September 19, 2024

Former Collingwood president Eddie McGuire has declared North Melbourne must “stand for something” or face being cut from the AFL. The looming introduction of the Tasmania Devils in 2028 will see the Kangaroos lose their link to the Apple Isle and their Next Generation Academy.AFL 2023: North Melbourne Kangaroos get special assistance package from  league

And McGuire believes the club needs to focus on northern Victoria, up the Hume Highway and into the outer sprawl suburbs of Melbourne to establish itself as more than just a lowly Melbourne club. North are one of the smaller Melbourne-based teams in the AFL and with the calls from AFL presidents, including McGuire, to keep the competition at 18 teams, they could be facing the axe prior to the Devils joining the comp in 2028.

McGuire fears the club doesn’t have a strong enough identity and says they are the prime candidate to make way if the AFL opts to keep the competition at 18 teams. “If North don’t (expand their influence to northern Victoria), I can tell you – non-Victorian presidents and some of the Victorian presidents, don’t want to have 19 teams,” McGuire said on Nine’s Eddie and Jimmy podcast on Monday.

“There’s an easy solution for this. One will go. And it wasn’t that long ago that St Kilda were right under the microscope on this.”

The former long-term Collingwood boss has long been critical of adding a 19th team. Before Tasmania were confirmed as a new side in the league, McGuire urged the AFL to merge North Melbourne with the Tasmanian side and share its schedule between Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium and the proposed $750 million Hobart Stadium.

Ahead of the first Tasmanian team entering the AFL, the Kangaroos agreed to play some of their games in the state before the Devils’ introduction. But with North attracting poor crowds as they languish winless at the bottom of the AFL ladder, Maguire believes the AFL need to scrap that move and bring some of the powerhouse AFL teams to Tasmania.

“I think the AFL should move North out of there, pay them the money and start bulking up those games in Tasmania and send some of the big clubs down once a year to get the Tasmania people lined up and excited (for their team in 2028),” McGuire said. “They weren’t excited by the weekend, I can promise you. Send the good teams down there.”

 

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