Official Club Stuff Tasmania: Summary of what we know

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Jul 2, 2010
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Heres what we do know based on AFL and Government reporting

Governance

With the establishment of the 19th licence the AFL and Tasmanian Government will now work to establish a Club Nominations committee and will select a Club Chair and Board of Directors.

McLachlan said there would be five board members appointed in the years prior to the team’s first game then seven come its first season, adding the president and chief executive had to be from Tasmania.

The AFL will have majority control of the seven-member board of the new club. The Tasmanian government will appoint board members.

Federal Funding

The federal government has announced it would chip in $240 million towards the contentious $715 million stadium project at Macquarie Point in Hobart.

State Funding

The state government will contribute $12 million per year over 12 years towards a team, plus $60 million for a high-performance centre. It will spend $375 million on the new 23,000-seat roofed stadium.

AFL Funding
  • Minimum of $15 million in the stadium in an arts and entertainment precinct.
  • $10m for the new club’s training and administration facility.
  • $93m in game development.
  • $33m to develop young male and female talent in Tasmania, including for ‘talent academies’.
  • $209m in distributions to the new club over the first 10 years to cover base funding, variable funding, AFLW funding and special list establishment funding.

Team Idendity

Later in the year, a community campaign will be launched to select the brand of the new Club including Name, Logo, Guernsey and song.

There’s a possible hurdle around the favoured name — the Tasmanian Devils — given American entertainment studio giant Warner Bros own the commercial trademark of the title.



Entry

The AFL men's team is expected to enter the competition in the 2028 Toyota Premiership Season, with a proposed timeline for a women's team entry into the NAB AFLW Competition to be worked through shortly.

McLachlan also hinted a Tassie state league team could be ready as soon as 2025.

Matches

Senior AFL and Tasmanian football sources also confirmed that, despite the $715 million stadium to be built at Macquarie Point on Hobart’s waterfront, there would be four games played in Launceston, at the University of Tasmania stadium, by the new Tasmanian team for an indefinite period, with the state and federal governments providing a further $130 million for Launceston.

The Stadium


macquarie-point-sep22.jpg


The stadium on the Hobart waterfront will be roofed and hold 23,000 spectators. But the nature of the roof - such as whether it would be retractable - was not confirmed by either the AFL chief or premier Rockliff.

The Stadium will be owned by Stadiums Tasmania.

Hobart Arts Entertainment and Sports Precinct – Business Case

State Government Reports
  1. Macquarie Point Stadium – Tasmanian Arts, Entertainment and Sports Precinct – Liminal Studio Pty Ltd
  2. Hobart Stadium – Site Selection Process Report – MCS Management and Consulting in conjunction with Philp Lighton Architects
  3. Pre-Feasibility Study for Regatta Point and Macquarie Point Sites – Aurecon
  4. Hobart Stadium Economic Impact of new Arts, Entertainment and Sports Precinct – PwC
  5. Macquarie Point Estimating the economic contribution of commercial uses at the new arts, entertainment and sports precinct – PwC
  6. Hobart Stadium Capacity Optimisation Analysis – MI Global Partners
  7. Hobart Stadium Cost Benefit Analysis Report – MI Global Partners

List Management

The new Tasmanian team, set to join the AFL most likely from 2028, will have the right to bid for the sons of any former Tasmanian AFL player, as well as a $1 million pool to fund sign-on bonuses to attract players. It was expected the ex-Tasmanian player would still have to have played a minimum of 100 AFL games as the current rules require for a player to qualify as a potential father-son.

North Melbourne in the short term

North will forge ahead with plans to play four AFL games at Blundstone Arena for at least the next three years, and their plan is for the AFLW team to play one match each in Launceston and Hobart in step with that timeframe.

The Hawks have existing contracts and made no comment regarding these yesterday.

References
Commissions and Committee Reports
 
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And now its budgeted

You can find the full budget here.

The Government will provide $687.4 million over 6 years from 2022–23 for a national approach to sustainable urban development in Australia.

Funding includes: $305.0 million over 5 years from 2023–24 for the Macquarie Point Precinct and University of Tasmania Stadium, to deliver urban renewal projects in Hobart and Launceston (pg 176)

 

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Tasmania AFL team’s new board revealed as premiership Tiger lands special role​

A Lions premiership hero is one of nine members of Tasmania’s inaugural AFL club board – with footy legend Jack Riewoldt also landing a special role. See the full list.



2 min read
September 12, 2023 - 6:21PM
News Corp Australia Sports Newsroom
https://www.themercury.com.au/sport...f4ed7c3d7cfc8fcbfe693260126e9?amp#share-tools
Jack Riewoldt Tasmanian AFL player and Alastair Lynch Tasmanian former AFL player at the announcement. AFL team for Tasmania announcement at North Hobart Oval. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones

Jack Riewoldt Tasmanian AFL player and Alastair Lynch Tasmanian former AFL player at the announcement. AFL team for Tasmania announcement at North Hobart Oval. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones
Brisbane’s triple premiership forward Alastair Lynch is one of nine business, sport and community leaders announced as the inaugural board of Tasmania’s AFL club and Tiger legend Jack Riewoldt will help develop the Devils’ DNA.

A 55-year-old Tasmanian, drafted from Hobart by Fitzroy in 1986, Lynch brings sport, business and skills to the table as the board will be introduced publicly for the first at UTAS Stadium in Launceston on Wednesday.
Tasmania chairman Grant O’Brien said his brand new board brought a range of talent.
“We have selected leaders in the fields of finance, commercialisation, leadership, community engagement, infrastructure, football, marketing, media and risk management – all essential skills required to establish a successful and sustainable football club in the AFL/AFLW and a best practice corporate governance platform,” O’Brien said.
Jack Riewoldt, retired Tasmanian AFL player, and Alastair Lynch, Tasmanian former AFL player. AFL team for Tasmania announcement at North Hobart Oval. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones

Jack Riewoldt, retired Tasmanian AFL player, and Alastair Lynch, Tasmanian former AFL player. AFL team for Tasmania announcement at North Hobart Oval. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones
As well as Lynch, the nominations committee, which included O’Brien, AFL CEO-elect Andrew Dillon and former Richmond president Peggy O’Neal, selected:
Kath McCann (marketing, leadership, well-being)
James Henderson (sports, media, commercialisation)
Alicia Leis (strategic risk management, finance, audit)
Roger Curtis (legal, club administration)
Laura McBain (finance, risk, start-ups, business development)
Graeme Gardner (Aboriginal advisor, local football administration, community engagement) > Kathy Schaefer (infrastructure, local government).
“Establishing the inaugural board is a significant milestone for the Tasmanian club,” said AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan said.
“They will lead the important process of building the foundations, supporting the required infrastructure developments, which are critical conditions of the licence, and building momentum and community engagement through the club establishment phase.
“This is an exciting next step in seeing an AFL and AFLW team representing Tasmania in the national competition.”
Tasmanian AFL Team Chairman Grant O'Brien. Picture: Grant Viney

Tasmanian AFL Team Chairman Grant O'Brien. Picture: Grant Viney
O’Brien is confident he has the right people to get the party started.
“I am thrilled to be working alongside this group of people, who all have deep personal connections to Tasmania and are proud and passionate about the social and economic benefits that the club will bring to this state by uniting all Tasmanians,” Grant said.
Premier Jeremy Rockliff looks forward to Tasmania’s AFL debut in 2028.
“Our government is committed to setting up our team for success, and it is essential that the club has strong leadership, sound governance and strategic oversight,” he said.
“I look forward to working with the board as we draw closer to making history and seeing our own Tasmanian team run onto the field in their own colours, singing their own song, for the first time in the years ahead.”
The board’s first job is to ratify the appointment of Riewoldt as Devils emissary, and the development of the Women’s Football Advisory Panel.
Riewoldt’s role is to “lead an extensive consultation project with communities, clubs and stakeholders to develop the DNA of the club – a body of work that will be known as The Fabric”.
“The Fabric will represent each and every strand that makes up the rich tapestry of our club, who we are, what we stand for, what we believe in, our history and our collective vision for the future,” Riewoldt said.
“I am excited to be able to play a role in ensuring that the culture of this club is one where every Tasmanian has a sense of connection, belonging and pride.”
 

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