The Gold Coast Bulletin

SHARKS READY

- TOM BOSWELL

SOUTHPORT premiershi­p coach Stephen Daniel says the club would embrace the challenge of a new second-tier league if the predicted demise of the NEAFL comes true.

The AFL is working on a potential new competitio­n for 2021 or 2022 that would pit all AFL reserves teams in one league or in a two-conference format that includes Southport and teams from NSW, Victoria and Tasmania.

Given four AFL clubs currently feature in the NEAFL – Brisbane, Sydney, Gold Coast and GWS – it would leave the league with six teams and threaten its future.

“It would be great for Southport, without a doubt,” Daniel said of a potential new league on the Bulletin’s Aussie rules podcast.

SOUTHPORT premiershi­p coach Stephen Daniel says the club would embrace the challenge of joining a new secondtier league if the predicted demise of the NEAFL comes to fruition.

The AFL is working on a potential new competitio­n for 2021 or 2022 that would pit all AFL reserves teams in one league or in a two-conference format that includes Southport and teams from NSW, Victoria and Tasmania.

Given four AFL clubs currently feature in the NEAFL including Brisbane, Sydney, Gold Coast and GWS, it would leave the league with just six teams, threatenin­g its future.

In the second episode of the Bulletin’s Aussie rules podcast, Daniel backed the AFL’s proposed reserves competitio­n and believed the club would push for the shift into a new second-tier competitio­n against VFL clubs, as well as Tasmania and NSW.

“It would be great for Southport, without a doubt,” Daniel said.

“We are quite happy in the NEAFL at the moment but if something was to unfortunat­ely happen to it, I could not see Southport Football Club, with the way it’s run and the profession­alism of the place, going back to QAFL level.

“I think Southport would be now striving to play the highest level of football outside the AFL that they could.

“If we were offered to go to a new competitio­n with the likes of Port Melbourne, Williamsto­wn and maybe Tasmania, and the NT and whoever else, I’m pretty sure Southport would embrace that and look at doing it.

“I think they will have AFL teams in one and then have another strong competitio­n of a number of Victoria clubs.

“I’m sure they would have another competitio­n and I’m pretty sure they would fill it up quickly.

“There would be a lot of teams who would want to participat­e.”

Daniel said it would have positive effects on recruiting, opening the door for talented Queensland players to remain at home while playing in a high quality competitio­n.

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