Australia’s best sporting teams don’t just battle it out on the field, their toughest challenge is often the weekly cross-country travel grind. From late-night flights to split-second recovery schedules. We reveal the top strategies to keep your team game-ready every week.
Keeping the show on the road: The ultimate contingency guide tour managers must read
“A great tour manager does so much more than simply plan an event; they’re a problem-solver, a diplomat, and carrier of battery packs, and sometimes even a part-time detective when lost gear mysteriously vanishes between cities,” he says.
“Touring isn’t just about logistics; it’s about making the impossible happen, often with little sleep and a double-shot latte in hand.”
To ensure a gig becomes a showstopper, whether it’s a concert of Swift proportions or modest Indie band hitting the pub circuit, Adam says every tour manager’s contingency list should incorporate the following.

Pack smarter, not harder
Forget stuffing an entire production’s worth of gear into the tour bus and hoping for the best. Adam suggests streamlining with a ‘critical kit’ approach.
“Identify what absolutely has to travel with the band and what can be sent ahead via freight or sourced locally. The best tour managers don’t just think about what to bring, they think about what they can leave behind,” says Adam.
Book hotels with recovery in mind
It’s not just about having a bed to crash on, it’s about making sure real sleep happens. Adam says blackout curtains, quiet floors, and late checkout options can make all the difference when the crew needs to recharge between shows. Smart tour managers prioritise hotels that cater to musicians’ real needs: secure gear storage, 24-hour room service (because post-gig hunger is real), and locations that cut down on unnecessary travel time.

Befriend the travel manager (seriously we don’t bite)
A travel manager can be a tour manager’s best-kept secret weapon.
“Travel managers have direct relationships with airline reps, and that can be a lifesaver,” says Adam.
“If a flight is cancelled or a schedule changes, being on a first-name basis with someone at the airline can mean the difference between a nightmare and a quick fix.”
Plan for the morning after
The gig’s done, the crowd’s gone home, but the crew? They’ve got an early call time and another city to get to. Adam says tour managers who factor in recovery windows and smart departure times keep their teams in better shape for the long haul.
“No one wants to sprint through an airport running on two hours’ sleep and a questionable energy drink," Adam says.
At the end of the day, the best tour managers know that while they can’t control everything, they can control how prepared they are. And that’s what keeps the show on the road, gig after gig, city after city.