riff

Bench
Messages
3,350
I agree, although he rarely blows the Penrith trumpet in his media work.
Yep, he's an absolute megalamaniac, but what he's trying to achieve will benefit the game in general.
 

Stinkler

Juniors
Messages
1,417
The Sharks should play out of Wembley.
Free transport included with all pre-purchased tickets, courtesy of the NRL.
 

Quigs

Immortal
Messages
34,816
The old wembley or the new wembley.

I like the old twin towers (the original twin towers by the way) of Wembley
 

Madsharkie

First Grade
Messages
5,026
I thought he was the living dead when his hair went all those weird colours a couple of years back.
 

husky65

Juniors
Messages
260
If only there was some explanation for the Broncos doing so well in memberships, like being the only QLD NRL club for some years and still being the only NRL club in their capital city - surely any other club can rely on a similar situation...
 

carcharias

Immortal
Messages
43,120
Can I just say
Gould if you weren't getting paid to go the footy you'd no way no how get off
your fat arse and travel to Homebush to watch a team like Penrith play every week.
You have lost plot.
 

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