The furore surrounding Port Adelaide's bid to wear their heritage Prison Bar guernsey has resurfaced.
And Port Adelaide chairman David Koch is "absolutely ropeable", alleging the club was tricked by Collingwood and former president Eddie McGuiure into signing an agreement in 2007 that meant the Power could only wear the black and white stripes during in the AFL's heritage round - which ceased to exist in 2008.
Koch revealed on FIVEaa Breakfast on Thursday morning that the AFL has threatened to deduct the club premiership points if they wear the Prison Bar jumper in next week's Showdown against the Crows.
āItāll cost me points. I did ask that," Koch declared.
"I said āIām happy to pay a fine, Iāll just bloody wear the thingā. They said āweāll fine you and take points off youā ā¦ it would be four points for the game. We canāt afford (to do that).ā
Port Adelaide were allowed to wear the jumper in their 150th anniversary season in 2020, and according to Koch, part of the agreement was to to ācontinue the conversation to wear the Prison Bar guernsey ongoingā.
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It comes after the Port Adelaide chairman issued a statement on Wednesday night, explaining that the club was yet to hear back from the AFL over whether or not they could wear the Prison Bar jumper against Adelaide.
And while Eddie McGuire may be gone from Collingwood, new president Mark Korda is as bold as his predecessor on the issue.
Korda released a statement just hours after Koch's plea on Wednesday night, saying āthere is a place for only one black and white striped jumper in the AFL, the iconic Collingwood jumper.
āIn the spirit of AFL collegiality and in recognition of Port Adelaideās rich South Australian history Collingwood supported the AFLās decision to allow Port Adelaide to wear a black and white striped jumper in 2020, Port Adelaide 150th year.
āWe are surprised and disappointed there is a renewed attempt to introduce the jumper to the competition on a permanent basis, particularly given what we believe to be in agreement was reached between the two clubs a number of years ago.ā
McGuire and former Port Adelaide star Kane Cornes went to war on the matter on Channel Nine'sĀ Footy Classified on Wednesday night.
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Cornes argued that Port Adelaide should be able to celebrate their South Australian heritage twice a year in Showdowns, saying it is special for fans.
He highlighted the signed Heritage Round agreement, saying Collingwood can't have known the annual round was going to be abolished.
However, the former Collingwood president maintained that Port Adelaide took lucrative amounts of money to strip away from the black and white for their new teal look, and thus should not be allowed to return to their heritage as they please.
Watch the fiery exchange in the video below!
Responding to McGuire's comments, Koch said he had reached out to ex-Power chief John James, who signed the 2007 document on behalf of the club.
However, Koch alleges that James wasn't aware that Heritage Round would be axed, calling out the AFL for being bias towards Victorian clubs and labelling the situation as āinsider tradingā.
āWe had no knowledge of that and that is a reflection of this VFL Melbourne market that pat the interstate clubs on the head and pay them a bit of attention but say: āGet away this is our game,āā Koch said on FIVEaa Breakfast.
āTheyāve got to understand thereās no āVā in AFL anymore and every club has got to be respected and treated the same. In my finance world, that would be called āinsider tradingā.
āSo this agreement was signed by a president of a club who had inside knowledge that the other parties were not aware of ā it begs the question whether the AFL were aware of it ā and completely against the spirit of the undertaking. That just infuriates me more after that comment last night. Iām absolutely ropeable that we could be hoodwinked like this.ā