Can you please elaborate? What are the moving parts?
1) Divisions 1 and 2/3 needed to be settled. In a normal year, that is largely peripheral, but a lot has moved over 2 COVID-affected seasons. Would Old Barker stay up based on 2 Grades + Colts last year? Would HAC be able to continue given their numbers? Who could fill those places if they came down?
2) Determing who is sticking in Fourth Division or dropping down to 1 team. That has changed about three times as clubs drop in and out - weather hasn't helped with determining numbers for individual clubs here, either. I was looking at our list with trepidation as recently as 10 days ago.
3) After that is sorted, we're left with 11 clubs - that means byes. Ugh... Making a draw with 8 clubs is a degree easier than 11, even tho it is only an extra fixture each week. You're now doing 6 home and 6 away games instead of an easy 7/7.
3a. Ground availability issues go up a notch with more fixtures in the same division. For some it is easier than others, but e.g. my club shares with a rugby league club who play Saturdays
, and so first one in usually gets the dates tho I try to make something reasonable before they get their draw in March. It isn't a guarantee even then, so we need to do a bit of horse trading to see what comes out in the wash. Reckon we might be playing a few night time games this year at Renegades if things don't quite work out.
3b. A significant point to make here: smaller clubs often operate at the mercy of Councils or other organisations, who want to maximise their field usage to cover costs - my club couldn't afford to pay for seasonal hire all day for every second Saturday, as one example. Larger clubs have a better case for keeping a ground all day, and often are a bit better off financially and/or have a longstanding history and investment in their ground. Renegades Rugby have had 6 home grounds in 15 years.
4) Last issue for this division in particular is Sydney Harbour having 1 team, and how their 2nd grade slot gets filled*. If Epping have 4 teams of a Saturday they're pushing hard for 2 Halligan Cup games at the best of times. Trying to find a 3rd is nigh on impossible.
*Bit of a discussion point, this. The Oysters are a red hot team and have an average winning margin somewhere north of 25 points last I checked. One loss in their history (to another good team in Redfield). Despite this success, they don't have a second grade side - tho they're only 3 years old. Probably have enough talent to play the same 20 guys in two grades and win them easily, mind you. If they've got 30 guys on the books, that's good enough given the quality they obviously have.