AFL weighs up naming premiership cup in honour of Ron Barassi

Renaming the premiership cup after Ron Barassi is among the ways the AFL is considering honouring the football legend.

League chiefs will consult clubs and key industry figures in coming days before deciding how to acknowledge Barassi, who died on Saturday aged 87.

Key points:

  • The AFL will discuss the best way to honour the life of the late Ron Barassi, according to league CEO Gillon McLachlan
  • Barassi, who won 10 grand finals as a player and coach, died on Saturday — and the AFL is considering various possibilities including naming the premiership cup after him
  • The Victorian government has confirmed that Barassi’s family has accepted a state memorial for him

The discussion comes as the Victorian government confirmed it would hold a state memorial for Barassi.

The AFL Commission will make a final call, with the grand final looming next week.

“It’s hard to imagine a bigger or more significant figure in the history of Australian Rules than Ron Barassi,” outgoing AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan told reporters on Monday.

“There were his exploits on the field, off the field and more broadly as an innovator and someone incredibly progressive.

“His legacy is being considered. There is, I know, a lot of push for renaming the premiership cup.

“There are other ways to remember him. Those things are being discussed.”

McLachlan played a straight bat when asked for his own opinion on whether the premiership cup should be renamed after Barassi.

Author: Ivan Robinson