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Your car in a pre-booked space about the boundary. Or maybe you have found a nice socially distanced spot in the outer and cheer.
This might not be country footy as we know it, but surely if the AFL can start allowing thousands of people into games there has to be a way we can make supporters work in the heart of our communities - should our football-netball leagues return.
American football club Seattle Seahawks calls it the 12th man, a vital member of the team, the fans.
The South Australian derby gets first crack at letting crowds in on Saturday with 2000 parochial Power and Crows fans to be in the stands at Adelaide Oval.
We do not yet know how this might impact our grassroots game. Restrictions are still tighter here in Victoria. Premier Daniel Andrews will give his next ruling on June 22 with a strong possibility to ease lockdowns a little more, should our COVID-19 community transmission rates stay low.
Ballarat Football Netball League has given a clear June 26 deadline for its state of play and Central Highlands Football League is keeping its options open.
This gives our league and club officials some innovative scope to get people through the gates because football with no fans hardly makes our games worth getting off the ground.
The AFL is a different beast with cardboard cutouts - imagine those in the historic City Oval grandstand - and broadcast special effects to superimpose the semblance of roaring supporters.
Only the canned cheering in play on Thursday night made Collingwood-Richmond sound more akin to the Gold Coast Suns cheersquad for a wintry outing at Mars Stadium.
Still, the AFL sets the tone for what should filter to community football. If they get crowds, we should too in our wide-open spaces.
Other major leagues across the state have already packed away their boots, most notably all three in AFL Barwon bounds and the Hampden league in Warrnambool.
Victorian Football League triple premiership coach Gerard FitzGerald, who is in his first season as head coach with Hamilton Kangaroos, told The Courier he was surprised the Hampden league had packed up early. FitzGerald said the certainty in their ranks does release some pressure on clubs but why not remain pending a couple more weeks when there was the scope to take finals into October.
This columnist does not make light of the huge financial and in-kind labour clubs are facing during this crisis.
In taking a closer look at what we are missing from community sport in this region, the overwhelming response from clubs, sports researchers and development experts was the social side of play. This goes for on and off the ground.
While clubs in our patch understandably want clearer lines on when matches can resume, across all sports, this is a time to think bigger.
Ideas might not work, but what if they did. We are in a time of great constraint which is also the perfect opportunity to think outside what has always been done.
If we go ahead, we need people through our gates.
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