by therisingblues » Sun Nov 13, 2005 2:00 am
Some have already put their finger on the problem; it is MARKETING!
I should qualify my next comments by admitting all my information has been gleaned off the net because I haven't been home to see a game for almost half a decade, but;
I think that the fall in coverage of the SANFL has led the decline in crowds.
Every year it seems the Advertiser hits a new low in its coverage of the SANFL.
The advertisement released this year for the SANFL appears as an utter joke to me, and that's after reading the comments for the ad, as well as those against the ad. If they try to flog the SANFL off as a bargain priced comedy side kick against the AFL they are doing the competition more harm than good. For f*ks sake if I want to eat a pie I go to a f*kn bakery! I don't need the SANFL for that! And if I want to save money I'll f*kn stay home and watch the footy on TV! What can get cheaper than that? And if I want comedy I'll watch f*kn Seinfeld!
The SANFL is a huge part of the foundation on which we have built our sporting culture as South Australians. It was once the salt of our sweat, the competition that kept the State enthralled in times of War, Depression, Adversity, Good times and Bad. The SANFL grand final was the biggest sporting event on the annual calender for over a hundred years. The champions that met each other on suburban soils during that time cared little for corporate riches but fought for the esteemed pride of champions of our state.
It was OUR game. The champions were OURS. The ovals were OURS. Week in week out we (the majority) would watch OUR chosen club and still be home for dinner and see the kids to bed.
This was a time of community identity and higher social values, and the SANFL was right at the heart of it. Even during the minor round the fervour of local rivalries was often the dominant event in the proccedings of areas surrounding the local grounds; the tide of supporters arriving by buses would swell with the crowds emerging from the clustered streets surrounding our urban treasures, and immerse the home team's territory in the excitement of football. I remember when I was living a few streets away from Glenelg oval during the early 80's, and still being able to hear the massive noise reverberating from it during a North game on the split round. (North got up narrowly to win that one, circa '82 I think)
I have also spoken with people who would rather watch paint dry than watch a game of footy who grew up around Thebarton in the 50's and even they confessed that they couldn't help but be touched by the excitement of the hordes of people that choked the streets and footpaths of their suburb whenever West Torrens played at home.
I believe that the SANFL is a proud and mighty competition that reflects our character as South Australians, wherever we may be on this globe. This history should not be buried under an eastern bias which has dubbed it unworthy of equality with their own great history, nor should it be forgotten in the midst of a national competition which has no true history of any real length, if we count only the years when it was truly a national competition.
My idea is:
The SANFL's history and what it means should be front and center of an ad campaign featuring images from throughout our competition's great history. Still photographs, moving images, headlines from the day, commentaries, and a sense of the old paraphernalia which once dominated our sporting culture, played as a backdrop to some select scripted comments by a well spoken narrator, and concluded with the line "The legend continues today", with the nine SANFL team captains depicted towering over the Stanley H Lewis Cup for which they compete every year.
Don't want to be seen to be trumpeting my own idea but I really do believe that the above campaign would see an increase in crowd figures. What do others think?
I am also a fan of the Reserves being live rather than the actual League game. I think the current practice may be good for ratings but damaging for the gate.
This post will also be available in hardback within a few weeks (sorry about the length).
I'm gonna sit back, crack the top off a Pale Ale, and watch the Double Blues prevail
1915, 1919, 1926, 1932, 1940, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1974, 1976, 2002, 2016, 2017