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Showing posts with label NFL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NFL. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2014

End of week sports geek - summary of the best of the weekend's sport

By Paul Frederickson

What a weekend of sport we have ahead of us!

Who will be laughing this Saturday afternoon?
AFL Grand Final

Hawthorn and Sydney have arguably been the best two AFL teams of the past few years, So who wins this weekend's sumptuous Grand Final? Buddy, Tippett, Reid and Goodes in the Swans forward line, wow! Against North Melbourne last week the Sydney forward line kicked 12 goals between them. If Sydney break even in the middle they win. Cheer, cheer the red and the white.

NRL Preliminary Finals

It's been a tough, bruising season in the NRL. A rest week, the chance to heal some wounds and relax sore muscles can make all the difference. For that reason next week's Grand Final will be the South Sydney Rabbitohs versus the Penrith Panthers.

World football

Liverpool versus Everton is always an exciting match and even this early in the season this is a pivotal game for both teams as they are desperate to kick-start their campaigns.

In much the same way as Liverpool versus Everton the Arsenal versus Tottenham game will have supporters in a frenzy and the experts sharpening their knives for whoever fails in this brilliant derby.

Schalke versus Borussia Dortmund shapes up as the pick of the rest of European football. Teams who have started off slowly and against expectations seem to be the theme of this week's world football section. Dortmund must win or even this early their European ambitions are in trouble and their Bundesliga ambitions are already finished.

NFL

The pick of the week is the Green Bay Packers versus the Chicago Bears in a pivotal NFC North clash. Rogers v Cutler in the battle of great quarterbacks. Green Bay have already lost two Conference games and cannot afford to lose against a divisional rival. At 1-3 and losing to a divisional rival Green Bay's season would be almost over even a quarter of a way into the season.

That's my best of the weekend's sporting world. What are your thoughts? What are you looking forward to the most?

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Superbowl shows the way to the FFA

By Paul Frederickson

As I watch my beloved Miami Dolphins lose another winnable game I realise we are years away from playing in a Superbowl. Reflecting on the brilliant Superbowls I've seen over the years I can't help but think that the FFA have a clear example of how to continue to build our national league and the season ending grand final.

Seattle the current Super Bowl holders
The NFL has two conferences with internal divisions. The winners of each conference plays off in what we would consider the Grand Final, the Superbowl. With the distance and cost of travel for A-League teams, once large scale expansion occurs the concept should be investigated by the FFA. Each team could play the teams in their own conference twice and then teams from outside of their conference once, thus saving the teams money as well as keeping the players fresh with less travel fatigue endured.

The NFL regular season coverage is split between different free-to-air stations and pay television providers depending on where the games are played. The Superbowl on the other hand is exclusive to free-to-air. This allows for the premier event on the NFL calendar to be seen by as many people as possible. Not only has the Superbowl grown the national game it has become an international game. This has brought unprecedented revenue to the NFL and their franchises. With the huge potential Asian audience for the A-League as well as a growing domestic audience free-to-air coverage, now provided by SBS on Friday nights must continue to grow.

The huge audience for the Superbowl, estimated at over 105 million people, is a massive incentive for advertisers. It is estimated that an Superbowl advertisement can cost $25,000 per second and approximately $3 million dollars per advertising segment. Whilst the A-League could never expect such numbers, a bigger Asian audience will broaden the potential advertisers and revenue streams beyond what is domestically available.

The Superbowl moniker was conceived in 1966 and in a relatively short period has become the mega-event that it is today. Initially conceived as the competition between the initial NFL and rival AFL the hyperbole from coaching luminaries including Vince Lombardi has built the event. Traditionalists may believe that the Premier's Plate decides the best team of the season but the Australian public lauds Grand Final winners. We should play the final game on a Saturday night with both contesting teams having a week off to allow for injuries to heal, players to freshen up and for the build up to encourage media participation and anticipation.

The A-League grand final may never meet the heights of the Superbowl but that is not to say that we shouldn't aim for the same high standards.

What are your thoughts on what the FFA can learn from the NFL?