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Is this the next city - already with pro club - that will throw its hat in the ring for an A-League license?
'Weāre open-minded to what the A-League has to offer and have had conversations with the APL,' says their General Manager.football360.com.au
Probably an identity thing so people from other parts of the South Island like Blenheim, Dunedin, Invercargill, Nelson, Queenstown, Rolleston, Timaru, etc get behind them. The proposed Tasmania FC name for a Tassie team is similar. I wouldnāt be surprised if South Island United played home games in both Christchurch and Dunedin like how Tassie FC would probably play in both Hobart and Launceston.Why not call it Christchurch United?
I'm not really a fan of these regional names....
It's too Rugby Union-esque.
Yeah I wonder what the parochialism is like there, is there a "south island" identity and would it be bigger than Christchurch alone?Why not call it Christchurch United?
I'm not really a fan of these regional names....
It's too Rugby Union-esque.
Agree with all of this except that the population in the whole of the South Island only around 1.2 million and only 400,000 odd in Christchurch? Whereas the north of England at a guess would have 20-25 million? South Island United is fine but doesnāt allow for another South Island team. Although would we really want more than 3 Kiwi teams?
Having been in NZ late last year football gets a much better coverage in the main stream media, including full replays.Which is a very valid set of points...
But what if one day in the distant future, Dunedin wants their own team, like in super rugby? Thatās where regional names come unstuck.Probably an identity thing so people from other parts of the South Island like Blenheim, Dunedin, Invercargill, Nelson, Queenstown, Rolleston, Timaru, etc get behind them. The proposed Tasmania FC name for a Tassie team is similar. I wouldnāt be surprised if South Island United played home games in both Christchurch and Dunedin like how Tassie FC would probably play in both Hobart and Launceston.
Interestingly, as you mentioned rugby union (which is, as you said, a very region-based sport), the South Island actually has two Super Rugby teams, not one. The Crusaders play in Christchurch and represent the Buller, Canterbury, Mid-Canterbury, South Canterbury, Tasman and West Coast RFUs, while the Highlanders play in Dunedin and represent the North Otago, Otago and Southland RFUs. The South Island team is a representative team that used to play the North vs South game (similar to State of Origin here but instead of NSW versus Queensland in rugby league itās the North Island versus the South Island in rugby union).
Cornwall? Scotland? Wales? Literally anywhere but England?Maybe because I come from the UK where we don't spend a lot of time on regional identity.
Yeah I wonder what the parochialism is like there, is there a "south island" identity and would it be bigger than Christchurch alone?
Another massive crowd for the Nix tonight at Christchurch, they would def be the place to put the next expansion team in. Or we could have 2k turned out to outs in Canberra.![]()
South Island nationalism - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Iād say Aussies are more diverse in the sports we enjoy (even though we enjoy the same sports just at different levels). Nobody can agree on what our national sport is (Aussie rules, cricket, rugby league, soccer?) but pretty much every Kiwi would say itās rugby union, since rugby union is huge everywhere in the country and the All Blacks are hugely successful and popular (in Australia people use the same argument for cricket and the Baggy Greens, and Iām sure the same argument is used there by some with cricket and the Black Caps).Having been in NZ late last year football gets a much better coverage in the main stream media, including full replays.
The difference there is that the main stream media doesn't try to bury football in a 15 second spot on the news.Iād say Aussies are more diverse in the sports we enjoy (even though we enjoy the same sports just at different levels). Nobody can agree on what our national sport is (Aussie rules, cricket, rugby league, soccer?) but pretty much every Kiwi would say itās rugby union, since rugby union is huge everywhere in the country and the All Blacks are hugely successful and popular (in Australia people use the same argument for cricket and the Baggy Greens, and Iām sure the same argument is used there by some with cricket and the Black Caps).
I added a paragraph to answer that question.The difference there is that the main stream media doesn't try to bury football in a 15 second spot on the news.
Now youāre getting it! The population argument is a huge factor. Tassie is similar, only about 40% of Tasmanians live in Hobart (the lowest percent of residents living in the state/territory capital in the country; in every other state/territory except Queensland (about 45% in Brissie) where over 50% live in the capital).Agree with all of this except that the population in the whole of the South Island only around 1.2 million and only 400,000 odd in Christchurch? Whereas the north of England at a guess would have 20-25 million?
Then theyād change the name.But what if one day in the distant future, Dunedin wants their own team, like in super rugby? Thatās where regional names come unstuck.