Melbourne Victory managing director Caroline Carnegie insists the membership is financially “OK” regardless of being fined $550,000 following the pitch invasion and crowd violence eventually month’s Melbourne derby at AAMI Park.
Found to have introduced the sport into disrepute, the Victory was penalised greater than half 1,000,000 {dollars} – $450,000 in fines and damages and $100,000 in misplaced income – by Football Australia.
The monetary blow got here a bit greater than every week after reviews that Victory had misplaced $6.7m within the 2021-22 monetary 12 months earlier than partnering with US private-equity investor 777 Partners in October.
Carnegie stated the Victory would “move forward” and “build” from the fines and different sanctions imposed on the membership.
“It’s hurtful,” Carnegie informed SEN radio.
“I’m not sure there are many sporting clubs or organisations around, particularly off the back of three years of Covid, that would sit back and want to be in a position where they’re fined over half a million dollars by their governing body.
“(But) we also understand FA had a job to do in this situation, and an example needs to be made that that conduct isn’t acceptable.
“Melbourne Victory’s a big club and we’ll be OK. We’ll move forward from these sanctions and build from there.
“We’ll be fine. We’re very excited about our new partner (777) who creates a lot of opportunities for us not just commercially but also from our pathways perspective in our sport, for men and women, which is very exciting for us.
“It’s been a tough climate for three years and we’ve gone through a lot of change. It’s no secret that two years ago we finished bottom, and we built from there, and we’ve also looked at ways in which we can build new income and revenue streams, which take some time.”
Carnegie stated the Victory wanted to work with the entire sport’s stakeholders to keep away from a repeat of the December 17 derby shame and guarantee better security for followers at matches.
“If we’re going to have active support in the future … we absolutely don’t want anybody feeling that they’re unsafe or that the behaviour is escalating and we haven’t done anything about it,” she unhappy.
“It’s not Melbourne Victory on its own that can solve these issues, and it’s not just the incidents at the derby that we’re trying to prevent. It’s any of those sorts of anti-social behaviours moving forward.
“If we could do it on our own absolutely we would be looking at that, but the reality is that we have a whole heap of stakeholders that are involved in risk and security, game-to-game and we’ll have those sorts of people involved moving forward.”
Originally revealed as Melbourne Victory to ‘build’ and ‘move forward’ from Football Australia-imposed sanctions