fdddc0f5a83bb46ed33b50970ed7c81b.ppt
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2016 Community Football Education Roadshow GWS GIANTS HEADQUARTERS, Saturday 21 February
AGENDA 1. Insurance 2. Working With Children 3. Sports Trainer & Concussion Update 4. Fundraising Opportunities 5. Suppliers & Partners 6. Anti-Doping (ASADA) 7. Transfers & Permits 8. Volunteer Recognition 9. AFL Club Improvement Program 10. 2016 Important Dates 11. Umpire Update 12. Multicultural and Indigenous Update 13. Resource Packs 14. Volunteer Management 15. Game Day Roles & Responsibilities © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 2
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM CERTIFICATE OF CURRENCY All Clubs must register and download the Certificate of Currency at the JLT website: http: //afl. jltsport. com. au/ © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 3
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 4
REGISTERING YOUR CLUB – CERTIFICATE OF CURRENCY (CLUBS TO REGISTER) © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 5
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM AFL NSW/ACT have maintained the Silver Level Cover for personal injury insurance for 2016 So what does this mean for your Club and its members? – No expected increase in insurance from 2015 What being covered with Silver Level Insurance gives your members over Bronze? – A 25% increase in reimbursement on Non-Medicare Medical costs – A $500 increase in the maximum amount per claim – A $250, 000 increase in Quadriplegia/ Paraplegia benefit BRONZE 2016 SILVER 2016 50% Reimbursement 75% Reimbursement $2, 000 max. Per claim $2, 500 max. Per claim $100 excess per claim $75 excess per claim Capital Benefits $100, 000 ($20, 000 for U 18) $150, 000 ($30, 000 for U 18) Quadriplegia/ Paraplegia Benefit $500, 000 maximum $750, 000 maximum Non-Medicare Medical Costs (examples include: Ambulance, Physio, Dental, Chiro, Private Hospital accomodation) © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 6
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM 2016 EXPECTED INSURANCE COSTS: SENIOR TEAMS - $1425 per team JUNIOR or U 19 TEAMS - $210 per team ** Please note – there will be NO Club/Teams discounts © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 7
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM When does Personal Injury Insurance apply? Personal Injury insurance provides coverage for injuries sustained whilst participating in an activity under the following circumstances: ü An official match or training session (pre-season and regular season) ü Travelling to and from an official club activity ü Participation in an official club function ü Tours or representative matches What cover is generaly provided within a Personal Injury policy? ü Capital Benefits – provides cover in the event of death or permanent disability. I. e. a participant loses permanent sight in one eye due to a ball hitting him. The claimant can claim for permanent disablement under the section ü Non-Medicare Medical Benefits – provides reimbursement for items that are not claimable in any way through Medicare. Due to legislation, this does not include the Medicare Gap. i. e. a participant requires a knee reconstruction resulting from a sporting injury. A claim can be made through this section of the policy for items not covered in part by Medicare. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 8
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM How do I make a Personal Injury claim? Step 1: Access a claim form - Download from JLT Sport Website (www. jltsport. com. au) - Phone Echelon on 1800 640 009 to have one sent to you by post Step 2: Complete all relevant sections of the claim form Step 3: Send your claim form to your nominated claims advisor within 270 days from the date of injury (earlier is preferable) Step 4: Your claims advisor will confirm receipt of your claim Examples of Non-Medicare Medical items. Examples of items covered by Medicare. Claimable as per the Policy Wording. Costs you WILL NOT be reimbursed for. • Ambulance • Physiotherapist • Dental • Private Hospital Accommodation • Chiropractor • MRI Scans* (if provider is not registered with Medicare) • Doctor’s Fees • Surgeon’s assistant • Anaesthetist Fees • X-rays • MRI scans* (if provider is registered with Medicare) • Public Hospital costs © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 9
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM • To upgrade your cover on non-medicare medical cover (RECOMMENDED): Upgrade Per Snr Team Per Jnr Team Silver – Gold $222 $59 Silver – Platinum $390 $82 • Regardless we always recommend you advise your players to take out Private Health Insurance • All Representative Players participating in a representative match will receive Platinum Personal Injury Cover and $1 m Quadriplegia/Paraplegia cover under the Personal Injury Policy. Platinum cover is for injuries which occurred in Representative matches only. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 10
AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL RISK PROTECTION PROGRAM WHY IT IS IMPORTANT FOR YOUR PLAYERS TO TAKE OUT PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE The table to the left is a GUIDE ONLY EXAMPLE: Two players, one with and one without Private Health Insurance, suffer the same injury, require the same treatment and incur the same medical costs. * Based on 80% private health reimbursement of surgery incurred costs and 45% of extra’s cover on physiotherapy N. B: With Private Health Insurance coverage ( to be claimed on before claiming under this program), the person claiming will further reduce the non-Medicare rebate available. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 11
JLT MATCH DAY CHECKLIST © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 12
JLT MATCH DAY CHECKLIST • Match Day Checklists are compulsory to be completed by all HOME club prior to the start of the first match each day. One check list per venue per day. • The App will work without phone / internet reception. The Checklist can still be completed and it will then submit itself when the phone comes into an area of mobile coverage • Photos can be taken of areas of concern and/or repairs, again strengthening the evidence of providing Duty of Care WHY IS IT COMPULSORY FOR CLUBS TO COMPLETE THE CHECKLIST? Clubs owe a duty of care to players, spectators and volunteers on match day. Insurance cover may not exist for clubs and/or officials who show deliberate negligence or disregard for these responsibilities. Checklist puts the club in a strong position to demonstrate it has taken a duty of care. WHO IS TO COMPLETE THE FORM? Home club is responsible to ensure the greater environment of the venue is safe for members and guests and therefore a home club representative must submit the online checklist WHAT IF THE CONDITIONS ARE NOT SAFE? If conditions can’t be made safe for play, then it may be negligent to start playing. To play in these conditions is placing the club in a poor position to demonstrate any duty of care. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 13
NAB AFL AUSKICK INSURANCE WHO IS COVERED? All registered NAB AFL Auskick competition participants and appointed volunteers* Insurance cost is included in participants registration. * Appointed volunteers means any volunteers appointed by the Club Auskick Coordinator for a specific term to participate on a regular basis during the Auskick Programme (this does not include parent helpers/volunteers on an ad-hoc basis). WHAT IS COVERED? ü ü ü Capital Benefit: Maximum $50, 000 Student Assistance Benefit Home Help Expenses Parents Inconvenience Allowance Non-Medicare Medical Expenses • 75% Reimbursement • $1, 500 Maximum Limit per Claim • $50 Excess Per Claim HOW TO MAKE A CLAIM? Via the “Making a Claim” section of the JLT Website www. jltsport. com. au/afl © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 14
WORKING WITH CHILDREN CHECK WHO NEEDS A CHECK? All Coaches, Assistant Coaches, Managers, Assistant Managers, Umpire Coordinators, First Aid officials, Sports Trainers and anyone who has direct and ongoing face-to-face contact with children is to obtain a clearance. HOW DO YOUR VOLUNTEERS GET A CHECK? 1. Visit the Kids Guardian NSW Website (http: //www. kidsguardian. nsw. gov. au/working-with-children/working-with -children-check/apply) 2. Complete the online application 3. Present themselves at a Service NSW Office or NSW Motor Registry for ID Verification (free for volunteers) 4. Present their Working with Children ID, Full name and Date of Birth to the Club for Verification CLUBS RESPONSIBILITY Ø VERIFY the volunteers WWC ID Online prior to the volunteer working with the children Ø Keep a valid Excel record of all club verification checks Ø Appoint a Club Protection Officer Ø Implement and adopt a Club Safe Environment © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 15
WORKING WITH CHILDREN CHECK A CHILD PROTECTION OFFICERS ROLE IS TO ENSURE THAT: ü All Working with Children Checks have been obtained by the appropriate people ü All checks have been validated by the club online and a record maintained. ü Be available to answer any questions in relation to obtaining a working with children check. ü Educate club members of the importance of a club safe environment. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS When do I need to get the check by? All checks should be completed ASAP. The legislation requires clubs to be compliant as of 1 April 2016. This means clubs may be audited for compliance as at 1 April 2016. We have coaches who are Under 18 do they require a check? No, children under 18 who are volunteering or working do not require under legislation to get a clearance. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 16
SPORTS TRAINER REQUIREMENTS LEVEL Auskick/ Junior 5 -12 Recommended: Trainer ERC Current First Aid Ideal: Trainer Recommended: TRAINING Youth 13 -17 Minimum: MATCH Senior 18+ ERC Current First Aid • First Aid: Must have completed Nationally Accredited Training in either of the following competencies (HLTFA 301 B or HLTFA 201) • Emergency Response Coordinator (ERC): Must have a current nationally accredited First Aid certificate and have completed an AFL Accredited Emergency Response Coordinator Training Course. • Trainer: Must have a current Nationally Accredited First Aid certificate, completed an AFL Accredited Emergency Response Coordinator Training Course and have completed a SMA Level 1 or a Level 1 Sports Trainer course. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 17
CONCUSSION MANAGEMENT Player welfare is the critical element 1. Recognise the injury: Suspect concussion in any player with one or more of the symptoms or signs after a knock to the head or heavy body clash 2. Remove from the game and refer the player for medical evaluation – Player must not return to the game 3. Ensure the player has received medical clearance before allowing them to return to the game or a graded training program 4. A concussed child must not return to play or sport until they have successfully returned to school without worsening symptoms If in doubt, sit them out © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 18
RECOGNISING THE INJURY Signs Symptoms ü Headache ü Nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain ü Dizziness ü Altered or lost vision ü Fatigue ü Ringing in the ears ü Memory disturbance ü Loss of consciousness Ø Loss of balance Ø Irritability Ø Pale complexion Ø Poor concentration Ø Slow or altered verbal skills Ø Inappropriate behavior ur Ø Mental confusion and memory loss Ø Not feeling your usual self! © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 19
POSITIVE STEPS FOR COACHES Ø Coach your players to play within the “Spirit of the Game” Ø Familiarise yourself with and follow the AFL’s Guidelines Ø Ensure your club has supplies of AFL Resources Ø Ensure all relevant match personnel have the same understanding Ø Display the AFL Concussion Poster in clubrooms Ø All medical support staff have SCAT 3 or pocket CRT cards Ø Educate players and parents about concussion and other safety policies Ø Provide player/parent handouts on match day © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 20
© Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 21
CLUB FUNDRAISING AFL NSW/ACT offers various opportunities to raise valuable funds for clubs. Some of those opportunities include. . . CLUB RAFFLE NAB INTRODUCER Headline prize of 4 tickets to the 2016 Toyota AFL Grand Final, including accommodation and airfares • Minimum order 15 Raffle Books (small clubs can apply for less) • Subsequent orders in multiples of 5 books The NAB Introducer Program allows a club to earn cash for any HOME, INVESTMENT or BUSINESS loan that you refer to the NAB. For introducing a loan to the NAB your club can receive the following commissions: • $3 a ticket – Club retains $2 of revenue • Home loan or investment loan = 0. 66% of the loan amount • Books cost $20 each • Business loan = 0. 50% of the loan amount • No refund for books not sold Order through Taleah. Neowhouse@aflnswact. com. au RAFFLE TICKETS GO ON SALE 2 MAY RAFFLE TICKETS ARE DUE BACK TO AFL NSW/ACT 22 JULY • For example: a home loan worth $300, 000 referred to NAB will earn your club a commission of $1, 980 • NB: This offer does not apply to NAB loans taken out through a Broker and the Introducer program must be mentioned at the beginning of the loan process. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 23
CLUB FUNDRAISING EXTERNAL GRANTS DEPARTMENT OF SPORT & RECREATION Visit www. dsr. nsw. gov. au for upcoming grants GO FOUNDATION Thinking of auction items or raffles for your upcoming Presentation or 2016 Club Registration Days? We have you sorted! Obtain one of the limited edition GO Foundation Indigenous Ball’s personally signed by Michael O’Loughlin and Adam Goodes, the only two Indigenous players who have both played 300 games for the Sydney Swans These balls are FREE. The only thing we ask is that your club gives 15% of the money they raise from the ball to The GO Foundation, as thanks to Goodes and O’Loughlin for their contribution to the program. To obtain a ball please email taleah. neowhouse@aflnswact. com. au © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 24
SPORTS MEDICAL SUPPLIER COMMERCIAL SUPPLIERS (Strapping / First Aid / Sports Medical) VICTOR SPORTS 2 Kent Road Mascot, NSW, 2020 Tel: +612 9211 0033 Fax: +612 9281 0711 admin@victor-sports. com http: //www. victor-sports. com/ COACHING EQUIPMENT SUPPLIER HART SPORT info@hartsport. com. au https: //www. hartsport. com. au Tel: 1300 764 719 MATCH BALLS SHERRIN www. aflnswact. com. au (Manage Football / Sherrin Football Order Form) Email Order Forms through Taleah Neowhouse: Taleah. neowhouse@aflnswact. com. au © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 25
APPAREL SUPPLIERS Aceit Sportswear Pty Ltd Dawn Gregory 02 4226 4054 sales@aceit. com. au BLK Formally Kooga Nathan Sullivan nathan@wrsgroup. com. au 0406 041 121 Canterbury International Andrew Suffell 0414 274 595 Andrew. suffell@canterburynz. com. au ISC Andrew Banasik 0499 013 909 abanasik@iscsport. com JS Sports Joseph Siciliano 08 8281 7155 joe@jssports. com. au APPROVED SUPPLIERS § AFL NSW/ACT Official suppliers are elected as the only supplier licensed to apply the AFL NSW/ACT logo onto any on or off-field playing apparel § Jumpers and shorts worn by clubs MUST feature the AFL NSW/ACT logo. Logo must be placed on the right breast on Guernsey and left leg of all shorts. § ON-FIELD apparel may only be purchased through 1 of the 6 suppliers § OFF-FIELD apparel may be purchased through an external provider but they may NOT use the AFL NSW/ACT logo. Off-field merchandise purchased through one of the 6 suppliers may feature the AFL NSW/ACT logo. Sherwood Narelle Orr 0403 956 878 narelle@sherwoodsportswear. com. au © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 26
Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA) AGREEMENT In 2010, AFL (NSW/ACT) subscribed to the ASADA anti-doping agreement: All community club footballers are subject to the code Covers: In-competition (Illicit and performance enhancing) Out of Competition (Performance enhancing only) Testing can be all year round (ASADA funded) Investigations can be conducted for the importation, distribution and use of supplements Under the code, all players are responsible for their own actions. For more information and to access educational modules go to: http: //www. asada. gov. au/education/index. html Even if it’s a cold and flu tablet… …when in doubt, check it out. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 27
TRANSFERS / PERMITS NB: Permanent transfers must be done prior to the 30 th June. No transfers will be allowed after this date. TYPE 1: MATCH DAY PURPOSE: Should ONLY be used if a junior player is “helping out” an opposition team TYPE 2: LOCAL INTERCHANGE Should be used when a player is playing in a different League, where the two Leagues have an Interchange Agreement signed. If no agreement has been signed then the player will need to be considered a full transfer (up until 30 June). PURPOSE: To allow players to transfer between Leagues on an adhoc basis for one off matches. TYPE 3: TEMPORARY TRANSFER Can only be used with NTFL PURPOSE: To allow players to transfer into the Northern Territory League during the off-season STUDENT PERMITS: All Student Permits must be processed and approved prior to the 30 th June. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 28
VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION – VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR (VOY) AWARDS CLUB VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR Each Club nominated VOY will receive a $50 Coles/Myer Voucher and Certificate LEAGUE VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR Nominated League VOY will receive a $200 Coles/Myer Voucher and a plaque. LEAGUE MERIT AWARD Each League nominated Merit Award will receive a $50 Coles/Myer Voucher and a plaque. EXTERNAL VOLUNTEER AWARDS Clubs are encouraged to nominate your volunteers for external awards such as Sport NSW Community Awards. VOLUNTEER & MERIT AWARD NOMINATIONS Open: 1 July Close: 5 August © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 29
AFL COMMUNITY CLUB IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (CIP) • • • AFL has changed the Swisse Quality Club program and has introduced The AFL Community Club Improvement Program. The Club Improvement Program aims to help clubs examine their current operations and identify areas of improvement. The Club Improvement Program looks at a number of factors that are crucial to success, and combines these results to build an overall picture of the way your club carries out its operations. The Club Improvement Program is the first step in growing your club and helping to make it sustainable. WHY THE NEED FOR A CLUB IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM? Promote best practice Ensure clubs are well administered Recognise a clubs off field performance Ability to highlight regions/ areas that require assistance Benchmark Leagues and Clubs © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 30
AFL COMMUNITY CLUB IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM HOW THE PROGRAM WORKS? HOW DO CLUBS ACCESS THE PROGRAM 1. Login to your clubs Footyweb account 2. Click on AFL Community Club Improvement Program Link on the right side under notifications (see screenshot below ) 1. Clubs complete an online assessment as a committee which should take approximately 30 minutes. 2. Clubs receive a detailed report outlining areas that need improvement 3. Clubs arrange a meeting with their relevant AFL NSW/ACT staff member to go through the report and highlight 2 -5 areas that clubs are to focus on improving 4. Based on answers provided Clubs may be identified as a Quality Club or Gold Quality Club Alternatively Go to www. afl. com. au/cip © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 31
• Policy & Procedure AFL COMMUNITY CLUB IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM • Risk Management • Compliance WHAT AREAS WILL THE REPORT COVER? • Planning • Workforce Culture & Leadership • Values Decision Making • Membership Services Upon completion clubs will receive a detailed report that provides best practice information to help formulate action plans on improving your clubs operations and governance in the future. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 32
REWARDS AND BENEFITS OF BEING INVOLVED? • Creating a best practice guide for your current Committee and all future Committees • Minimising the risks associated with running a club • Providing an atmosphere that will help attract new participants, officials and members • Providing an environment that will be attractive to sponsors/partners and help your club broaden its appeal within the wider community ACCREDITED CLUBS WILL RECEIVE: • • Certificates to display in clubrooms Logos for clubs to use on letterhead, website etc. Stickers to display in clubrooms Branding on the play AFL locator AFL NSW/ACT SPECIAL OFFER Each Month between March and September 2016 AFL NSW/ACT will draw 5 Clubs who have fully completed the online assessment and have been verified by a AFL NSW/ACT Staff member the chance to win $500 worth of Sherrin Footballs. TOTAL PRIZE POOL OF $20, 000 5 WINNERS EACH MONTH FOR 8 MONTHS! © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 33
2016 IMPORTANT DATES RAFFLE On sale May 2 Books Due 22 July Raffle Drawn 29 July MULTICULTURAL ROUND 16 July 9 VOLUNTEER & MERIT AWARD NOMINATIONS Open: 1 July Close: 5 August INDIGENOUS ROUND 10 Friday May 27 UMPIRE RECOGNITION ROUND 9 May 20 – May 22 © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 34
CLUB EDUCATION AFL NSW/ACT is able to offer your club the following training • Vilification and Discrimination – aims to change the language within our clubs so that clubs are inclusive of every background and culture. • Respect and Responsibility – raises awareness and defines the causes and common misconceptions associated with violence against women. The program educates clubs on ways to make people feel safe, to be treated with respect, to be valued and feel accepted for who they are. • Drugs and Alcohol – designed to educate on the issues of alcohol and binge drinking and the dangers of illicit drugs use. • Depression – Educate and raise awareness of the prevalence and impact, casual factors and categories of mental illness that exist across the community. To build the capacity of the AFL industry to recognise the signs, activate early intervention and support those that may be suffering a mental illness. • Cyber Bulling and Social Media -Educate and raise awareness of the affects of social media whilst informing of the social responsibilities and the benefits social media can play. • Anti- Doping (ASADA) – Provide guidance on what players can and cannot take in relation to WADA/ASADA guidelines. Not just an issue for elite sport, a player from any level of football can be sanctioned, even if they didn’t know they were doing anything wrong. • Concussion – Program identifies the appropriate management of concussion to ensure the health and safety of all people who play Australian Football. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 35
UMPIRE UPDATE © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 36
MULTICULTURAL & INDIGENOUS UPDATE © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 37
VOLUNTEER MANAGEMENT GROUP ACTIVITY At your table address your designated topic as it relates to your club and your clubs environment TOPIC 1 Group 1 Barriers to Volunteering Group 2 Roles Required within a Club Group 3 Why do volunteers leave a club? © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 38
VOLUNTEER MANAGEMENT In your group address your designated topic as it relates to your club and your clubs environment TOPIC 2 Group 1 How do clubs recruit, where can they find volunteers and who should they be targeting Group 2 Tips to Retain and Reward Volunteers Group 3 Tips to Overcoming Barriers to Volunteering GROUP ACTIVITY © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 39
VOLUNTEER MANAGEMENT TOPIC 1 TOPIC 2 Group 1 Barriers to Volunteering How do clubs recruit, where can they find volunteers and who should they be targeting GROUP ACTIVITY Pass on your Topic 1 findings to the group who share the same colour in Topic 2. Group 2 Roles Required within a Club Tips to Retain and Reward Volunteers Do your findings answer or assist in answering the barriers, difficulties and roles that the Groups identified in Topic 1? Group 3 Why do volunteers leave a Tips to Overcoming Barriers to club? Volunteering © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 40
RESOURCE PACKS PURPOSE OF THE PACKS? • Educate clubs to be better informed about the duties required on game day • Benchmark standard at all matches • Equip the clubs with all the necessities to perform their duties on game day WHATS INCLUDED IN THE RESOURCE PACK? • • • Function Cards: (Coach, Water Carrier, Runners, Boundary Umpires, Goal Umpire) Game Day Equipment: • Air horn • Timer • Whistle x 2 • Ball Pump • Sports Bag Game Day Vests: • Water Carrier • Ground Manager • Boundary Umpire • Runner • First Aid • Team Manager • Coach © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 41
CLUB & GAME DAY ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES In a group on your table, spend 15 minutes on all the roles and positions you need on game day to ensure the best environment and experience for players, spectators and umpires. © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 42
consumption increases. Inappropriate CLUB & GAME DAY ENVIRONMENT – ROLES AND RESPONSIBILTIES comments are made to the umpire by the coaching staff and spectators of both sides. Game ends but there is still a lot of tension around the ground. HOW WOULD YOUR CLUB HANDLE THIS SITUATION? © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 43
GAME DAY – How to Generate a Positive Match-Day Environment? • Coach sets the tone of the environment COACHES • Needs to be aware of their attitude and approach • Emphaise the importance of learning and development not on winning • Teach players the rules of the game and demand no player breaks them • Umpires need to hold zero tolerance to abusive language and demonstrative behaviour UMPIRES • Umpires need to report inappropriate behaviour • Umpires should not talk to coaches without the presence of the Ground Manager • Must maintain and control the behaviour of club officials, players and spectators at all times GROUND MANAGER • Ensure spectators are kept outside the boundary fences • Report issues that arise • Protect the umpires and have zero tolerance to bad behaviour or remarks RELATIONSHIPS • A good relationship between club Presidents can assist in resolving many situations quickly and efficiently without any further action needed © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 44
THANK YOU FOR YOUR VALUABLE TIME TODAY FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT AFL COMMUNITY – WWW. AFLCOMMUNITY. COM. AU AFL NSW/ACT WEBSITE – WWW. AFLNSWACT. COM. AU TALEAH NEOWHOUSE – COMMUNITY FOOTBALL MANAGER NSW/ACT TALEAH. NEOWHOUSE@AFLNSWACT. COM. AU 8333 8014 © Australian Football League 2013. This document is confidential and intended solely for the use and information of the addressee. 45
fdddc0f5a83bb46ed33b50970ed7c81b.ppt