WA Premier Mark McGowan and his daughter Amelia look around the facilities during the opening day of the new Optus Stadium in Perth.
Camera IconWA Premier Mark McGowan and his daughter Amelia look around the facilities during the opening day of the new Optus Stadium in Perth. Credit: AAP

West Australian premier Mark McGowan makes bold plea for a Perth Stadium AFL Grand Final

Staff WritersNews Corp Australia

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WEST Australian premier Mark McGowan has raised the idea of the new Perth Stadium one day hosting the AFL Grand Final, suggesting it’s “the least the rest of the country could do” in order to compensate for the state’s GST rates.

Speaking at the opening of the new Optus Stadium on Sunday, McGowan jokingly suggested the rest of the country could give up “small compensation” and hand over the Grand Final when its contract with the MCG expires in 2037.

“It’s the least that the rest of the country could do for Western Australia, considering the GST they take from our state, that they hand the AFL Grand Final to our state each and every year for nothing,” McGowan said.

“It would be a small compensation but it would be something.”

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Asked about the AFL adopting a system like the US Super Bowl, which rotates venues, the premier quipped: “Well, we might get that here as well.”

He added that he might mention the idea to President Donald Trump when he visits Washington.

Perth was promised its new stadium would be “world class” and when the $1.6 billion venue was finally opened to the public many were indeed in awe of its size and amenities.

“I was blown away. It’s absolutely fantastic,” Dockers fan Geraldine Bruce told AAP.

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“We’ve got seats on level 5. It’s got a great view, nothing interrupting it, and the amenities are fantastic. I can’t say anything against it.”

The new Perth Stadium.
Camera IconThe new Perth Stadium. Credit: Getty Images

MC and former AFL player Shaun McManus, who has played at most large stadiums in Australia, said it was by far the best.

About 110,000 free tickets were snapped up for the community open day at Optus Stadium, which has two 340 square metre super screens and the largest sports lighting system in the world, with 891 floodlights.

Construction on the 60,000-seat stadium began in December 2014 but there have been several controversies including its name, location, cost, lack of parking and even the beer.

The lingering problem remains the Matagarup Bridge, connecting East Perth to the venue, which is not expected to be ready until May.

Transport Minister Rita Saffioti said 80 to 90 per cent of people arrived on Sunday via public transport, but the day showed clearer signage was needed for future events.

Last week, there was another squabble regarding a proposed cap of 40,000 people for a likely Big Bash League cricket semi-final due to weekday peak-hour traffic putting stress on public transport.

McGowan conceded a cap was not ideal, but said the government was working through the public transport issues.

“We’re working with the WACA and Venues Live, who are bringing to us options early in the coming week,” he said.

The premier said the goal was to avoid having a bottleneck of people.

McGowan also acknowledged previous Labor premiers Geoff Gallop and Alan Carpenter, and former Liberal premier Colin Barnett for their efforts, inviting his predecessor to join in the ribbon cutting.

“It’s been a lot of blood, sweat and tears by a lot of people,” he said.

Events already planned at the stadium include a one day international cricket match, the AFL Women’s game and two Ed Sheeran concerts.

— WITH AAP