GVGjr
20-02-2022, 05:44 PM
Richmond is leading the charge to be this year’s first club to roar past 100,000 members as the countdown to the AFL season intensifies.
In the Year of the Tiger, Richmond fans are backing the yellow and black to strike back in 2022 after missing the finals last year.
A month out from the season kick-off, the Tigers have already signed up 84,948 members as they aim to crack the 106,000 mark for the first time this year.
Despite missing the top-eight, the Tigers finished second on the AFL’s 2021 membership ladder last year – with a club record 105,084 – passing the 100,000 mark for the fourth year in a row.
Richmond was the first club to break the 100,000-member mark in 2018.
n a pre-season analysis of club members, the Tigers came out well in front of Collingwood, which was second with 70,000 members.
But West Coast, which topped the league’s membership ladder for the second consecutive year last season with 106,422 members, chose not to divulge its pre-season figures but hoped to build on last year’s club record total.
Richmond said its membership drive centred around getting the Tiger Army back together at the MCG.
“We have just launched our 2022 membership campaign ‘Year of the Tiger Army’,” the club said.
“This year is all about getting back together for our home games at the MCG and recognising the incredible support we have received from our members over the last two years in particular.”
Under new president Jeff Browne, the Magpies are aiming to break through the 100,000 member barrier for the first time this year.
Richmond 84,948
Collingwood 70,000
Carlton 67,928
Essendon 60,678
Hawthorn 60,100
Port Adelaide 52,164
Geelong 49,055
St Kilda 43,500
Melbourne 43,000
Adelaide 40,000 +
Fremantle 40,000
Western Bulldogs 38,824
North Melbourne 38,756
Sydney Swans 35,722
Brisbane Lions 29,318
GWS Giants 25,094
Gold Coast 8,721
**West Coast declined to provide current membership total
In the Year of the Tiger, Richmond fans are backing the yellow and black to strike back in 2022 after missing the finals last year.
A month out from the season kick-off, the Tigers have already signed up 84,948 members as they aim to crack the 106,000 mark for the first time this year.
Despite missing the top-eight, the Tigers finished second on the AFL’s 2021 membership ladder last year – with a club record 105,084 – passing the 100,000 mark for the fourth year in a row.
Richmond was the first club to break the 100,000-member mark in 2018.
n a pre-season analysis of club members, the Tigers came out well in front of Collingwood, which was second with 70,000 members.
But West Coast, which topped the league’s membership ladder for the second consecutive year last season with 106,422 members, chose not to divulge its pre-season figures but hoped to build on last year’s club record total.
Richmond said its membership drive centred around getting the Tiger Army back together at the MCG.
“We have just launched our 2022 membership campaign ‘Year of the Tiger Army’,” the club said.
“This year is all about getting back together for our home games at the MCG and recognising the incredible support we have received from our members over the last two years in particular.”
Under new president Jeff Browne, the Magpies are aiming to break through the 100,000 member barrier for the first time this year.
Richmond 84,948
Collingwood 70,000
Carlton 67,928
Essendon 60,678
Hawthorn 60,100
Port Adelaide 52,164
Geelong 49,055
St Kilda 43,500
Melbourne 43,000
Adelaide 40,000 +
Fremantle 40,000
Western Bulldogs 38,824
North Melbourne 38,756
Sydney Swans 35,722
Brisbane Lions 29,318
GWS Giants 25,094
Gold Coast 8,721
**West Coast declined to provide current membership total