Free Agency
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Free Agency
Alas, it only seems a matter of time.
What do you think?
Is it the end of one of the last things that makes our game special? By that I mean, many players will chop and change clubs for the dollar, cause it will simply be alot easier to. Lord forbid it ever gets to English soccer stage!!!
There will be some limits I would think. Maybe you have to be at a club for 4 years or something...
Either way, I loath the thought that the top players in my team could be nurtured and become very important parts of the team, than after xxx time they are off to the highest bidder. Loyalty, as much as it dosent exist now, will be GONE.
Once the fire is lit, watch it get worse and worse.
Its the ONLY thing I can think of that could turn me away from the game for good.
Discuss...
What do you think?
Is it the end of one of the last things that makes our game special? By that I mean, many players will chop and change clubs for the dollar, cause it will simply be alot easier to. Lord forbid it ever gets to English soccer stage!!!
There will be some limits I would think. Maybe you have to be at a club for 4 years or something...
Either way, I loath the thought that the top players in my team could be nurtured and become very important parts of the team, than after xxx time they are off to the highest bidder. Loyalty, as much as it dosent exist now, will be GONE.
Once the fire is lit, watch it get worse and worse.
Its the ONLY thing I can think of that could turn me away from the game for good.
Discuss...
Re: Free Agency
Players are more loyal to the clubs now than they have ever been. Hardly any players swap clubs. This year there was about 20. the year before even less. One champion player swapped the rest probably happy to go.iwantmeseats wrote:Alas, it only seems a matter of time.
What do you think?
Is it the end of one of the last things that makes our game special? By that I mean, many players will chop and change clubs for the dollar, cause it will simply be alot easier to. Lord forbid it ever gets to English soccer stage!!!
There will be some limits I would think. Maybe you have to be at a club for 4 years or something...
Either way, I loath the thought that the top players in my team could be nurtured and become very important parts of the team, than after xxx time they are off to the highest bidder. Loyalty, as much as it dosent exist now, will be GONE.
Once the fire is lit, watch it get worse and worse.
Its the ONLY thing I can think of that could turn me away from the game for good.
Discuss...
As for free agency it will come in due to restraint of trade laws but it will have minimul effect due to the salary cap. rather not have it but better than going to court and all the rules are proven to be illegal.
- saintsRrising
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While mainly complain about the AFL......the fact is that the current set of rules provides a very even competition by comparison to other major competitions around the world.
Free agency would be the death of an even competion......and after a period of time the richest clubs would dominate by and large year in year out.
If free agency came in due to "restraint of trade"....then the same legal basis would apply to "salary cap" is a restraint of trade...which it clearing is as it limits directly what a player can earn.
The only "real" winners would be the elite players who would end up earning more.
The vast majority of players would earn less and you would end up witha lop sided competition where memberships and attendances would go into decline.
The "majority" of players are actually better off with the current system.
The "level" ( well more level than most competitions) has resulted in increased income which has flowed through to all players with the elits topping up very nicely from endorsements.
For example M Lloyd earns $120,000 per year with a boot endorsement.\
Undermine interest in the AFL and revenues will drop with total player incomes declining evein ifa few elite "fre-agents" end up pocketing more.
Free agency would be the death of an even competion......and after a period of time the richest clubs would dominate by and large year in year out.
If free agency came in due to "restraint of trade"....then the same legal basis would apply to "salary cap" is a restraint of trade...which it clearing is as it limits directly what a player can earn.
The only "real" winners would be the elite players who would end up earning more.
The vast majority of players would earn less and you would end up witha lop sided competition where memberships and attendances would go into decline.
The "majority" of players are actually better off with the current system.
The "level" ( well more level than most competitions) has resulted in increased income which has flowed through to all players with the elits topping up very nicely from endorsements.
For example M Lloyd earns $120,000 per year with a boot endorsement.\
Undermine interest in the AFL and revenues will drop with total player incomes declining evein ifa few elite "fre-agents" end up pocketing more.
Flying the World in comfort thanks to FF Points....
The salary cap isnt a restraint of trade. A player can earn what he likes as long as the club manage the rest of the players wages. That isnt a restraint of trade. I think you will find the AFL has no legel issue with the salary cap but may have with players swapping clubs so it will make no difference if you are a rich club or a poor club so that regard it would be the same as it is now. Also the AFLPA have never had any issue at all with the salary cap but have some issues with players swapping clubs.saintsRrising wrote:While mainly complain about the AFL......the fact is that the current set of rules provides a very even competition by comparison to other major competitions around the world.
Free agency would be the death of an even competion......and after a period of time the richest clubs would dominate by and large year in year out.
If free agency came in due to "restraint of trade"....then the same legal basis would apply to "salary cap" is a restraint of trade...which it clearing is as it limits directly what a player can earn.
The only "real" winners would be the elite players who would end up earning more.
The vast majority of players would earn less and you would end up witha lop sided competition where memberships and attendances would go into decline.
The "majority" of players are actually better off with the current system.
The "level" ( well more level than most competitions) has resulted in increased income which has flowed through to all players with the elits topping up very nicely from endorsements.
For example M Lloyd earns $120,000 per year with a boot endorsement.\
Undermine interest in the AFL and revenues will drop with total player incomes declining evein ifa few elite "fre-agents" end up pocketing more.
If you manage the players well free agency may not bee completely bad.
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This thread reminds me of the movie Baseketball.
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You're talking about a free market system not free agency within the structure of a draft and salary cap.saintsRrising wrote:Free agency would be the death of an even competion......and after a period of time the richest clubs would dominate by and large year in year out.
The NFL has become known as the "Not For Long" league because team's can quickly go from bottom to top with a few decent FA signings. The problem with the AFL system is the perception that team's need to bottom out to guarantee adding quality to their list. I'm not convinced teams need to bottom out to impove their list (ie Port), but if you want to increase your chances in the AFL you get to the top of the draft. Trading in the AFL has become almost non existant also unless you hold key draft picks.
IMO, a properly structured free agency would not only make the competition more even but it would also get rid of the tanking perception by reducing the need for mechanisms like the Priority Pick (which in itself is an admission of the failings of the present system).
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Free agency is probably an inevitability eventually, and I think an unfortunate one. I recall seeing a couple of years back a table listing percentage of revenue that found its way to players, and the AFL was around 25%, which is insanely low compared to other leagues around the world.
Eventually, the AFLPA is going to put their foot down on this. Contrary to what's generally accepted, it's probably a raise in the salary cap that's needed to redress this rather than free agency - all free agency truly allows is for players to truly test their value on an open market... in a hard cap system it remains cap room rather than profitability that then drives contract offers. It would most assuredly raise the number of players moving between teams though.
However, the two do tie together in that in addressing their percentage of revenue, it would make little sense for palyers to not also address their ability to ply their trade where and when they like.
Until the AFLPA decides to make an issue of it however, the AFL is unlikely to substatially raise the cap... teams like the Roos, Bulldogs and Demons who operate on the edge already would find themselves uncompetitive, and unable to fully use their cap room. It would be their death knell.
A better model than the NBA is probably the NHL, as it contains more market disparity between the rich and poor and tries to address this via a hard cap based on total revenues... it's indicative that it took multiple player strikes over the course of 20 years for ownership and players to compromise on a model not dissimilar to that already in effect in the AFL. Worth considering the next time we want to bash the AFL as a backward and autocratic organisation. The NBA with it's soft cap, and the NFL with it's loose contracts are fundamentally outside the AFL experience - as is the North American trading system whereby there's less time where one can't trade then where one can... but the NHL would seem to indicate that a hard cap will stifle trades regardless, so it probably sits the closest.
What will be the spark? A negotiation gone wrong ending in a holdout? A rise in profitability for the poorer teams of the AFL? The next TV deal? Something will, and it will fundamentally change our experience as AFL fans, so as a conservative by nature, I hope the AFL has a cannot refuse offer in place that will restrict the impact of free agency when it comes to a head.
Eventually, the AFLPA is going to put their foot down on this. Contrary to what's generally accepted, it's probably a raise in the salary cap that's needed to redress this rather than free agency - all free agency truly allows is for players to truly test their value on an open market... in a hard cap system it remains cap room rather than profitability that then drives contract offers. It would most assuredly raise the number of players moving between teams though.
However, the two do tie together in that in addressing their percentage of revenue, it would make little sense for palyers to not also address their ability to ply their trade where and when they like.
Until the AFLPA decides to make an issue of it however, the AFL is unlikely to substatially raise the cap... teams like the Roos, Bulldogs and Demons who operate on the edge already would find themselves uncompetitive, and unable to fully use their cap room. It would be their death knell.
A better model than the NBA is probably the NHL, as it contains more market disparity between the rich and poor and tries to address this via a hard cap based on total revenues... it's indicative that it took multiple player strikes over the course of 20 years for ownership and players to compromise on a model not dissimilar to that already in effect in the AFL. Worth considering the next time we want to bash the AFL as a backward and autocratic organisation. The NBA with it's soft cap, and the NFL with it's loose contracts are fundamentally outside the AFL experience - as is the North American trading system whereby there's less time where one can't trade then where one can... but the NHL would seem to indicate that a hard cap will stifle trades regardless, so it probably sits the closest.
What will be the spark? A negotiation gone wrong ending in a holdout? A rise in profitability for the poorer teams of the AFL? The next TV deal? Something will, and it will fundamentally change our experience as AFL fans, so as a conservative by nature, I hope the AFL has a cannot refuse offer in place that will restrict the impact of free agency when it comes to a head.
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Not sure what you mean by loose contracts, I presume this is in relation to cutting players and taking a cap hit?BAM! (shhhh) wrote:. . . and the NFL with it's loose contracts are fundamentally outside the AFL experience - as is the North American trading system whereby there's less time where one can't trade then where one can... but the NHL would seem to indicate that a hard cap will stifle trades regardless, so it probably sits the closest.
Many in the NFL are actually starting to complain about the diminishing number of trades/free agents available.
The one aspect of the NFL that we could definately use in the AFL is the ability to add true "free agents" to your list - those being players that didn't make it onto an AFL list through the drafts. Provided those players are subject to some sort of waiver wire I can't see why we don't allow it.
Personally I don't have a problem with players changing clubs under free agency. I think the club loyalty aspect is overblown and our system limits players in their ability to realise their true market value within the structure of the cap. I also think players salaries should be made public for the same reason and so clubs are held accountable for some of their stupid decision making (currently the players suffer that by having to play for less than their worth or risk going to the worst performed club).
I know people will start throwing in the "yank BS" comments but IMO those that fear free agency are those that don't understand if structured properly it would improve the evenness of the comp rather than detract from it..
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You got my drift. length of an NFL contract isn't worth the paper it's written on. Out clauses are IMO a great idea, and a lot of aspects of the NFL system are very forward thinking - a league that can make that much money, and yet have a competitive team in Green Bay is onto someting.JeffDunne wrote:Not sure what you mean by loose contracts, I presume this is in relation to cutting players and taking a cap hit?BAM! (shhhh) wrote:. . . and the NFL with it's loose contracts are fundamentally outside the AFL experience - as is the North American trading system whereby there's less time where one can't trade then where one can... but the NHL would seem to indicate that a hard cap will stifle trades regardless, so it probably sits the closest.
Many in the NFL are actually starting to complain about the diminishing number of trades/free agents available.
The other big thing I'm a fan of in the NFL system is their more mature draftees - which would be just about impossible for any other sport to get past the courts, but means the top draftees are much less likely to bust.
I agree with this. I think we'd need to be careful how it was facilitated in order to prevent it being the thing that opened the door entirely, but I could really see it being beneficial to clubs and players to allow teams to sign uncontracted and VFL players mid season to cover long injury lists... provided there is a waiver wire to rpevent abuse, they could be added to the rookie list for the duration of a single season - so when injured players return, they can't be played, and at the end of a season it must be decided to elevate or discard.The one aspect of the NFL that we could definately use in the AFL is the ability to add true "free agents" to your list - those being players that didn't make it onto an AFL list through the drafts. Provided those players are subject to some sort of waiver wire I can't see why we don't allow it.
It would mean that a team like say the Bulldogs isn't completely wiped ot by a few injuries, and provide opportunities for the Clinton Jones of the world.
Not directing this at any individuals, but those I've spoken to about this issue outside this forum, IMO vastly underestimate the impact it has on player movement.Personally I don't have a problem with players changing clubs under free agency. I think the club loyalty aspect is overblown and our system limits players in their ability to realise their true market value within the structure of the cap. I also think players salaries should be made public for the same reason and so clubs are held accountable for some of their stupid decision making (currently the players suffer that by having to play for less than their worth or risk going to the worst performed club).
It's not the Riewoldts, Judds etc. who would move, they make a boatload regardless... it's the 2nd tier guys like a Leigh Montagna who come off a career year, and then are faced with a decision between a team that's patiently developed them, and a BIG payday. Behind those there are the journeymen players - think Jason Blake, you'd always have one or 2, but every 2 years or so the name and visual changes.
It would also put individual teams at a huge disadvantage - currently when recruiting mature players, the preseason draft may disadvantage players, however, the trade system giving them a veto is AFAIK absolutely unique. This means the teams have a hole in recruiting, and absolutely no way to get around it other than money, and no out to deal with dissapointing contracts.
I don't think it's yank BS, I think it's inevitable. It's not like they've always had it, it was something that players in each league had to fight for and go to court for. I think it's inevitable here too.I know people will start throwing in the "yank BS" comments but IMO those that fear free agency are those that don't understand if structured properly it would improve the evenness of the comp rather than detract from it..
I also think that it can be done to everyone's benefit, but one of the key aspects that is overlooked is that it's not structured properly in any of the US leagues at this point - in all of them, there remain gripes between owners and players which mean that further civil action is almost an accepted part of their sports futures.
50 years from now, the AFL will have free agency, and people will robabl wonder what all the fuss was about. However, the landscape of that AFL will likely be incredibly different, and I wouldn't doubt that a few of the fans who will end up being turned off by what it becomes will be fans who advocated things like free agency which created the change.
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