The Weekend Post

Final must go where fans are

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IF YOU love something, set it free.

Victorian footy fans must do the unthinkabl­e and support shifting the 2020 AFL Grand Final interstate. It’ll be infinitely better for the Grand Final to be played in front of a big crowd at a lesser stadium, in a lesser city, than at an empty but magnificen­t Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Normally, as a proud Victorian, I’d react with righteous anger upon hearing any talk of shifting the Grand Final from its spiritual home, but we are living through an insane period in human history.

Crazy times call for crazy measures and though it feels unnatural and wrong on every level, one must acknowledg­e that the disease-ridden city is no place for the biggest annual spectacle in Australian sport.

The Grand Final deserves to be played in front of tens of thousands of fans and if that can’t happen in Melbourne, then the AFL must ensure it happens in Queensland, NSW, Western Australia or even in the god forsaken badlands of South Australia.

Indeed, anywhere outside of Melbourne is a good option if it remains the unfortunat­e epicentre of the coronaviru­s crisis in Australia.

However, any move interstate must not be seen as a precedent; it should be considered a one-off in extraordin­ary times with the full expectatio­n that the premiershi­p game will return to the ’G as soon as the city is through the COVID-19 catastroph­e.

I reached out to several legends of the game for their take on the Grand Final conundrum and I’m happy to report that all, naturally, agreed with my sage judgment.

“A crowd interstate for the grand final is a better option than a nocrowd Grand Final at the MCG,” said four-time premiershi­p player, fourtime premiershi­p coach and the game’s greatest ever player, Leigh Matthews.

“If it can’t be played in front of a crowd at the MCG, and crowds are available elsewhere, then I think it should be played elsewhere,” said premiershi­p player and double

Brownlow champion Chris Judd. “I don’t think they should lock it in elsewhere though until they’re super confident a crowd will be possible there.”

Western Bulldogs great and sixtime All-Australian Brad Johnson agreed that the AFL should wait a few weeks before determinin­g where the Grand Final would be played but said it was critical that the game be held in front of a large crowd.

“The AFL will need four to five weeks at a minimum to have a venue set given the logistics around holding a world-class event,” he said.

“Sydney will chase it, Queensland will definitely chase it, Adelaide will make a big play for it and so will Western Australia, the facilities at Adelaide Oval and Optus Stadium are unbelievab­le.

“We just want to play footy where it is safe … the fans are critical, I think if we can get to the point the AFL Grand Final is played in front of 60,000 plus fans that’s the way to do it … an empty MCG just wouldn’t be right come Grand Final day.”

Hawthorn premiershi­p player and Brownlow medallist Shane Crawford is also in favour of the Grand Final being played interstate if fans can attend and he’s rooting for footy’s new temporary home, Queensland.

“The Grand Final should be played with a crowd, Queensland is my pick since they have saved the AFL this year,” Crawford said.

However, as it stands, the AFL still plans to hold the Grand Final in Melbourne on October 17 even though all Victorian clubs will be based in Queensland for the rest of the season.

AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan will have to consider other options if Melbourne is still in lockdown and on Wednesday Victorian Sports Minister Martin Pakula made it clear that the AFL could not hold the Grand Final on Saturday afternoon due to a clash with the Caulfield Cup.

“If the AFL Grand Final happens to be on October 17, or on any of our feature race days, the AFL will work around racing — whether that means putting it on at night, or the Sunday — but it definitely will not go headto-head with the race meeting,” Pakula said on RSN radio.

The Grand Final at a deserted MCG on a Saturday night is a depressing prospect. Better to let Queensland or Western Australia take the game and give the spectacle the atmosphere it deserves.

Rita Panahi is a Herald Sun columnist rita.panahi@news.com.au

@RitaPanahi

Rita Panahi NORMALLY, AS A PROUD VICTORIAN, I’D REACT WITH RIGHTEOUS ANGER UPON HEARING ANY TALK OF SHIFTING THE GRAND FINAL FROM ITS SPIRITUAL HOME ...

 ?? Picture: AAP ?? HOME: Fans arrive at the MCG for last year’s Grand Final.
Picture: AAP HOME: Fans arrive at the MCG for last year’s Grand Final.
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