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A mad, sad act of desperation

El Diablo

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94,107
http://www.smh.com.au/news/lhqnews/...1248977235953.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap2

A mad, sad act of desperation

Phil Gould | August 2, 2009

Karmichael Hunt has signed with the AFL, but the sky is not falling in.

Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.

This is a farce on so many levels. Actually, I don’t know why I’m laughing. It’s very sad.

Surely this represents the final nail in the coffin of the current structure of the NRL’s ownership and administration. I’ll come back to this in a moment.

THE AFL

I have no interest in AFL, so how they spend their money and justify this decision is no business of mine.

However, I have no doubt this latest publicity stunt will cause a big backlash from its own player ranks.

Even if Hunt becomes a champion in the code (which he may well do), the decision to sign a 22-year-old rugby league player to a specialist sport such as Australian football, to play at the very top level, for $1 million a season, is irresponsible.

They can dress this up anyway they like. The bottom line is that the top players and even the youngsters coming through the junior development pathways in the AFL will look at this deal and ask, why so much for a bloke who has never played a top-grade AFL game?

Signing Hunt to a deal of this magnitude will not attract one more player to the Gold Coast franchise simply because of his introduction to their roster. This is an act of desperation. It is also acknowledgment that the Gold Coast is a rugby league stronghold and they need a gimmick like this to get a toehold in the area.

The locals will see this for what it truly represents.

KARMICHAEL HUNT

I’ve never met Karmichael Hunt.

From a distance, I’ve admired his ability, skill and toughness. He’s one of the elite athletes in our game.

However, I see a young man who has accepted all the development, coaching, money, adoration, plaudits and representative decorations our game has to offer. Yet I’ve never once heard him praise, promote, show loyalty or offer thanks to the game that has given him so much in such a short space of time. He has treated rugby league as his a personal life-support system and now walks away without a second thought.

Maybe I’m reading him wrong. I hope I’m wrong and I’m prepared to bow to anyone who can set me straight on his issue.

However, this is the perception I have of young Hunt.

At age 22, he claims he’s in search of a new challenge in life and this decision to join the AFL is not just about the money.

Firstly, when someone says it’s not about the money, you can be guaranteed it’s about the money.

Secondly, if he was truly in need of a real challenge in sport, then what about the challenge of helping the Broncos claw their way out of the obvious hole they are in? The club that developed and nurtured this kid from a boy to hero is in desperate need of leadership and courage to get it through a difficult time over the next few seasons.

For the last five years, senior players have guided and assisted Hunt’s rise to fame as well as giving him the opportunity to win premierships, play for Queensland and Australia.

Now, when they desperately need him to stand up and help develop the next era of Broncos culture, he decides he needs a new challenge.

It’s easy for him to walk away because the restrictive salary-cap laws and the under-resourced NRL places unfair limits on the amount of money our top players can earn.

No, this has nothing to do with a new challenge. This is pennies from heaven. Mind you, how many of us could turn down a $1 million-a-year offer to change careers? In this sense, it’s hard to be critical of Hunt. So, good luck to him. I hope he’s happy.

However, this scenario and others like it have highlighted the weaknesses in our game and the desperate need for change in management and ownership.

THE NRL

NRL’s favourite response to situations like this is to say, "The sky isn’t falling and we’re very happy with our position".

This statement is not one of leadership or confidence, it’s purely a throw-away, damage-control line designed to belittle, as some kind of fool, anyone who dares to criticise the role of the governing body.

It makes these statements to deflect attention from the inadequacies of management and the problems created by having a media company own the game.

Why are so many top-line players prepared to turn their back on rugby league? The obvious answer is money.

How does the AFL afford to pay players, with no experience, $1 million a season, when the NRL can’t even offer Hunt half this amount, despite the fact he’s one of the top 40 players in our game?

But there also are other factors.

Players might love rugby league, but, let’s be honest, they have no respect or loyalty towards the NRL. Player managers, the media and the media company that owns the game have no respect or loyalty towards the players or people within the game.

The NRL is a partnership between the decaying and ineffective ARL and a media company, News Ltd, whose publications and journalists attack people within the game and the code itself with such unbridled vindictiveness, unfairness and ferocity that it belies any suggestion they even remotely act in the best interests of rugby league.

This situation is only exacerbated by the fact rugby league has been under-sold, under-funded and denied all best efforts to develop at an optimum or even acceptable pace for the past 14 years.

This in turn limits the earning power of players and clubs, and has resulted in more players heading to England, union and now the AFL.

It has also contributed to the lack of depth in experienced player talent among NRL clubs, along with the decay and pending demise of our reserve grade/premier league/state league competitions in NSW.

We need a change to the way rugby league is run and this cannot happen until the game is independently owned and administered.

This can’t happen until the sky does fall and wipes out the systems we have in place so we can rebuild something strong and exciting to take our game into the future.

So I agree with the NRL: "The sky isn’t falling on rugby league."

And therein lies the problem, because that’s exactly what we need.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
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94,107
Players might love rugby league, but, let’s be honest, they have no respect or loyalty towards the NRL. Player managers, the media and the media company that owns the game have no respect or loyalty towards the players or people within the game.

The NRL is a partnership between the decaying and ineffective ARL and a media company, News Ltd, whose publications and journalists attack people within the game and the code itself with such unbridled vindictiveness, unfairness and ferocity that it belies any suggestion they even remotely act in the best interests of rugby league.

This situation is only exacerbated by the fact rugby league has been under-sold, under-funded and denied all best efforts to develop at an optimum or even acceptable pace for the past 14 years.

:clap:

although Gus should remember Fairfax journo Magnay is just as bad if not worse than some news ltd wankers
 

ibeme

First Grade
Messages
6,904
Tens of thousands of people marched to get Souths reinstated into the game. It'd be nice if something similar could happen to get News Limited out of our game
 

Kiki

First Grade
Messages
6,349
Wow gus! What an article. Wonder what the reaction is gonna be?
 

MsStorm

Bench
Messages
2,714
Brilliant article by Gus.

I just want to see this new commission in place as soon as possible.
It will change the game for ever.

Living here in Melbourne and seeing the previous vfl change to a commission based competition (afl) has really made me envious of their code.

Their game has absolutely flourished since then and I'm hoping the same thing will happen to rugby league.
 

aarondoyle

Juniors
Messages
1,021
I hate agreeing with Gus Gould, but f**k me that was a good article. Someone needs to take it and smack Gallop in the face with it.

Time to leave David.
 

maestro1

First Grade
Messages
5,134
Let the revolution begin.....

Great article Gus. News Limited ......Please F*ck off.........NOW
 

TinghaInMotion

Juniors
Messages
466
Tens of thousands of people marched to get Souths reinstated into the game. It'd be nice if something similar could happen to get News Limited out of our game

This would be great. I would go. It would really get the attention of the NRL/News limited. How would we organise something like this?
 

sportive cupid

Referee
Messages
25,047
"This situation is only exacerbated by the fact rugby league has been under-sold, under-funded and denied all best efforts to develop at an optimum or even acceptable pace for the past 14 years.

This in turn limits the earning power of players and clubs, and has resulted in more players heading to England, union and now the AFL."
Under-funded?

Denied all pest efforts to develop?

Limited earning powers leading to players leqaving?

God! I thought he was talking about the NSW Health system?:shock:
 

Frank_Grimes

First Grade
Messages
7,071
Good article, except he's wrong:

Phil Gould said:
Yet I’ve never once heard him praise, promote, show loyalty or offer thanks to the game that has given him so much in such a short space of time.

"I've grown up in Queensland and I've played all my junior football here," he says. "Loyalty is a big thing for me and if I'd turned my back on the work they'd put in to me as a junior it would have been disappointing."

Hunt in 2005 re: wanting to play for QLD.

http://www.webcitation.org/query?ur...2005/01/21/1106110945491.html&date=2009-05-07
 

ibeme

First Grade
Messages
6,904
How would the funds be raised without News Ltd btw?

By being able to independantly negotiate TV deals, the game could demand what it is really worth. The NRL consistently fills the number one spot in pay TV ratings, and dominates the top ten each week. The contract does not reflect that.
 

sportive cupid

Referee
Messages
25,047
That sounds like a good start.

How does the AFL manage to fund their game? Maybe looking to a successful game and how they really do it (not just the old rhetoric aboutu how they have the media on their side) and then looking to how that could be incorporated into the unique culture of Rugby League?
 

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