The history of the Tasmanian AFL bid covers a series of proposals and bids between 1987 and 2023 for a Tasmanian-based Australian rules football team in the Australian Football League and AFL Women's premierships.[1] Eight formal proposals for a new or relocated club to represent Tasmania were made over this time, the earliest coming in 1992, while informal proposals were raised as early as 1987, when the Victorian Football League commenced its expansion to become a national competition.
The final bid, a $150 million bid backed by the Tasmanian government and federal funding for a new stadium at Macquarie Point, Hobart, was accepted by the league on 2 May 2023. Tasmania will compete in the AFL from 2028.
Australian rules football has been the primary code of football played in Tasmania for as long as the mainland states, with the first clubs formed in the early 1860s. The state was a full member of the Australian National Football Council, and hosted the national football carnival in 1924, 1947 and 1966. The largest attendance at a football game in Tasmania was set at the 1979 TANFL Grand Final with 24,968 spectators watching Clarence defeat Glenorchy by three points at North Hobart Oval.
1991–1993: AFL expresses interest and Tasmania declines licence
Following the expansion of the AFL into Queensland and Western Australia (1987) and South Australia (1991), the AFL and its clubs first took an interest in Tasmania. Tasmania also took an interest in the AFL; Clarence president Roger Curtis noted in 1992 a decline in local Tasmanian football attendances linked to broader access to televised AFL,[2] commenting "the only way to get the kids playing football here is to give them access to the best product available and that, of course, is AFL football."[2] The Tasmanian Football League was in a dire financial position at the time, and the AFL granted the TFL a rescue package of AUD$250,000.[2]
Struggling Melbourne club Fitzroy became the first AFL club to play regular premiership games in Tasmania, playing two games per season at North Hobart Oval in each of 1991 and 1992[3] The Tasmanian Government offered the AFL $70,000 to continue the arrangement, but it was ruled financially unviable to continue.[3]
In October 1992, an opportunity arose when the AFL Commission voted on whether or not to axe the Sydney Swans, as the club had accrued over AUD $9 million of debt since its relocation from South Melbourne to Sydney in 1982.[4] Tasmania was an option at this point, but the TFL declined the licence fee, reported to be around AUD $4 million, and announced it would be at least 10 years before it would be ready to enter the AFL.[4] The AFL ended up preparing a multi-million dollar assistance package to keep the Sydney club viable.
1994–1997: 16th AFL licences
After Fremantle was awarded the 16th AFL licence in 1994, the prospect for expansion into Tasmania was raised again. Tasmanian Sports Minister Peter Hodgman spoke to the AFL about the possible introduction of a local team to the league and raised the possibility of state funding.[5] Between 1994 and 1997, the bid was prepared for a Tasmanian team that involved the construction of a 30,000-capacity stadium at the Hobart Showgrounds in Glenorchy, at the cost of approximately $30 million.[6] At the time, the AFL commission and club executives were of the view that the league could not sustain more than 16 clubs, and expressed concerns that Tasmania's small market and declining number of drafted AFL players were barriers to entry.[5] The collapse of Fitzroy in 1996 created a place in the 16-team competition which was filled by Port Adelaide.
State level football in Tasmania also had its own problems in the late 1990s, with the Tasmanian Statewide League collapsing in 2000. However, two new advancements were made in the early 2000s: first, the establishment of the Tasmanian Devils Football Club to compete in the Victorian Football League between 2001 and 2008;[7] and second, the establishment of a long-term deal by Hawthorn to play regular home games at York Park in Launceston starting from the 2001 season, originally one per year but increasing to four per year since 2008. St Kilda also had a deal to play games in Launceston between 2003 and 2006.
2008–2011: Tasmania beaten by Gold Coast and Western Sydney
These expansions into non-traditional markets, at the expense of Tasmania as a traditional football state, and with two clubs which over their first fifteen years remained unprofitable as stand-alone entities, began to stir controversy about Tasmania's absence from the league. Popular opinion began to take the view that, perhaps financially but certainly romantically, Tasmania deserved its own team.[9] The matter became so controversial that the Government of Australia conducted a Senate inquiry in 2008. At the enquiry, Tasmanian senator Kerry O'Brien brought into question the AFL's commitment to the game in Tasmania, and stated that he believed that with continued neglect, the popularity of soccer could overtake Australian rules football in Tasmania.[10] The AFL argued that New South Wales participation numbers were in excess of that in Tasmania,[11] to further its argument that a team in Western Sydney was a higher priority. The Senate enquiry found that insurmountable cultural barriers would make such a move non-viable.[12]
In April 2008, former Tasmanian premier Paul Lennon revived the push for an AFL team by travelling to AFL House in Melbourne and launching a bid for a 19th licence. Lennon retired in May, the responsibility of steering the bid went to Economic Development Minister Paula Wriedt. Wriedt said Tasmania only made the case for a Tasmanian team, and was not trying to beat the Gold Coast or Greater Western Sydney to be the 17th or 18th club.[13] The bid received a significant boost in July 2008, when confectionery company Mars committed to being the proposed club's major sponsor.[14] The bid was ultimately rejected, with Wriedt later commenting that Demetriou had been dismissive of the Tasmanian bid amidst his focus on the Gold Coast and Sydney teams.[15]
Through this time, it was speculated that the AFL was holding Tasmania open as a soft target for relocation of struggling Melbourne clubs. In 2012, there was increased speculation when North Melbourne – which had considered relocation to Gold Coast prior to the Suns' admission – committed to move home games to Hobart's Bellerive Oval, initially two, then later four.[16] As a result, Tasmania hosted eight AFL games annually throughout the late 2010s: North Melbourne hosting four in Hobart and Hawthorn hosting four in Launceston.
2011–2017: Off the agenda and bare draft crop
In April 2014, AFL deputy chief executive Gillon McLachlan said he supported a single team representing Tasmania. He stated Tasmania would be the next team to join the AFL, but that this would not happen for at least a decade.[17] In 2016, the Garlick report confirmed that a stand-alone Tasmanian team would have to wait until at least after the active broadcast deal expired at the end of the 2022 season to enter the AFL.[citation needed] For the 2016 AFL National Draft no Tasmanian players were drafted. In April 2017, the Tasmanian Government indicated its interest in relocating the Gold Coast Suns to Tasmania, in the event the new club which was still struggling were to collapse.[18]
In February 2018, Trisha Squires took over from Rob Auld as CEO of AFL Tasmania. At the time, the organisation was unsure whether Tasmania would be better off under its existing deals with Hawthorn and North Melbourne, or its own side.[20] Squires described talk of a standalone Tasmanian team as a "distraction".[20] Around the same time, the A-League (Australia's top soccer league) announced a planned expansion for 2019/20, and identified an ultimately unsuccessful Tasmanian bid as a contender.
In response, the AFL formed a Tasmanian football steering committee,[21] which in July 2018 delivered recommendations to improve junior and state-level Tasmanian football – including funding targets, the re-establishment of Tasmanian teams in Victoria's under-18s and state-level senior leagues, and improved junior pathways[22] – but did not recommend establishing a senior AFL team, instead determining that the success or failure of these plans would drive future efforts for a senior team.[22]
In September 2018, AFL Tasmania announced that all of its representative Tasmanian football teams would be known as the Tasmania Devils and would wear green, yellow and maroon – the nickname and colours worn by VFL team which AFL Tasmania had administed between 2001 and 2008.[1] The AFL applied for a trade mark with IP Australia for the Tasmania Devils logo in May 2019,[23] and the Tasmania Devils under-18s team began playing in the NAB League from 2019.
2019 taskforce
The pathway to Tasmania's successful bid took its first major step in 2019, when AFL advised the Government of Tasmania its guideline prerequisites for an AFL team:[24] at least 50,000 members; up-front capital of $40,000,000; a unified Tasmanian football community; AFL standard venues; a minimum of 10 Tasmanian-raised players in the AFL; and a respectful exit strategy for North Melbourne and Hawthorn. At this point, there were already 90,000 Tasmanian-based members of existing mainland AFL clubs.
In mid-2019, a government-appointed taskforce comprising businesspeople Brett Godfrey, Errol Stewart, Grant O'Brien, Julie Kay, Paul Eriksson and James Henderson formed to work on the bid.[25][26] Under its 2019 planning basis, the taskforce aimed to enter the competition in 2025, and first proposed plans to build a new stadium and training facility at Hobart's Macquarie Point. In November 2019 the Taskforce run petition surpassed 60,000 pledges in support of a Tasmanian AFL team.[27][9]
The bid's progress stalled in 2020 due to the uncertainty and upheaval of COVID-19 pandemic, particularly as the 2020 AFL season was suspended and the full financial impact was yet to be seen.[28] However, the taskforce continued towards its original 2025 goal, and put forward its business case.
2021 bid
2021: Conflict and the Carter report
In 2020, Tasmania had new premier in former East Launceston player Peter Gutwein, who took a much more aggressive stance than his predecessors in driving the Tasmanian bid with the AFL.[30]
In 2021, Gutwein's government refused to negotiate an extension of the Hawthorn and North Melbourne deals – set to expire in 2022 – until it received a firm timetable for the introduction of a Tasmanian team.[31] One week later, the AFL formally responded by rejecting the demand for a concrete timeline, and instead pledged to set up an independent review into the merits of Tasmania's bid which would report back no later than early 2022.[32] Gutwein accused the AFL of stonewalling, stating "after receiving our business case 12 months ago, it beggars belief the AFL has not been able to consider it fully over the last year and now, to add insult to injury, want to take up to another year before providing clarity on the future of a Tasmanian team".[33] In response, the AFL highlighted the need to review financial and investments risks following the COVID-19 pandemic on the football industry.[34]
The independent review was overseen by former AFL Commissioner and Geelong Football Club president Colin Carter.[35] The Carter Review was completed well ahead of schedule and presented to the AFL Commission in late July 2021.[36] This review determined that a 19th licence could be awarded to a stand-alone Tasmanian team, but that a relocated team or a joint venture team between Tasmanian stakeholders and a Victorian team "would arguably produce a more sustainable outcome and therefore should be considered before a 19th licence".[37] The report also found that the economic barriers to a 19th team could be overcome with the ongoing assistance of government and league funding.[38]
Gutwein was annoyed that the report did not advocate for a 19th licence, and continued to hold up the North Melbourne and Hawthorn deals. Subsequently, a deal was struck between the Tasmanian Government and the AFL that retained these deals, while agreeing to put the matter of the 19th licence to the 18 club presidents in March 2022.[39][40]
2022-23 bid submission and acceptance
Momentum for the bid began to build in 2022. In March 2022, Gutwein unveiled designs for a proposed 27,000-seat, retractable-roof stadium to be built at Regatta Point on the banks of the River Derwent, within walking distance of the Hobart City Centre,[41][42] with an estimated cost of $750 million, and earliest completion date of 2027 – to be built contingent on the AFL bid being successful.[43]
The same month, an AFL review concluded that it had the finances and resources to support a Tasmanian team in an expanded competition, after suffering far lower than feared losses during the COVID-19 pandemic,[44] although significant State Government financial backing would also be required to secure their admission.[45] At the AFL club presidents meeting ahead of the 2022 season launch, McLachlan said that while the ongoing work around Tasmania's bid remains confidential, that "The framework is there, the discussions are getting meatier, and the heavy lifting will be happening over the coming months."[46]
In November 2022, in-principle agreement was reached between the AFL and Tasmanian Government – now under new premier Jeremy Rockliff – on commercial terms for Tasmania's bid for a 19th licence.[47] The Tasmanian government's funding commitment included $12 million per year over 12 years, plus $60 million towards a high-performance and administration complex.[47] The final outstanding prerequisite was securing full funding for the Macquarie Point Stadium. This was secured in April 2023, when the AlbaneseFederal Government committed $240 million of federal funding to the stadium.[48][49]
With prerequisites met and the AFL Commission in favour, the only remaining step was a vote of the 18 club presidents which – under long-standing provisions in the AFL Constitution – required a two-thirds majority.[50] The vote was held on 2 May 2023 and won unanimous support.[51]Gillon McLachlan formally announced the team's admission to the AFL at North Hobart Oval on 3 May, with the men's team will join the Australian Football League from its 2028 season, and the timeline for its AFL Women's team to be developed later.[52]
Venues and travel
Left: Bellerive Oval would serve as the club's home ground in Hobart. Right: Tasmania's potential second ground, UTAS Stadium (York Park) in Launceston.
Due to the distribution of Tasmania's relatively small population between Hobart in the south (250,000 as of 2021) and Launceston in the north (87,000), as well as the long-standing football rivalry between the south and north of the state, it has long been proposed that a Tasmania club would use one home ground in each of the two cities, which are approximately 200 km apart.
A Tasmanian AFL team's main home venue in Hobart would be a new stadium at Macquarie Point, to begin construction in the near future, and be completed by 2029.[53]Bellerive Oval is the current stadium in use in Hobart. York Park is the current stadium used in Launceston.