Rebel man
John Thornett (49)
Few points you raise the NRC and shield as examples of free tickets yet still lack of crowds. Neither of them have been marketed or promoted in the same way and the shield is played 10-6 on business days.The AFL would be crazy not to invest heavily in AFLW given their financial position. It is a rapidly growing segment that has significant interest and the easiest way to improve it rapidly is to make it more professional.
It really doesn't take much in player payments to provide the ability for players to train and play enough to improve the standard rapidly.
Free tickets or not (and I believe tickets aren't free now), the games are popular. People suggesting that it's easy to fill a sporting event if the tickets are free mustn't have been to many NRC games. Whether those were free or not made a negligible difference to the crowds. Likewise things like domestic one day cricket and Sheffield Shield games.
You could hand out tonnes of free tickets to most Super Rugby games and it would only make a marginal difference to the crowds. Not many people give up an evening to do something they're not particularly interested in just because it's free.
This would be the case for every second tier sporting league. The whole point of the exercise is that they can grow AFLW at a much faster rate by investing in it rather than having to wait 150 years for it to grow to the size of the AFL through just its own means.
Women's sport, particularly in formerly male dominated sports are the growth areas. Ultimately this feeds into interest in your main product.
I find it strange how much animosity there is towards women's sport and investment in it. It's a no brainer in terms of the most effective way to grow your overall interest.
The AFLW is doesn’t grow the game and will struggle to ever turn a profit. One issue is it highlights issues already within the AFL, there isn’t a big enough market in Victoria to support another 10 professional sides
Also the AFL is reluctant to give them a proper season with how the conference system worked last year with the number of teams and games you could go two years without playing a club.
If the AFL want it to work they have to do the right thing by the women and give them a proper season but they don’t want to meet the cost of that. Also they know what ever attention it gets now will die if it competes with the men’s comp
I think the only way it can work going forward is if they play same team at the same venue before the men’s. They tried with dynamic pricing the other year. They could sell the tickets for 60% of what they normally go for if you get a general admin seat for the start of the women’s