The Cairns Post

COACH FORGOES PAY

Scott stands tall in crisis

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MARK ROBINSON AND JON RALPH

as AFL coaches brace for inevitable job losses as part of drastic cuts in football department spending during the coronaviru­s shutdown.

Football department­s had exploded in size over the past decade but are set to be significan­tly scaled back as clubs prepare to take massive financial hits.

Each club’s soft cap expenditur­e is reportedly set to drop from $9.7 million this year to just $6.7 million for 2021.

It means the number of assistant and developmen­t coaches, football analysts and recruiting staff at each club will likely be slashed. Most football department employees are already on leave as AFL clubs operate with skeleton staff during the competitio­n shutdown.

AFL Coaches’ Associatio­n chief executive Mark Brayshaw told SEN radio yesterday that he expected at least three years of aggressive cost cutting as the competitio­n dealt with the COVID-19 fallout.

“There’s no question the (senior coaches) I’m speaking to are fearful that the headcount will be reduced because we are going through such a catastroph­ic financial challenge that is inevitably going to require a lower budget across every single area of a footy club,” Brayshaw said.

“But also very few industries are escaping this as well and they’ve all got friends outside (football) that are doing it worse.

“I can’t see the circumstan­ce where football department­s aren’t going to operate off much lower soft caps for the foreseeabl­e future and I’m certain that coaches are across that as well.”

Brayshaw said senior coaches were fearful for the viability of the AFL’s smaller clubs and were eager to help.

With AAP

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