http://www.afl.com.au/staticfile/AFL...emfeedback.pdf
Here it is. If you can summarise in less than a thesis it'd be appreciated....
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http://www.afl.com.au/staticfile/AFL...emfeedback.pdf
Here it is. If you can summarise in less than a thesis it'd be appreciated....
I'll have to go back to school to work that formula out.
Anything in the AFL's hands makes me nervous. I've never seen a problem in the old way even if teams like Geelong got gifted a dynasty. If it's such a big issue scrap F/S and academy preferences altogether then have an untouched draft.
Can't say I'm a fan of the proposed changes, an like usual it's a reactionary change based solely on Heeney.
Just throwing it out there for discussion but...
Outside of the romance of a former club players son playing for the same club should there be any reason why these few players get special treatment?
Is there another sport where recruitment is done via drafts but makes allowance for players who father played enough games at a particular club?
I know we have done pretty well out of father son selections and we all love that idea but if we had selected a Joe Daniher because the rules allowed us to I think we might have a slightly different view on this.
Probably not but I'd say that's a good argument to keep it. There's very little soul left in the AFL, most teams lack their own stadium, others lack fans or support and exist for purely commercial reasons, there are less and less one-player clubs as the game becomes more of a business. The AFL is already arguably one of the most business-oriented (as opposed to fan-oriented) and least traditional professional sports in the world (The NBA is probably ahead there with teams moving around and changing names all the time).
I'd prefer to keep any unique aspects to the game (outside of the actual game itself) that we can. It really needs some heart.
Is there any other reason needed other than the romance of it?
There is very little left to love in the AFL and father son has been a stroke of genius by the AFL. The current formula works well.
This seems to be yet another over reaction by the AFL this time because of academy players so why are they changing the father-son rule????
That's not really a reason and still doesn't answer why should these players get special treatment?
I agree that it's being driven by the success of the academy players but I still maintain that if we had landed a Joe Daniher or Darcy Moore our view's might alter a bit
The father/son doesn't need changing. It works for 16 of the 18 teams.
It's the academy rules that need examination. Whether the proposal from the AFL will work, and is a fair representation of equalising the effect of the academies remains to be seen however.
Funding of the academies should be directly from the AFL including personnel required. As the GWS and GC do not qualify for F/S in reality (and won't for 1.5+ decades) they should be exempt from discounting (in the new AFL model) until such time if these new rules come into place (1.5+ decades with reviews every five years of F/S qualifications for those two clubs).
The 14 other teams do not have the ability to form academies. If they did the SANFL/WAFL colts and the TAC Cup would become redundant. The private school system would also be materially affected.
As Bulldog supporters who crave for equalisation until such time as we become a stable entity, we must surely see the inequity in the academy rules as they currently stand, and flow-on in the future if changes aren't made.
There's nothing inherently wrong about the academy system in the northern non-traditional states; It's to grow the game, but not for those clubs that currently run the academies - for the game itself. The way they are administered and draft concessions granted are the key inequitable characteristics.
The F/S rules are fine as they are.
I'm honestly at a loss as to why the Swans get dibs on the players from their academy. Would the academy not still serve to boost the game if any team could draft the players in it?
http://www.sydneyswans.com.au/academy
Bottom of the page you'll get an idea of how it's 'funded'.