The AFL has come under fire for allowing Brisbane to host the AFLW grand final at a venue that’s “nothing more than a glorified training pitch”.
On Friday the Lions won the right to host the season seven decider, but with both the bigger Gabba and Metricon Stadium unavailable, Brisbane has turned to their new base at Springfield.
Remarkably the brand new $80 million Brighton Homes Arena has only 600 grandstand seats available, and holds up to just 8000 people.
Furphy has made the commitment to provide equal support to its AFL and AFLW teams. Don’t support the AFLW? Unbelievable.
“When you’ve got venues that can hold 30/40/50,000 available next week, I don’t know if it’s the right call.”
SEN journalist Sam Edmund also questioned the choice of Brighton Homes Arena, where Brisbane will play either Melbourne or North Melbourne.
“It’s never hosted a game – it’s only had its turf laid down for heaven’s sake,” he said.
“It might be hosting an AFLW grand final that history has shown can attract more than 50,000 people.”
The AFLW grand final has drawn an average 23,000 fans across the five deciders, with Adelaide Oval hosting the past three – including the 2019 grand final attended by a whopping 53,034 people.
3AW journalist Tom Elliott believes Marvel Stadium would have been the better option for the AFLW given its capacity.
Lions will not fear GF venue drama | 00:44
“They are talking about a football ground called Springfield which is nothing more than a glorified training pitch,” he said this week.
“I find this utterly astonishing.
“The AFL keeps saying that it takes women’s football seriously – play the grand final at Marvel Stadium!
“If 50,000 people want to rock up and watch the two best women’s team go head-to-head against each other … play it at Marvel Stadium here in Melbourne because Marvel Stadium is owned by the AFL and be done with it.
“Don’t give home ground advantage. just don’t have a women’s grand final at what amounts to a training track.”
Fox Footy’s David King believes the AFL had set itself a precedence when it came to crowd size priority by allowing Richmond to lock out thousands of fans from the elimination final last weekend.
Tigers stand by home final decision | 01:15
The Tigers opted to play their home final at the club’s “spiritual home” Punt Road – which held just a few thousand fans.
“Richmond have set the course here – it’s not about the volume of people you can get to the venue,” King said on SEN.
Edmund was concerned the AFL had “walked into a battle they can’t win” by moving the AFLW season to later in the year – outside of its usual summer timeslot.
With the grand final in November instead of March/April, Brisbane’s bigger venues the Gabba and Metricon Stadium are already booked out.
The Gabba remains under cricket authority – with both a Sheffield Shield game and Australian Test in coming weeks, while Metricon Stadium is hosting a music festival featuring international superstar Calvin Harris.
Gabba to be unavailable for AFLW GF | 00:36
“There’s a debate every year from interstate clubs now: ‘We want the grand final in Perth, Adelaide, whatever’. It’ll never happen with the contract with the MCG. I think it’s admirable but with this new timeslot on the calendar, they’ve walked straight into a battle with cricket they can’t win,” he said.
Even Lions star Emily Bates admitted players were yet to actually get on the freshly laid Brighton Homes Arena turf.
“While the turf was laid only a month ago, we travelled to a nearby community field to train,” she said post preliminary final win.
“(But) we’ll be able to train on it this week.”
In a statement, the AFL confirmed it had conducted an “independent turf inspection” this week, where the ground was deemed “suitable to play”.