From 2006 to 2023, there were discussions around the possibility of an AFL club relocating to Tasmania. Tasmania had been bidding for its own team since 1992, however the AFL had rejected their bids and offered the relocation of a struggling team from Melbourne as an alternative. At the start of the 2006 season, the Devils and the Australian Football League's North Melbourne Football Club began a partial alignment, allowing North Melbourne listed players to play for Tasmania when not selected in the seniors, an arrangement which lasted from 2006 until 2007. This was unpopular among local fans, harming the popularity of the club, and the season proved to be a disappointment on-field, with the Devils finishing ninth and missing the finals, ultimately going into recess at the end of 2008. Since 2012, the club began playing regular premiership fixtures in Tasmania. North's popularity at Bellerive peaked in the
2015 AFL season and
2016 AFL season when it drew high attendances of between 16,000 and 18,000 to a few of its matches due primarily to its on field improvement. However, following the
COVID-19 pandemic and Tasmania's (ultimately successful) 2021 AFL bid, the club's home attendances dropped as low as 5,000 as its on-field performance continued to slide. In 2016, the AFL provided the club with first access to Tasmanian talent through the creation of the North Melbourne Tasmanian Academy and the
AFL draft, while the North Melbourne-Tasmania Kangaroos, a Tasmanian-aligned AFLW club, was admitted to the competition. In 2017, the North Melbourne women's team's name and guernsey for home games was rebranded the "Tassie Kangaroos", however the move widespread criticism from cynical Tasmanian fans that the club was more fly-in fly-out as opposed to being committed to Tasmania long-term. In 2019, due to the continuing decline of the Tasmanian player base, the club was criticised for failing to foster local talent at the grassroots. In 2020,
Caroline Wilson stated that "within the AFL there’s a view that Tasmania should not be off the table despite the fact that it seems like an indulgence at the moment, and that North Melbourne should go to Tasmania". In April 2020, former North Melbourne CEO Ron Joseph voiced his opposition to the idea of North Melbourne relocating to Tasmania, by saying he would "fight like buggery" to stay at Arden Street if the league ever again tried to relocate the club. Further, Joseph was concerned that "North Melbourne has been identified as the club that they’d like to head AFL football in Tasmania...They haven’t got an AFL competition until they have a Tasmanian team. It’s a real issue for the AFL". In 2021, talks around the formation of a Tasmanian-based AFL club began heating up. It was originally reported that the state’s best chance for an AFL license would come through relocating an existing club rather than a 19th team, with the focus of this being on North Melbourne. The club was further aligned with Tasmania with the appointment of Tasmanians in president
Ben Buckley (2016) and senior coach
David Noble (2021), both having represented the state. In 2021, club CEO Ben Amarfio gave in-principle support for a new Tasmanian licence (along with Hawthorn's Jeff Kennett) despite both clubs having a vested interest given the sale of their home games. While Kennett remained open to the prospect of future relocation, Amarfio remained adamant that the club would not relocate to Tasmania, stating: "Our footy club has been in North Melbourne for over 150 years. We are invested in staying at Arden Street and looking forward to being an active participant with the Victorian government and the City of Melbourne in the exciting development going on in this precinct." Club president Ben Buckley, responding to pressure from AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan, reiterated this stance in 2022. On 3 May 2023, the AFL announced that Tasmania would receive the 19th licence to enter the AFL and AFLW in 2028, therefore ending any prospect of a club relocation. Further, with the admission of a Tasmanian team to the AFLW, the ''raison d'etre'' for the alignment between North Melbourne and Tasmania will cease to exist, and the alignment will be dissolved. With the 19th license being awarded to a Tasmanian team, North Melbourne ended its partnership with Tasmania after 14 years to pursue a new deal in Western Australia. ==References==