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Perth Bears Media Watch

Nuke

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Staff member
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5,677
Plenty of butthurt from The West today.

Front page: aussie rules.
Snarky article teaser as well about the Origin game. Much smaller and barely there.
20250619_084350.jpg
 

Nuke

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Staff member
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5,677
It's incredibly childish, isn't it?

But apparently they don't have any vendettas against Rugby League. Just unbiased reporting...
 

Perth Red

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73,219
People generally dislike and distrust the media so having the local rag unhappy def plays into our hands!
 

Hoofhearted

Juniors
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784
If ever there was signs that the Bears are going to be a success it’s the way The West Australian is treating RL at the moment. You never see articles like this about soccer or union, because they are not a threat to AFL.
I had a mate recently trying to big note AFL saying he had a choice this year to go to either ANZAC Day, Gather Round or the AFL GF. I pointed out I could choose between Vegas, ANZAC Day, Magic Round, any of the 3 Origins, NRL GF or head off with the Kangaroos at the end of the year to England.
I honestly believe AFL is reaching critical mass, they have ran out of growth. The big clubs are huge, smaller ones are struggling and the last 2 expansion teams are money pits. Their latest expansion is Tasmania, a small market that might not get off the ground.
We are about to expand into WA and PNG, both with Govt backing. Have potential a second NZ up our sleeve for the future plus only scratching the surface on the potential of the International game. We are already the top TV product without a national footprint. Much more upside to the NRL moving forward.
 

Perth Red

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73,219
Loving this childish behavour by The West, they are on the nose here anyway as a media outlet so this just keeps playing into our hands.

The West Australians origin game (Freo) 37k, The 'Easterners' Origin game 57k. LOL!
 
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flippikat

First Grade
Messages
5,617
I honestly believe AFL is reaching critical mass, they have ran out of growth. The big clubs are huge, smaller ones are struggling and the last 2 expansion teams are money pits. Their latest expansion is Tasmania, a small market that might not get off the ground.
We are about to expand into WA and PNG, both with Govt backing. Have potential a second NZ up our sleeve for the future plus only scratching the surface on the potential of the International game. We are already the top TV product without a national footprint. Much more upside to the NRL moving forward.
Our trump card is the international game.

Expansion options in NZ (Christchurch, maybe Wellington too) & possibly Fiji, an already announced expansion team in PNG, test footy, connections with the UK Superleague.

The AFL has none of that, and once they've saturated Australia anything else is hard work because no other country cares about that sport (that is, if they understand it in the first place).
 

Perth Red

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73,219
NRL chief Peter V’landys and WA Premier Roger Cook’s plans to convert Perth from an AFL-only town to a rugby league outpost are continuing apace. Even if Kerry Stokes is yet to get behind the cause.

Fresh from poaching Seven news boss Anthony De Ceglie to head the new Perth Bears, the city’s wheelers and dealers are now working hard to get on its board.

The team is staying tight-lipped about any potential off-field appointments, but Peter Cumins is rumoured to be in with a chance for a director gig. The Cash Converters executive was behind the original bid for a Perth NRL team, before V’Landys and co torched his plan for a more lucrative deal with Cook’s Labor government.

Proving he’s not one to hold a grudge, Cumins was spotted dining with De Ceglie at Crown’s Bistro Guillaume last week. He was also happily ensconced in various pre-game festivities on Wednesday for the State of Origin.

Meanwhile, former WA Labor minister Peter Tinley has been linked to a potential role with the club. Tinley chaired a parliamentary working group into the viability of a Perth NRL team. He’s also mates with Cook. After all the premier has done to secure a team, he must be keen to see some WA Labor flavour sprinkled into the Bears’ DNA.
In the spirit of bipartisanship, former federal Liberal minister Ben Morton’s name has also popped up.

De Ceglie told us on Sunday he had been getting some “incredibly positive” feedback from potential sponsors, after a week making use of the flood of NRL types in Perth for the State of Origin. BHP is shaping as a potential backer, along with some insurers.

The Big Australian’s iron ore chief Tim Day, a proud Queenslander and NRL fan, was spotted enjoying the corporate hospitality at the game last week. Gina Rinehart may not be interested in sponsorship (she doesn’t do contact sport), but at least the Bears might still cash in on some of WA’s mining activity.

In fact, Wednesday’s game proved something of a soft landing for the Seven turncoat after a tumultuous first few weeks in the job. Not a Sherrin in sight, the corporate suites of Perth’s home of AFL were overrun by an east coast armada of Channel Nine and Foxtel executives, NRL brass and rugby league legends.

V’Landys and Cook were unsurprisingly sidled up to each other for much of the night in Optus Stadium’s Chairman’s Lounge, as well as Nine CEO Matt Stanton.

De Ceglie was also seen in conversation with Tourism WA chair Di Bain just weeks after her husband and Perth business heavyweight John Poynton delivered him with one of the all-time public slap-downs.


Perth’s a small town, with some big personalities who apparently have long memories, and Poynton seems to think many won’t be so willing to forgive De Ceglie’s previous sins at The West Australian.

If Wednesday’s paper is anything to go by, editor-in-chief Chris Dore and Stokes are certainly yet to move on. The only mention of the game was buried on page 46 of sport, sidled up to some colourful classifieds. The AFL was loud and proud on page 1 with a promo for “the real State of Origin”. Which was apparently Fremantle versus Essendon.

Dore, who attended the game on Wednesday alongside Seven West Media chief Maryna Fewster and The West’s editor, Sarah-Jane Tasker, told us he was “confident” the Bears would get plenty of coverage in the paper’s courts and crime pages once it launched.

At least the AFL is providing no shortage of news. Pressure is heaping on Richard Goyder – unsurprisingly absent from the Chairman’s Lounge on Wednesday, despite being one of Perth’s best-known chairmen – to relinquish his role at the top of the AFL Commission as the league comes out of a scandal-filled month.

But the big question is, who will leave to make way for a potential replacement? There are just 10 AFL commissioners and no term limits.

Seek co-founder Paul Bassat has been canvassed as one potential departee. He declined to comment when we asked him of his plans. But he is up for re-election this year and, having joined the board in 2013, is the longest-standing commissioner bar Goyder. Ex-army major general Simone Wilkie is not due for a re-election bid, but her name has also been thrown around as among those considering a change.

We hear the Perth Bears are in the market for directors with experience in sport.

 

Perth Red

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Peter Cumins was at the pre game Q&A, had a quick chat with him and he seemed very upbeat so possibly he's on the board, or a sponsor. Tinley would be a good choice. Well respected around town and on both sides of politics here. Also gives the WA Govt a direct set of eyes and ears on the board which I'm sure Cook would like.
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,732
Peter Cumins was at the pre game Q&A yesterday, had a quick chat with him and he seemed very upbeat so possibly he's on the board, or a sponsor.
i think @Red&BlackBear said months ago that there was always a good chance he would be involved in some way, just wouldnt be running the club. those other west aussie names seem to be line with him saying they'd be good gets/
 

Red&BlackBear

First Grade
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5,818
i think @Red&BlackBear said months ago that there was always a good chance he would be involved in some way, just wouldnt be running the club. those other west aussie names seem to be line with him saying they'd be good gets/
Cumins was always a shout, is a shout - I should say. If not as a board member then definitely as a sponsor and commercial partner.

His consortium bid might have been half assed and he might have stumbled a lot in the process but you can’t deny his love for the game, what he has done for the game in WA and what he can provide the franchise moving forward.

Out of the names published in that AFR article, I only knew of 3 potential names, the others I hadn’t heard of being looked at before today/that article. I see the quantity to pick from as nothing but positive. Onwards and upwards. As I alluded to @Perth Red, local WA’ers shouldn’t worry about board representation. They’re in good, local hands.
 

Growthegame

Juniors
Messages
42

PerthBear94

Juniors
Messages
3
Imagine if the board was entirely made up of people who were just highly qualified to direct an NRL franchise instead of worrying about if their postcode begins with a 6 or not.
 
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