melbcityguy
Club Legend
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- Oct 20, 2024
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This is the stupidest story I've read. Like I dunno if it's xenophobic to soccer or if they are just stupid it's mind boggling
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Sign Up Now!This is the stupidest story I've read. Like I dunno if it's xenophobic to soccer or if they are just stupid it's mind boggling
They're lazy twits. There's a public park 850 metres down the road!This is the stupidest story I've read. Like I dunno if it's xenophobic to soccer or if they are just stupid it's mind boggling
Bit from column A, bit from column B.This is the stupidest story I've read. Like I dunno if it's xenophobic to soccer or if they are just stupid it's mind boggling
it will have a drop-in cricket wicket on it from November until February
I thought the whole idea of drop in pitches was flexibility, quick install and removal?
Quote:
"These surfaces allow venues like the MCG to pivot from other sports to cricket within 24 hours"
So looking at Newcastles grounds staff refusing to put the sprinklers on there has to something going onBit from column A, bit from column B.
Nah, they're just lazy.So looking at Newcastles grounds staff refusing to put the sprinklers on there has to something going on
I can see both sides.They're lazy twits. There's a public park 850 metres down the road!
Good day, Chuq.Hi all, first post here, people may remember me as the Tassie A-League guy from various forums 10-15+ years ago! I've been out of the loop for several years as being a parent to young kids took over for a while. I only realised this forum existed a few days ago. I drafted a long post as a reply to the "Boutique Stadiums" thread, but then I realised there was a Tasmania FC thread. So now I've rewritten the (non-rectangular stadium) bits of it!
Mac Point Stadium
Obviously this is the elephant in the room, the Macquarie Point Stadium. Encyclopedia volumes of opinions have been written about this, no point repeating it all here, but suffice to say despite not being an AFL supporter personally (far from it), it and the AFL team will be a great thing for the state and city. The AFL club is what got it going, but it's not all about them - about 75% of the planned events are non-AFL.
If it had failed, "building a stadium" would be a poisoned chalice, no politician would want to risk mentioning a stadium again, so a rectangular stadium would be off the cards for many years.
In any case, it is going ahead, so we need to make the most of it to get the best result for football. Despite being oval, it's not bad news for us. I had the opportunity to chat with the CEO of the Macquarie Point Development Corporation when they had a public showcase late last year, where I learned about a few design features that intend to make it as spectator friendly as possible for football. These include making the oval shape as "tight" as possible (not huge and circular like the MCG or York Park), having the stands at a steeper pitch than usual, and also the first row of the seating is not at ground level, but one step higher. Obviously all just words right now, but we will see.
Apart from not being rectangular, everything else about the venue will be world class, it will be close to the restaurant/bar strip of Salamanca, walking distance to heaps of hotels - events here will produce an incredible fan experience. I'm confident that we will see the Socceroos/Matildas play in Tasmania for the first time. I also think we can expect 1-2 visiting A-League matches a year here. Should we host another Asian Cup or Women's World Cup, or something of that ilk, it will be a prime contender to attract some group games.
However, I don't think we could host a permanent A-League team at the site. Nothing to do with shape, or capacity, but the fact is... it will have a drop-in cricket wicket on it from November until February. There is no doubt it could be used for high drawing matches, like finals and so on. But there just isn't access to it for 13-14 matches a season over summer (more if including an A-League Women's team).
More on rectangular stadium ideas in another post..
Past A-League bids & FT
The first A-League bid was in 2008 and there have been at least a couple of others since. Each time, FFT (now Football Tasmania) has been either ambivalent or ignorant of the bids. They either didn't want to be involved, or they only feigned interest when things were looking positive. Their current strategic plan mentions "A-League" three times with no detail.
I remember one specific event where an FT rep (possibly CEO) said in an interview "Tasmania has no chance of an A-League team" and within a couple of days, a well progressed bid team came out publicly, and the FT rep changed their tune and tried to latch on to it. I can't for the life of me remember when or who it was, unfortunately.
FFT is hugely keen on their "Home of Football", but of the locations being considered, Wentworth Park is the most central and even that is not particularly central ... and in any case, there's nothing in the plans appropriate for hosting top level matches. It's an admin building and a bunch of pitches, and while I get that is important for grassroots, I'm unsure as to how they're spending $80m on it.
The most recent bid had Victoria Morton involved, I was in touch with her a bit during that time. I really thought they were going to get through.. that was the round where we got Macarthur and Western United, so I don't think the failure of the bid can be blamed on the bid team.
Other professional teams in Tasmania
In addition, Netball Australia is adding two teams to the Super Netball league starting in 2027. Netball Tasmania has submitted an EOI (the only public one). Nothing guaranteed, but Netball Australia's new CEO is ex-Jackjumpers. So by 2028 it might be 7. Ignoring rugby since it isn't a rugby state, pretty much every professional sport in the country will be covered except for football.
- 2011: Nil
- 2012: 1: Hobart Hurricanes (BBL)
- 2015: 2: Hobart Hurricanes (WBBL)
- 2021: 3: Tasmania JackJumpers (NBL)
- 2026: 4: Tasmania Jewels (WNBL)
- 2028: 6: Tasmania Devils (AFL + AFLW)
The other sports have the advantage of working together facility wise. AFL and cricket share oval grounds. Basketball and netball share indoor courts. The Derwent Entertainment Centre (JackJumpers main home) got an upgrade just before they joined, now on the back of that the Silverdome (Launceston, their "second home") is getting a minor upgrade, but also on the basis that the WNBL team and maybe netball team will play a higher percentage of games there. There's also a community multi sport complex being built at Devonport Oval which includes a 3k capacity indoor court, again pretty minor in the scheme of things, but it will be occasionally used by the teams mentioned and is an example of how it becomes a bit of a positive feedback loop. This is (IMHO) just bad luck for football. In other states we can pair with rugby clubs for facilities but sometimes that doesn't work out well - consider the pitch issues with Lang Park and even SFS.
We had clean air 18 years ago. Now the calendar is very crowded. Looking for an upside, however, Tasmania is developing a professional sports industry for the first time. There is a lot of experience in all the facets that make up a professional club, from the sporting side through to management, marketing and so on.
Stadiums Tasmania
The other general comment is that Stadiums Tasmania, a state government authority, was established in 2021 and officially commenced operation in 2023. The intention is to centralise management of major sports/event venues, instead of them being handled individually by various councils. This is happening gradually at the moment but once complete it should include the DEC (ex-Glenorchy), York Park (ex-Launceston), Silverdome (govt managed since 1985), and Bellerive Oval (ex-Clarence, though leased to Cricket Tas). And of course Mac Point will fall under this too. The advantage here is that individual councils aren't competing for events. Instead, Stadiums Tasmania can coordinate and promote venues collectively. If the state wishes to secure a one-off major event, it can leverage its portfolio and manage negotiations and scheduling centrally.
That's my brain dump of bits of pieces of Tassie football (and more broadly, Tassie sport) for now. Next post will focus on rectangular stadium discussion...
From what I understand, South Hobart were founded in 1910, and Darcy St opened in 1910, so I'm guessing they are largely responsible for the establishment of the park?I can see both sides.
I walk my daughter's dogs in Darcy St.
Thanks Decentric, I think it's been a while, either the TUFC forum, TWGF or maybe MV.net?Good day, Chuq.
Welcome to the forum!
Haven't seen you online for years!
You live in the adjoining suburb to the guy who owns this forum!
The dog owners in the area perceive the issue differently.From what I understand, South Hobart were founded in 1910, and Darcy St opened in 1910, so I'm guessing they are largely responsible for the establishment of the park?
Add to that the dogs have only been allowed there since 2005 ish. And there's an actual park just down the road. They can't play soccer on that park, but the dogs can use it freely.
It's a no-brainer, but a couple of empty kettles want to make noise.
Good question, Chuq?Thanks Decentric, I think it's been a while, either the TUFC forum, TWGF or maybe MV.net?
I've definitely been online! Just not so much in football circles.
So this site is run by a Hobartian! Curious if it's anyone well known from the football world or just a fan!
Ta.Off topic but still relevant to Tassie football.
A couple of Tassie products in Dan Wojcik and Iluka Wootton have joined Adelaide’s youth team.
Adelaide don’t normally recruit any interstate players for the youth setup so this is very unusual.
I'm a Tas Cricket Member and see the Tas Crick CEO and Sec a fair bit.If it is that quick then it does change the situation significantly! I admit I'm not 100% on the process, but I was under the impression it was the kind of thing they didn't want to be doing back-and-forth a couple of times a week. I thought the benefit was that they didn't need weeks of ground curation etc.
Cricket Tas also intends to play Sheffield Shield and One-Day Cup matches at Mac Point as well, so that may take up more days. (My guess - the Sheffield Shield will be purely to get Test accreditation - after that, it surely doesn't need a 23k venue)
The other likely summer events (concerts and basketball) they are covering the wicket area with a floor anyway so those aren't an issue to intersperse between cricket matches. So it would only be an issue for us![]()
I can't remember and it was only last week! I think it was related to the Breaking Barriers / promotion-relegation discussion. Linked from reddit most likely.How did you find about the forum?
I don't think it's long term but they need to play some sort of long-form game there to get the accreditation for Test matches? So it's either Sheffield Shield or some non-competition/exhibition games?I don't think Shield games are on the agenda at Mac Point.