AFL merged Fitzroy and Brisbane to great successBecause mergers are a terrible idea which hasn’t been done in any other sport and for good reason. St George Illawarra is the only one that has made sense and that is a takeover rather than a merger. There should have just been relocations to the areas that were killed off i.e Perth, Adelaide, 2nd Brisbane, GC etc could have bought the Sydney clubs that were failing and just moved them there.
AFL merged Fitzroy and Brisbane to great success
Listen mate.A bit of trivia. ...through the short era of the SG/ I and WT mergers the mighty stand alone Dogs..Eels and Souths have collected 3 spoons each ...Knights 4 and the Panthers 2 while the two mergers none....not one!. Dogs ...Souths and the Knights have won no more premierships during that time than WT or the Dragons. ..Eels less than zilch and Pennies only now one more.
Just curious...how come stand alone clubs have collected SO MANY spoons over the same period of time their fans claim such overwhelming success as compared to the mergers ? Or doesn't repeat offender stone fkn' motherless last count as a metric on the superiority / heart /know what you stand for barometer ?
And how many people are you willing to lose from this sport to do that? 100k, 200K, more?Brisbane took over Fitzroy -it wasn’t a merger. Tbf happened with the Sydney clubs after the war. They would have kept their idenTory and had the opportunity to grow their brand more they could’ve ever imagined in a congested Sydney market
If you are being sober about it and look at things like revenue, memberships, sponsorship, national profile, supporter base probably 6 tops. The other 3 should be relocated (and would strongly benefit them)
Obviously they were anything but a powerhouse club in 2001 and 2007 (from 1998 to 2015 really with a few blips of success in there, things have improved only since then, I'd put it down to the renewed focus on player development). They did however win a premiership within 2 years of one of them. I've never claimed Panthers to have been a powerhouse club over the entire NRL period, really its only been the last two seasons they could claim that. You're making that one up.Nice deflection from the habitual spooner point....so how DID your supposed powerhouse club come stone fkn motherless last twice during the same period of time? Any theories you can blame on something?
Imagine if the sport had taken that attitude a hundred years ago. You'd all be union or afl fans now!And how many people are you willing to lose from this sport to do that? 100k, 200K, more?
I hear its big in Adelaide though.
Imagine if the sport had taken that attitude a hundred years ago. You'd all be union or afl fans now!
The AFL grew to having billion dollar contracts with only one merger, one relocation and no clubs folding. The NRL could have done the same. The less wealthy AFL clubs running on fumes held on in that period in the 90s as the old fashioned product based on primarily gate takings transformed into what is now primarily a TV product (and much richer for it). The NRL went through the same transformational period at basically the same time, but lost 4 foundational clubs, almost lost a 5th, as well as the Dragons.FYI I don’t wish for any team to die whether they were in Sydney or not; however in a national competition you can’t have 12 Sydney sides. The destruction of Perth, Adelaide or a 2nd Brisbane were more damaging in terms of the money lost to the game then any Sydney side
Really a large majority of the current clubs in Sydney owe their existence to Brisbane, Warriors and Melbourne and the large TV contracts that followed as a result
We have only got it once in 2009 and that is our only one since 1966. We did come 2nd last in 2016 and 2006 which to me is as good as a spoon.Obviously they were anything but a powerhouse club in 2001 and 2007 (from 1998 to 2015 really with a few blips of success in there, things have improved only since then, I'd put it down to the renewed focus on player development). They did however win a premiership within 2 years of one of them. I've never claimed Panthers to have been a powerhouse club over the entire NRL period, really its only been the last two seasons they could claim that. You're making that one up.
Even the Roosters have got the spoon twice in the NRL era, same as us.
There is a couple of advantages they have had though. 1. Central stadiums policy. This has meant their suburban identity clubs where able to become city wide appealing clubs and all play out of large quality stadia with big crowds that are well serviced. 2. Grants based on need. This has meant even the smaller poorer clubs have been able to grow and invest in things like customer growth. 3. A refusal to hold back expansion because of struggling clubs. AFL could have easily not expanded and spent all their money on existing clubs who were struggling but chose not to. This in return has given them a strong national footprint and a revenue base that goes along with that. Despite all that I am sure the AFL would be happy to see certain clubs relocate, they tried to get someone to go to GC rather than start a new club and I'm sure they'd be happy to see one of them move to Tassie.The AFL grew to having billion dollar contracts with only one merger, one relocation and no clubs folding. The NRL could have done the same. The less wealthy AFL clubs running on fumes held on in that period in the 90s as the old fashioned product based on primarily gate takings transformed into what is now primarily a TV product (and much richer for it). The NRL went through the same transformational period at basically the same time, but lost 4 foundational clubs, almost lost a 5th, as well as the Dragons.
The AFL isn't magic, what it managed to do was not one of a kind or impossible to replicate. The NRL could have done the same if it didn't panic in the 90s.
We have only got it once in 2009 and that is our only one since 1966. We did come 2nd last in 2016 and 2006 which to me is as good as a spoon.
Not sure why people get so fussed over the spoon. Someone has to finish last and it can be better to completely bottom out at times rather than finish 11th or 12th and fool yourself in to thinking you were competitive. As far as I am concerned, the bottom four are as bad as each other and where teams finish within that is irrelevant.
The AFL grew to having billion dollar contracts with only one merger, one relocation and no clubs folding. The NRL could have done the same. The less wealthy AFL clubs running on fumes held on in that period in the 90s as the old fashioned product based on primarily gate takings transformed into what is now primarily a TV product (and much richer for it). The NRL went through the same transformational period at basically the same time, but lost 4 foundational clubs, almost lost a 5th, as well as the Dragons.
The AFL isn't magic, what it managed to do was not one of a kind or impossible to replicate. The NRL could have done the same if it didn't panic in the 90s.
A bit of trivia. ...through the short era of the SG/ I and WT mergers the mighty stand alone Dogs..Eels and Souths have collected 3 spoons each ...Knights 4 and the Panthers 2 while the two mergers none....not one!. Dogs ...Souths and the Knights have won no more premierships during that time than WT or the Dragons. ..Eels less than zilch and Pennies only now one more.
Just curious...how come stand alone clubs have collected SO MANY spoons over the same period of time their fans claim such overwhelming success as compared to the mergers ? Or doesn't repeat offender stone fkn' motherless last count as a metric on the superiority / heart /know what you stand for barometer ?
You're largely right here but that doesn't contradict my underlying point. A lot of people argue all the Sydney clubs that died were doomed and there was no getting around that without merging at least or folding. I'm saying the AFL proves you could maintain almost all your heritage while also modernising, it doesn't have to be either/or.There is a couple of advantages they have had though. 1. Central stadiums policy. This has meant their suburban identity clubs where able to become city wide appealing clubs and all play out of large quality stadia with big crowds that are well serviced. 2. Grants based on need. This has meant even the smaller poorer clubs have been able to grow and invest in things like customer growth. 3. A refusal to hold back expansion because of struggling clubs. AFL could have easily not expanded and spent all their money on existing clubs who were struggling but chose not to. This in return has given them a strong national footprint and a revenue base that goes along with that. Despite all that I am sure the AFL would be happy to see certain clubs relocate, they tried to get someone to go to GC rather than start a new club and I'm sure they'd be happy to see one of them move to Tassie.
Yeah my bad I was thinking you came last in '16 as well.We have only got it once in 2009 and that is our only one since 1966. We did come 2nd last in 2016 and 2006 which to me is as good as a spoon.