With the league's pre-season cheese convention well and truly underway, the suited ones have headed west to Adelaide to argue about money. Chunks of cheese have dominated The Smother this week, and the unfettered cheddar discussion has continued with the revelation that outgoing AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou took home $3.8m for his efforts in 2013.
Although the figure is inflated by a $2m performance payment which was earned over previous years - presumably for achieving goals like not taking a six week mid-season jaunt around Europe - there are many within AFL land who think the fee to be somewhat excessive. On this we agree, but that may be a case of sour grapes given that negotiations with our own Big Cheese, the CEO at Smother Enterprises, fell well short of expectations. We are pleased with the decision not to fire us, but we continue to oppose the Eddie McGuire style public lashings that the boss has instituted. Our opposition, however, only seems to increase the intensity of the whippings. Truth be told, we're not real good at helping ourselves.
Speaking of which, with Sydney set to lose their controversial cost-of-living-allowance (COLA), we wonder if they too have been hoisted by their own petard. While, perhaps not so much as hoisted by their own petard, rather purchasing as many petards as they could carry, delivering them personally to Eddie McGuire and telling him to do with them as he wished. With the COLA argument heating up, common wisdom might have suggested keeping their heads down and avoiding anything that might serve as a flash-point in the argument. Something like, you know, signing the league's biggest player to a multi-millon dollar ten-year deal.
Instead, the Swans made a substantial donation to the armaments of the very men who were campaigning to have the COLA abolished, and in the end it has proved too much for the league to ignore. Although Demetriou denies that Buddy influenced the decision to remove the allowance, he also denied having any regrets about the way he handled the ASADA saga....
In the news...
The 18 AFL Captains gathered at the redeveloped Adelaide Oval today, and they wasted no time in coming out swinging against the Herald Sun. "As leaders of the playing group, we think it's appropriate to stand up, and lend our voice and influence, in condemning the mistreatment of vulnerable players. That's our responsibility" said the captain of the captains, Matthew Pavlich.
The AFL also took the opportunity to do some market research on the skippers, revealing that Hawthorn, Sydney and Fremantle are Premiership favourites among the admittedly niche market of AFL Captains. They also chose Scott Pendlebury for the Brownlow, Travis Cloke and Josh Kennedy to share the Coleman and Jack Martin as Rising Star.
While it's small change for Demetriou, Carlton's Marc Murphy is close to re-signing with the Blues on a 4 year, $700,000-a-season deal.
And finally, Geelong's George Burberry has celebrated returning to training - after having his jaw broken in the pre-season - by donning a rather fitting bright pink cap.
Wednesday, 5 March 2014
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
Tuesday, March 4, 2014: Replacing the tribunal with a system of public floggings committed in city square
Oh, Eddie, where would this column be without you? The whiteboard here at Smother House has been completely barren, save for the crudely constructed illustrations of phalli from various angles, and we'd all but given up hope of producing anything with a mere resemblance to a meaningful dissertation before that highly anticipated first wonky bounce of the 2014 season. But there you were, Eddie, on a high-horse that is becoming so high we're beginning to doubt that even you will be able to dismount safely.
"The next team that cheats and the next administration that does it, they should be be put in the city square and flogged" said the typically calm McGuire, "it's time for them to actually kick into the competition and for a few clubs pull their head in and stop cheating and burning the competition to the ground every other year."
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Big Ed's relentless diatribe against the unnamed rogues who threaten an apocalyptic derailment of all that is pure was not the sole item on today's football agenda. With over 24 hours having transpired since the shock resignation of Big Cheese Andrew Demetriou, attention has turned to the future of large cheeses - the next CEO of the AFL. Rapidly expanding cheese Gillon McLachlin is almost certain to take the job, but with the Herald Sun needing to sell newspapers and the AFL keen to show it's probity in these matters, we can expect a myriad of names, sensible and otherwise, to be thrown forward in the coming months.
Hence, as we enter our second calendar month of existence, we're proud to announce the newest segment to join the Smother ranks, a thorough analysis of the range of cheddar trying to get it's parmes-on the the biggest office in the land.
Gillion In the Name Of...
Given his desire to replace the tribunal with a system of public floggings committed in city square, a McGuire push for the top job - a job in which he would theoretically be able to put his Dickensian plans into action - seemed a mere formality. Unless, of course, you remember just how important Collingwood is. "It's bad enough having to fund them, without having to run it" said McGuire of a potential demotion to the AFL job.
This leaves Channel 9's Jeff Browne, AFL Commissioner Paul Bassatt, Geelong CEO Brian Cook, West Coast CEO Trevor Nisbett and MCC guru Stephen Gough as likely competitors in the AFL's selection process, a process that is absurd according to Kangaroos' boss James Brayshaw. "When you've got such a high-quality candidate sitting there, why would you bother with any of that. Just appoint him." said Brayshaw, perhaps unawares of the fate of other high-quality candidates like Stephen Dank.
So even though the job is Gillon's to lose, we'll be keeping a keen eye on the process the league uses to select him. After all, we mustn't become too distracted by those angry young men running around on a patch of grass and forget what this game is really about - men in suits arguing about money.
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In the news...
Far from tempering expectations for the upcoming season, Gold Coast's Dion Prestia has declared his nascent group of roustabouts near certainties to win the 2014 flag. "There's a lot of boys who have played over 50 games now and there'll be a few more this year. We're not going to have any excuses any more," he crowed. "We expect to win every game we go into. Our first few years we'd think 'we're playing a top-four team, we're probably not going to win', but we can match it with anyone I reckon."
Port Adelaide's Andrew Moore has supported hair testing of players for drugs, which can pick up any usage in the last three months. "Obviously in the off season guys will go away, do their own thing but it's important that they realise what career they have." he said in an attempt to end the career of several of the AFL's biggest names. Port's Irish recruit Daniel Flynn has headed home to deal with homesickness and a terminally-ill grandfather.
The Match Review Panel has issued its findings on the NAB Challenge, with Scott Selwood fined $900 for inappropriate-pushing-of-a-player-into-an-umpire, Ryan O'Keefe can accept 93.75 points for striking Selwood. Billy Smedts can also accept 93.75 points for inappropriate-Toumpas-touching.
In further bad news for the Saints, Lenny Hayes has been given a week for striking Stephen Congilio and Maverick Weller has also copped a week for Tomas Buggery.
Despite St. Kilda now missing many of it's few stars for the round one grudge match with Melbourne, Matt Finnis has accepted the job of CEO at St. Kilda. His first act in the role will presumably to contact Clive Palmer about any spare seats on his Titanic.
Joel Selwood, who is suffering from 'awareness' in his leg, has revealed his issues with sentient body parts might have spread. "I've got to listen to my body right now and make sure that I am right", he said, although he is confident of playing round one.
Monday, 3 March 2014
Monday, March 3, 2014: At least on par with professional cycling....
So that's that, the inaugural NAB Challenge has been run and won... well, run at least, owing to the abandonment of the NAB Cup, there were no winners. But it happened, and that's got to stand for something.
According to some, who we haven't met but assume exist somewhere in the dark underbelly of AFL House, the 18 games in 18 days format was an unqualified success. Spreading football across the country with games in far-reaching places like Wagga Wagga, Ballarat and even in the sparse docklands of Melbourne is an admirable goal - and we think it's fair to say the event took on a life of its own, well, it at least looked that way from the filthy couches of Smother House.
Speaking of taking on a life its own, we have to spare a thought for Geelong captain Joel Selwood. Selwood was subbed out of the penultimate NAB Challenge match on Friday night after experiencing sentience in his hamstring. "Selwood experienced some awareness in his leg" Tweeted the club, leaving journalists to ask whether the leg was happy at Geelong and if, under the new free-agency agreements, the leg could sign a separate contract and nominate for the rookie draft.
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But that is all old news now, 11 days before the first (probably diagonal and recalled) bounce of 2014, the Biggest of Cheeses, Andrew Demetriou has announced that this will be his last season at the helm. The man who brought football to the Gold Coast and Blacktown, denied it to Tasmania and is currently engaged in a ferocious campaign to turn the game into a working example of communism will be sorely missed, according to fawning AFL Commission Chairman Mike Fitzpatrick.
"Andrew has been one of the most influential CEOs in our history" he told the waiting media, pointing to the establishment of an integrity unit as one of his crowning achievements. "Andrew has been the first in Australia sport - after the racing industry - to deliver an integrity unit" said Fitzpatrick, suggesting the league was now, in terms of integrity, at least on par with professional cycling.
Credit should also go to metal health advocate Jeff Kennett, waiting 2 torturous hours after the announcement to get himself in the papers. "I hope Mike Fitzpatrick is also resigning because the AFL commission has been far from active, far from good at upholding good governance and the AFL commission has accepted no responsibility itself for the failing of the code over the last three years" he barked at Fairfax radio.
Still, it would be unfair of us not to give the last word in The Monday Smother to the AFL's CEO of the decade, and certainly the greatest we've seen since Wayne Jackson. "I didn't inject anyone ... it had had no impact on me" said Demetriou of the Essendon scandal, leaving us to wonder whether the league was a little harsh on James Hird.
In the news...
In the weekends results, Collingwood overcame a 41 point half-time deficit to defeat the Suns by 14 points at Metricon, while the Giants smashed the Saints on Saturday night in Wagga Wagga and Friday night saw the Cats defeat Melbourne by 13.
Meanwhile the ASADA investigation continues to leak like a sieve, with News Limited spending the weekend naming and shaming Essendon players who are under investigation. We have joined Fairfax in choosing not to name the players, our concerns not being the breach of privacy but the refusal of our own Big Cheese to buy us an online subscription to the Herald Sun.
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