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Perth Bears Media Watch

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,732

NRL expansion club in Perth could build a bigger national brand than the West Coast Eagles​

While the West Coast Eagles fly high in WA, the NRL’s new expansion club - the Perth Bears - could build a bigger national profile than the AFL heavyweights.
Peter Jenkins

2 min read
May 16, 2025 - 5:00AM
https://archive.md/dlDMS#comments

North Sydney Bears fans (L-R) Scott Cable, Victoria Bic, Ben Pickering and Rebecca Taylor, celebrating the announcement of the Perth Bears being the newest NRL team. Picture: Tim Hunter.
The Perth Bears can be a bigger player in the Australian sporting market than the city’s AFL jewel in the crown the West Coast Eagles, according to a global expert on brand valuations.
The stunning prediction by Mark Crowe, Australian managing director for multinational consultancy firm Brand Finance, follows the recent series of tremors from the far side of the Nullarbor.
AFL rights holders Seven West Media slammed the birth of the NRL expansion club, branding them the Bad News Bears.
But in a shock move on Thursday, the Australian Rugby League Commission announced the defection of a key Seven West Media lieutenant, Anthony De Ceglie, to become the Bears’ CEO for their 2027 entry to the competition.
Crowe told The Daily Telegraph the AFL also has long-term factors to consider given the Bears have $65 million in support from the WA Government and boast the potential to build a genuine Australia-wide profile from Perth.

WA Premier Roger Cook at the Perth Bears announcement on May 8. Picture: Getty Images
“Bringing together this iconic brand with heritage and fondness that is the Bears, and bringing it across to Perth, they will have an ability to leverage both the market in WA while developing a frontier of support on the eastern seaboard, specifically in Sydney,” Crowe said.
“That is a real benefit, a big leg up. It will enable the Perth team to scale up quickly in terms of having a national profile.
“Sporting brands generate significant strength and value within their home towns but they don’t necessarily transfer that into a national strength. A good example is the West Coast Eagles.
“They are a very strong brand but most of that strength is generated in their home state. They don’t have the strength nationally like some of the Sydney NRL teams or the Melbourne AFL teams do.”


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Bears fans in Sydney celebrate the entry of the Perth team to the NRL competition from 2027. Picture: Tim Hunter.

Bears fans in Sydney celebrate the entry of the Perth team to the NRL competition from 2027. Picture: Tim Hunter.
Crowe believes within five years the Bears could “easily” be among the NRL’s top 10 strongest brands.
In a 2024 Brand Finance report, the Broncos were No. 1 for brand strength with a score of 80.9 out of 100. The Canberra Raiders were 10th on the NRL list with a score of 67.1. The West Coast Eagles brand score was 64.3, leaving it 13th among the 18 AFL clubs.
The signing of De Ceglie also doubles down on an unabashed NRL ambition to eat the AFL’s “lunch”, as ARL Commission Chairman Peter V’landys colourfully suggested last week.
The 39-year-old will be expected to open doors of influence in Perth and accelerate commercial opportunities. Crucially, according to Crowe, the Bears have already secured the support of the WA Government.

Australian Rugby League Commission Chairman Peter V’landys addresses media at the Perth Bears announcement. Picture: Getty Images
“The Premier’s announcement is a demonstration that this is not a private team air dropping themselves into a city,” he said.
“It’s a city warmly welcoming them and confirmation that they’ll be supported. The government has rolled out the welcome mat and clearly they have looked at this and believe it’s a positive for the state economy.
“They’ve done their independent analysis. That will help the Bears attract commercial dollars because sponsors will feel both comfortable and assured that they’re associating with a team on side with the government of the day.”
De Ceglie, originally from WA and with a thick contact book, is expected to play easily in that commercial and political pool, prerequisites for his appointment.
As ARL boss, V’landys boasts a hyper sensitive political antennae and knows the power, the importance of influence.
He boasts a strong bond with rugby league loving Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and has state premiers in NSW and Queensland on speed dial.
V’landys was there in WA when Premier Roger Cook confirmed the Bears deal. But he will likely now handball future frontline roles in Perth to the man previously embedded in the bosom of the AFL.

 

blue bags

Coach
Messages
10,083
North Sydney Oval. Is a very busy stadium
With Sydney Swans AFLW team training. And cricket. Union team. All Play and train their
A lot of night's. The flood lights are fully on
And many community events happening as well
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
73,179
Part 1: The ongoing battle between Australia’s biggest sporting codes is about to escalate as the AFL and NRL enter a new era of expansion with new teams entering both competitions in new markets before the decade ends.

Although in somewhat of a phoney war right now, the codes’ chase for eyeballs is on with spectators, sponsorship dollars, broadcasting revenue, talent, venues and reputations up for grabs.
As the AFL, led by a slo-mo replay in chairman Richard Goyder, looks to the relatively safe harbour of footy-mad Tasmania to expand with the Tasmania Devils starting – subject to a stadium being built – in 2028, and keeps the pot boiling in the Northern Territory for a possible 20th team, the NRL’s incursion into new territory is more aggressive.

They have already made forays into Las Vegas with clashes opening the past two NRL seasons and unveiled a plan to create a team in Papua New Guinea by 2028; a move underpinned financially by the federal government partnering with the NRL in an ambitious piece of sports diplomacy.

In 2027, the NRL will enter AFL-mad Perth with the Perth Bears, a membership-based team with a local chair to be born with seed funding of $65 million over seven years from Roger Cook’s state government as they play at HBF Park near the centre of Perth.

The energetic and determined approach of indefatigable NRL chairman Peter V’landys has generated hype for the new team in a state with just 5000 adult players and six teams in its division one competition.
“The sad thing is we can’t do it tomorrow because of all the publicity and have to wait until 2027,” V’landys said. “It has got momentum, it has got people excited, there is immense interest.”

No one expects the NRL to dominate the AFL in Perth, so the interest is as much about what it means in the national strategic battle between the two codes and what inroads the Bears will make.

But there is enough regard for the NRL’s muscle and expertise in reaching consumers and sponsors to understand the impact they can have in a sport-oriented city that not only watches West Coast and Fremantle, but also fanatically supports cricket’s Perth Scorchers and basketball’s Perth Wildcats.

“It will have an impact, there is no doubt about that,” Michael Roberts, the CEO of WA Football, said.

Competition for the corporate dollar will increase with another professional sporting team in town also seeking members and crowds.

The NRL has also tapped into a growing awareness among state governments since COVID – and particularly since the advent of the AFL’s Gather Round – that tent-pole events in their state can benefit their economy. The NRL’s influence on WA government policy remains to be seen, but their mere presence means the competition for resources and program will intensify.

The NRL is talking about co-existence, V’landys arguing that a rising tide floats all boats. But there’s no need for niceties in a competitive landscape.

“As I said at the press conference (announcing the Bears), I am not really concerned as to what the AFL thinks because Kentucky Fried Chicken doesn’t ask McDonald’s when they open a franchise. We are concentrating on the NRL,” V’landys said.

The AFL, confident of the position of its sport in Western Australia, wasn’t taking the bait.
“Western Australia is a proud football state, and we will continue to invest in the game in WA as well as continue to hold big games and big events to drive participation across the state,” Dillon said.
“Footy fans in WA are as passionate and parochial as they come, with Optus stadium averaging 45,000 plus fans a week for West Coast and Fremantle matches, and now with the Kangaroos bringing two home games to Bunbury this year. You pair that with the recent success of the Indigenous All Stars game, the AFL content in WA is only on the rise.
“We are obviously aware of a new sporting franchise being established in Perth from 2027, and while we respect their presence in such a great sporting city, we will continue to focus on investing and growing our game in WA.”

This month that will act as a forerunner of what is to come in Perth, and around over the country, as regions vie for events to attract business and sports tourists.

In June, an NRL premiership match will be played in Perth, as will the jewel in the NRL’s crown – game two of State of Origin to be played in front of what is expected to be a soldout Optus Stadium.

Although crowds for the NRL doubleheader at Optus Stadium in round six in April was underwhelming (about 30,000 spectators per match), the game was played during a low ebb in negotiations between the government and the NRL, so there was a backlash for the sport at that time. Confirmation of the Bears’ entry in May prompted enthusiasm for the sport, lifting TV ratings to record levels for State of Origin game one broadcast on Nine – the owner of this masthead – with a national average audience of 3,755,000 backed by dramatically increased Perth viewership.

From an AFL perspective, the WA government has spent close to $2.5 million a year over the next three years for North Melbourne to play two home games in the state against the Perth-based teams. They are also interested in hosting an AFL State of Origin game.

AFL officials are aware that good local stories will be important in driving the success of the Bears. Two rugby league sources, who wished to remain anonymous, expect the Bears could attract up to 25,000 members from Perth in 2027 as well as those North Sydney Bears followers who are now aligned to the club.

The AFL also knows that West Coast’s poor performances of late have led to poor fixture timeslots that deliver below-par ratings which are less appealing to sponsors, so it is hoping the Eagles are on the improve by the time the Bears emerge from their hibernation.

The NRL are being bold too, appointing Anthony De Ceglie, the former Seven West media executive who was editor-in-chief of The West Australian, to add some sports media intrigue to the perennial issues facing expansion teams in non-traditional states.
The West Australian was a vocal objector to the Cook government’s support of the NRL expansion team until that announcement. V’landys described the media coverage as biased, accusing Seven West Media of protecting their AFL interests. “They don’t want us to be here because they realise we are going to be competitive,” he said.
Now everyone is watching the local media’s response as the Bears’ entry moves closer.

https://forums.leagueunlimited.com/javascript:void(0);
The inaugural chief executive of the NRL’s newest team, the Perth Bears, has been announced.

The NRL are also closing in on Mal Meninga as their inaugural coach. There are few bigger names in Australian coaching than Meninga who, with all due respect, is a much bigger national brand than either Eagles coach Andrew McQualter or Justin Longmuir, of the Dockers.
The need for recognition adds another element to the Eagles’ desire to retain Harley Reid.
What is of more concern for the AFL in Western Australia is how the NRL’s presence will create a contest for elite talent that has not previously existed.

This looms as a real issue for the AFL, more bound by the country’s borders when searching for talent than the NRL who can draw on New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and the Pacific for players, as well as far-flung corners of England and South Africa. The AFL has Irish talent, a small-scale Pacific partnership and a reinvented combine in the USA to complement its reliance on homegrown players.
AFL officials are not being complacent. They know the strength of the NRL as a brand and organisation and respect their willingness to take risks and work hard to get a result.
Fremantle CEO Simon Garlick says both AFL clubs and WA Football need to be at the top of their game to guarantee the natural appeal of AFL among the corporate community is not taken for granted. He also understands the demands for talent means Western Australia must carry its weight.
“The critical element for the AFL and WA Football to work through is our pathways and talent development to ensure we continue to attract both participation numbers at the rates we need and talent coming through those ranks because that is the lifeblood of our competition and the foundation [of our game] that makes it so strong,” Garlick said.



 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
73,179
Part 2:
Although the Western Reds had no impact on the AFL during their short-lived time as WA’s rugby league team, that project was derailed by the Super League wars in the late ’90s. This re-entry has been a long time coming and will be more sophisticated. Already areas on the Perth map are being circled where rugby league teams might emerge.

“We do need to lift our game,” Roberts said. “You can’t just rest on your laurels. We know that the NRL is going to go heavy into schools, and we need to be sure that we lift our game. The fight for talent is one area that it will have an impact.”
The NRL entry into schools is part of their seven-year agreement with the government, formalising a desire to enter 500 schools. They are also keen to partner with Clontarf, who work with Indigenous youth, in the west. Former NRL stars such as Johnathan Thurston and Preston Campbell are revered figures among Indigenous people in a time when the AFL has dropped the ball in attracting and retaining Indigenous talent. Just one Indigenous player was drafted last season.

“Rugby league would be part of the curriculum in WA absolutely and that is good for a number of reasons,” V’landys said. “The beauty of rugby league is that you can play different formats of it, you can play touch, you can play tag, and you can play contact, so it is a sport that anyone can play at any level.”
West Coast’s inaugural coach Ron Alexander is upset that the WA government is using state money to support NRL in schools, calling it “a betrayal”, but remains relaxed as he doesn’t expect the Bears’ arrival will have the impact some anticipate.

“I don’t think it will make much difference. The people who follow Aussie rules will keep following Aussie rules and those who are interested in NRL will go to the NRL,” Alexander said.
The NRL has chosen a good time to strike, opening up new fronts when the AFL administration is weakened and struggling clubs in Victoria, such as St Kilda, are trying to limit Gold Coast’s growth in Queensland, a state where the AFL is making significant progress increasing participation through development programs, headlined by the northern academies.
The battle is more difficult in western Sydney, where local AFL teams are struggling to attract participants in the face of the dominance of the Penrith Panthers, the Parramatta Eels and the Wests Tigers.
V’landys dismissed the presence of Greater Western Sydney, a club which has been competitive at AFL level.
“They are not the Giants, put it that way. They have not had any impact on us at all,” V’landys said.

The NRL also expects expansion will help its broadcast discussions, particularly as it walks that tightrope between ensuring Perth feels as though it has its own NRL team while keeping that team aligned to North Sydney fans in NSW.

“It is certainly going to have an effect because we are going to provide an extra game which is going to have its benefits ... it is certainly enhancing our broadcast pitch to the various broadcasters,” V’landys said.

The AFL is in a strong position with ample broadcast revenue to attack or defend where it sees fit in the codes’ “cold war”.

This month’s action in Perth, will provide an insight into what that means before the competition gets real in 2027.
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
16,696
Anyone got the story in the Australian today about the Bears? 10 leading companies headquartered in Perth have basically said the Bears can get f’d …not good

The new ceo of Seven West Maryna Fewster was as quoted as saying - “Rugby League isn’t quite at the level of support In the community to warrant one of our major brands partnering with it “

Also they keep attacking new Bears CEO De Ceglie saying he is the most hated man in town basically …

I would suggest that PVL needs to get his Telegraph mates in Sydney to start returning serve and going after the Giants who are having success on the field but still playing in front of 6k crowds and are anonymous in the city , despite hundreds of millions being spent on them by the AFL
 
Last edited:
Messages
15,881

Perth Bears NRL boss Anthony De Ceglie facing daunting task​

Perth Bears chief executive Anthony De Ceglie will have a fight on his hands as he tries to woo sponsors and fans in a city that doesn’t care about rugby league.
Steve Jackson

4 min read
June 2, 2025 - 8:30PM
Perth Bears CEO Anthony De Ceglie at North Sydney Oval. Picture: Julian Andrews

Perth Bears CEO Anthony De Ceglie at North Sydney Oval. Picture: Julian Andrews

This article contains features which are only available in the web versionTake me there
The inaugural boss of the NRL’s newest club faces daunting challenges as he looks to win over local sponsors and fans in a city that cares little for the sport and seemingly less for him.
NRL chair Peter V’landys last month appointed erstwhile Seven national news director Anthony De Ceglie as the first chief executive of the Perth Bears in the hope the veteran news man and west coast native would be able to open doors in the city. However, it seems many of them have slammed shut on Mr De Ceglie, even though he officially started in the role only this week.
The Australian contacted 10 leading businesses headquartered in Perth, as well as the city’s dominant media player, Mr De Ceglie’s former employer, Seven West Media, to see if any would consider aligning with the side – only to be told they were all either uninterested in backing the Bears, or completely disinterested in even discussing the club.
A spokesman for Woodside Energy said the business wished the Bears “every success” but the petroleum and gas giant’s “focus with regard to football in Western Australia remains our partnership with the (AFL’s) Fremantle Dockers”.
It was also a hard no from Roy Hill, the iron-ore mining company majority-owned by the nation’s richest person, Gina Rinehart, with a spokesman indicating the business refused to sponsor “any dangerous sports – so it’s not something we would ever look at”.
The same went for the rest of Mrs Rinehart’s vast mining and agricultural empire, with Hancock Prospecting noting the billionaire’s ongoing commitment to instead pouring millions into the national swimming, rowing, synchronised swimming and beach volleyball teams.
“Mrs Rinehart has already demonstrated a strong commitment to Australian sport, and is the largest, single non-government contributor to the Olympic effort in Australian history,” a spokesman said. “But she only supports sports that are non-contact, not dangerous, and that help lift Australians up and show our national pride on the world stage.”
Fellow WA billionaire Andrew Forrest, who owns the city’s rival Super Rugby franchise, the Western Force, was not even up for discussing the Bears – this despite the fact the two teams will share a new high-performance training centre funded by the state and play out of the same 30,000-seat stadium.
Andrew Forrest. Picture: AFP

Andrew Forrest. Picture: AFP
Gina Rinehart.

Gina Rinehart.
Perth-based giant Wesfarmers – which owns Bunnings, Kmart, Target, Officeworks, Priceline Pharmacy and Soul Patterson Chemist – and mining giant Mineral Resources were both equally indifferent to the Bears – though the later remains a key sponsor of the AFL’s West Coast Eagles and maintains the ongoing naming rights for that club’s training ground, MinRes Park.
BankWest was similarly conflicted, with a spokesperson saying the financial institution was not in a position to comment “at this time” before pointing to the bank’s ongoing deal with the Fremantle Dockers.
WesTrac, which is chaired by Ryan Stokes, the son of Mr De Ceglie’s former employer and one-time staunchest supporter, Seven West Media chairman Kerry Stokes, declined to comment on Perth’s new NRL club.
The flurry of rejections and mass indifference comes as one of Perth’s best-connected businessmen, former Reserve Bank of Australia boss John Poynton, unleashed on Mr De Ceglie, telling The Australian half the city’s key figures “hated his guts” and warned the one-time newspaper editor was about “to be taught a lesson” when he “walks back into town”. “That’s the problem about making a prick of yourself – it’s hard when you have to come back and face the very same people,” Mr Poyton said.
Another well-connected Perth corporate leader was heard making similar comments at a function last week, suggesting: “Life catches up with everyone, and it’s going to be fun seeing life catch up with Anthony.” The rookie chief executive was expected to spend the next fortnight learning the ropes at the NRL’s headquarters at Moore Park, in Sydney’s inner east, before returning to his home state where he will need to try to quickly re-establish relationships with the city’s business and media communities.
Ryan Stokes. Picture: John Feder

Ryan Stokes. Picture: John Feder
One of the first tasks will be attempting to win over his former newspaper and its editor, his one-time mentor and former editor-in-chief of The Australian, Christopher Dore.
However, the masthead’s parent company, Seven West Media, insisted all of its coverage of the Perth Bears would be soley dictated by the local community’s interest in the sport – and that was currently non-existent.
When asked if there was any way in which Mr De Ceglie could convince SWM to partner with the new club, chief executive Maryna Fewster added that would have to be a hard “pass” – at least for now.
“Rugby league isn’t quite at the level of support in the community to warrant one of our major brands partnering with it,” Ms Fewster said.
“Maybe one day if the Bears find a fan base one of our suburban Perth Now or regional papers might have a look – but for now our values don’t quite align with the code.”
On the bright side, Mr De Ceglie’s return to Perth will coincide with the arrival of the NRL’s showpiece second State of Origin clash, which is scheduled to be played in the city on June 18.
The contest, which is routinely one of the highest rating broadcasts on Australian television each year, transcends the traditional sporting divide, with the first game, won by NSW in Queensland’s Suncorp Stadium homeground 18-6 last week, managing to increase its year-on-year ratings – even in Perth.
Grizzly task for boss in city that doesn’t care for the Bears
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
16,696
Even while they're pretending to be unbiased, they're still laying the boot in every chance they get, aren't they?!

Yes …

It reminds me of the type of prejudice and exclusion that RL has always had to overcome from elites and the top end of town throughout its 130 year history ….
 

wb2027

Juniors
Messages
418
The club won't have any issues attracting sponsors. The prospect of exposure on the opposite coast would be attractive to a lot of businesses. Plus no company is going to publicly comment to a newspaper before an agreement is in place.
 

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