daysofourlives wrote:Can anyone post the link to the story yesterday in the paper where that Parkinson dick said how good the reserves sides are for the comp
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
So a 6 or maybe 8 team competition played over maybe 6-8 weeks is equivalent to a full scale AFL reserves national competition?
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
So a 6 or maybe 8 team competition played over maybe 6-8 weeks is equivalent to a full scale AFL reserves national competition?
Where did anyone say it was?
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
Its all about growth of the game. An AFL Reserves competition probably isn't seen as growing the game, its just the same players playing in a different competition that would be quite costly. A women's competition may lead to a big growth in women's participation and interest in the game, and may have far more growth potential than a Reserves comp..
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
So a 6 or maybe 8 team competition played over maybe 6-8 weeks is equivalent to a full scale AFL reserves national competition?
Where did anyone say it was?
DW notes its "interesting" the AFL is looking at a womens competition, but money is prohibitive in setting up an AFL reserves. No joke? The two would require vastly different funding and can't be compared at all.
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
Only if they swap shirts at the end
And then you wonder why people view SANFL supporters as outdated...
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
So a 6 or maybe 8 team competition played over maybe 6-8 weeks is equivalent to a full scale AFL reserves national competition?
Where did anyone say it was?
DW notes its "interesting" the AFL is looking at a womens competition, but money is prohibitive in setting up an AFL reserves. No joke? The two would require vastly different funding and can't be compared at all.
I concur with him that its interesting, hardly means they're equivalent.
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
I wonder how much interest they think a women's game will generate?
Given something like netball still seems to struggle for mainstream coverage, I find it hard to think it will generate much interest, but kudos to the afl for trying, hopefully it does gather momentum.
Judging by the comments the other day I would think the only way a national reserves comp would come in is if Foxtel bankrolled it all. If there are women's games to broadcast too they might go for an extra fox footy channel, and therefore need content to fill it.
Dogwatcher wrote:Interesting the AFL is now looking at a women's competition by 2017, but money is a prohibitive factor in setting up an AFL reserves competition.
So a 6 or maybe 8 team competition played over maybe 6-8 weeks is equivalent to a full scale AFL reserves national competition?
Where did anyone say it was?
DW notes its "interesting" the AFL is looking at a womens competition, but money is prohibitive in setting up an AFL reserves. No joke? The two would require vastly different funding and can't be compared at all.
Throwing money at something which isn't going to generate much interest/commercial attention means it's very interesting and, in my eyes, questionable. Why would you throw money at something like that, flying players around etc, at the cost of player development to your major product?
You're my only friend, and you don't even like me.
What sort of competition do you think it would be -
How many teams? How many teams per state? How many matches?
Clearly your first post alludes to you thinking the money spent on a national womens competition should be put into a national AFL reserves competition, other wise you would be "interested" in it. ie - Don't waste money on a womens competition when you could run an AFL reserves comp and get Port/Adelaide out of the SANFL.
It may not generate interest amongst men and people already interest in the sport.. But when you look at growth, WE aren't the targets for that sort of business ideas.. We are already invested and interested, they need to look for ways to externally grow interest, and they may view women as a massive growth potential.. If having a small 6 team women's competition that gets girls playing the sport at a young age and getting them interested in it, it could flow on to generate more interest in the game.. An AFL Reserves comp wont generate new interest in the game, hence why they would be reluctant to pump money into it
I would place an AFL reserves or, at the least, an AFL reserves comp featuring SA/Vic sides ahead of a women's league. Heck, I'd even place having AFL umpires full time ahead of the reserves concept.
You're my only friend, and you don't even like me.
Dogwatcher wrote:I would place an AFL reserves or, at the least, an AFL reserves comp featuring SA/Vic sides ahead of a women's league. Heck, I'd even place having AFL umpires full time ahead of the reserves concept.
I don't doubt that for one moment. Needless to say the AFL doesn't appear to though.
By the look of it the reserves are in the SANFL for some time. I reakon this thread might crack 1000 pages.
An AFL womens competition helps the AFL secure/maintain/increase Fed Govt funding for participation programs through getting more people active in Sport.
A national womens competition supports that pathway to make it attractive to girls to take up Footy.
More female participation and interest in Australian Football means the AFL can attract more or demand of more from sponsors which = dollars.
A national reserves cometition is low on the list of the AFLs list of priorities. Why would they want to? They have their clubs' "reserves" teams playing in good local state leagues (except for the Northern States). They aren't going to start spending money flying up to an extra 270 people around he country each week and accommodating them if they can avoid it.
A national reserves competiton is no where near as finacially viable to the AFL as national womens competition is. And while the AFL likes footy, it loves money more!!!
It may be on the wish list of some of the clubs but that wish is secondary to more $$$ from the next AFL TV rights deal for their own corporate and 1st team spending priorities (dev coaches, resources, fact trips O/S, O/S training camps , crytherpay chambers etc).
A national reserves competition is a LOOOOOOOONNNGGG way off despite what some on here might wish for.
Let that be a lesson to you Port, no one beats the Bays five times in a row in a GF and gets away with it!!!