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read moreWith the funding of the planned new Hobart Stadium having emerged as a major issue in the Tasmanian election, AFL Chief Executive Andrew Dillon has reiterated that the state must build a stadium for its team to be the competition’s 19th club.
With doubts emerging over whether the planned $715 million budget will be sufficient for the ground in Hobart's CBD and the Labor opposition having advised it will seek to renegotiate the deal agreed by the present Government, Dillon advised that the AFL is not backing away from its 'no stadium, no team' condition for the new Tasmanian club.
Tasmania Premier Jeremy Rockliff, who is aiming to be re-elected after calling an early poll for 23rd March, has pledged to cap state government spending on the Macquarie Point stadium at $375 million.
Opposition leader Rebecca White has vowed to renegotiate the deal with the AFL if Labor is elected, insisting the waterfront stadium is not "the right priority for our state".
White, who still wants an AFL team for Tasmania but without the cost to taxpayers, has noted “we also don't believe it can be built on that site, for that price and in that time frame.
When asked if he would be willing to renegotiate the agreement for the Tasmanian club, Dillon said he would not be drawn into "hypotheticals".
He noted “we've been really clear on saying that the licence that we have for the 19th team in Tasmania, which will be an amazing thing for Tasmania ... that we do need to have a stadium in Hobart, at Macquarie Point, (seating) at least 23,000 people and with a roof, because that was a pivotal part of the business case.”
Dillon was adamant the AFL would go ahead with unveiling the nickname, widely tipped to be the Devils, and jumper in March despite the possibility of a change of state government.
As well as the $375 million pledged by the Tasmanian Government, the Federal Government is contributing in $240 million, the AFL $15 million, while $85 million is expected to come from borrowings and the private sector.
The club is aiming to enter the competition as the 19th AFL team in 2028.
Images: Andrew Dillon speaks to reporters in 2023 (top, credit: AFL Photos) and the latest concept for the new Hobart Stadium (below, credit: Infrastructure Tasmania).
15th February 2024 - Tasmanian Premier makes election pledge to limit state government’s contribution to new Hobart Stadium at $375 million
13th February 2024 - Record ticket sales and membership figures drive strong AFL 2023 financial result
5th February 2024 - MoU signed on future AFL and AFLW content ahead of proposed UTAS Stadium transfer
9th February 2024 - City of Launceston votes to transfer ownership of UTAS Stadium
4th February 2024 - Scope of work revealed for upgrade to UTAS Stadium Launceston
31st January 2024 - Hobart City Council reaches agreement with Stadia Precinct Consortia on Macquarie Point Stadium 2.0
30th January 2024 - AFL records Australia’s largest sporting crowds in 2023
22nd December 2023 - Hobart eastern shores location selected for high-performance AFL training centre
11th December 2023 - Tasmanian Government launches community consultation for Hobart Stadium project
9th November 2023 - Plans for new Hobart stadium reach major milestone
18th October 2023 - Private consortium reveals alternative concept for Hobart’s AFL Stadium
16th October 2023 - Draft plan released for Hobart’s AFL stadium precinct
6th September 2023 - Controversial Hobart AFL stadium could generate $226 million a year for Tasmanian economy
22nd May 2023 - Tasmanian Government releases detail of deal with AFL for Hobart Stadium
20th May 2023 - AFL Chief Executive warns Tasmanian objectors ‘no expansion team without new Hobart Stadium’
13th May 2023 - Thousands rally in Hobart in ‘Stop the Stadium’ protest
27th April 2023 - Federal Government set to contribute $240 million for AFL stadium in Hobart
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