Australian Championship MVP eyes A-League move as three options emerge
Wests APIA defender Dredon Kelly speaks to football360.com.au after being named MVP of the Australian Championship.
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Good listen, final npl nsw/npl vic collaboration podcast of the aus championship, review of the final and comp overall.
Interesting to hear the host universally agreeing a nsw/vic super league as a national second division would be better than none at all, which I tend to agree with personally.
Good listen, final npl nsw/npl vic collaboration podcast of the aus championship, review of the final and comp overall.
Interesting to hear the hosts universally agreeing a nsw/vic super league as a national second division would be better than none at all, which I tend to agree with personally.
My honest opinion is that the Australian Championship complements the A League.![]()
Does the A-League need Championship winners South Melbourne?
The biggest virtue that the Championship, South Melbourne, and its other foundation sides have is aspiration. Right now, Australian domestic football needs as much of that as it can get.www.espn.com
Hellas have probably done the most of all the clubs outside the a league to further discussion of a second division with the amount of pressure they’ve been applying on old soccer’s behalf for decades, but certainly the concept itself wouldn’t even be a thing without nsw and vic clubs as obvious as it sounds. there simply wouldn’t be near enough demand for such a comp or the number clubs capable, if any at allIt was a very good episode. Enjoyed listening to it.
To your point about a NSW/VIC SuperLeague arrangement, it makes both logistical and financial sense. These are the clubs that have the supporter base and financial means to fund such a competition.
Then you look to add 2 teams from either an Adelaide, Brisbane, Canberra, and Hobart. In an ideal world, you’d have a team from each city.
On this btw, it’s not really a radical concept tbh in Australian sport. Sydney and Melbourne are essentially the sports traditional heartland in this country in the way Melbourne is for the afl and sydney is for the nrl. You see even now the bulk of those leagues are made up of the traditional clubs from those cities. You don’t see the afl putting a cap on the number of Melbourne clubs for the purposes of national equity. “We’ve already got Collingwood, Richmond, Carlton ..so we need a team from Darwin before we let in hawthorn …” no..It was a very good episode. Enjoyed listening to it.
To your point about a NSW/VIC SuperLeague arrangement, it makes both logistical and financial sense. These are the clubs that have the supporter base and financial means to fund such a competition.
Then you look to add 2 teams from either an Adelaide, Brisbane, Canberra, and Hobart. In an ideal world, you’d have a team from each city.
Not stated as such, true - but by the same token, Hell will have frozen twice over before the AFL seriously considers promoting a traditional Melb club from the VFA/VFL state-tier(eg. Port Melbourne or Williamstown) to the AFL.You don’t see the AFL putting a cap on the number of Melbourne clubs for the purposes of national equity. “We’ve already got Collingwood, Richmond, Carlton ..so we need a team from Darwin before we let in Hawthorn …” no..
Not stated as such, true - but by the same token, Hell will have frozen twice over before the AFL seriously considers promoting a traditional Melb club from the VFA/VFL state-tier(eg. Port Melbourne or Williamstown) to the AFL.
Plus an Adelaide (Western) United ..... plus a Perth (Macarthur) Bulls ......If they were big enough maybe, but they arent and they'd be forced to play at the mcg or docklands anyway which would kill them.
The AFL were however smart enough to promote the powerhouse of the SANFL Port Adelaide to the top flight. Imagine if they created Adelaide Heart out of thin air lol.
Interesting. Would such a team cannabilise the fan base of an existing AFL club if let in to the top tier?Not stated as such, true - but by the same token, Hell will have frozen twice over before the AFL seriously considers promoting a traditional Melb club from the VFA/VFL state-tier(eg. Port Melbourne or Williamstown) to the AFL.
Not to any degree worthy of consideration, no.Interesting. Would such a team cannabilise the fan base of an existing AFL club if let in to the top tier?
Technically, they have - when the VFA/VFL was the top-tier from 1877 until 1896, when the usurper VFL/AFL came into being.Excuse my ignorance, as far as im aware those clubs have never had a previous history of playing at the highest level am i right ? Even when the vfl was the highest level of the sport, where as obviously the nsw and vic npl are made up of clubs which previously were playing at the highest level
Will defer to you, I have a passing knowledge about it but am by no means an expert on the sportTechnically, they have - when the VFA/VFL was the top-tier from 1877 until 1896, when the usurper VFL/AFL came into being.
And yet in WA’s case they created both the Eagles and Dockers out of thin air, though in fairness it was the prudent thing to do in those particular instances.The AFL were however smart enough to promote the powerhouse of the SANFL Port Adelaide to the top flight. Imagine if they created Adelaide Heart out of thin air lol.