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Bears Confirmed & Rumoured Signings

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3,624

more on jack cole and marata niukore

Perth Bears eye another player from Panthers​

Meanwhile, the Perth Bears have reportedly identified their next signing targets. Fresh from snaring Panthers players Liam Henry and Scott Sorensen, the Bears will reportedly now target young Penrith half Jack Cole and Warriors forward Marata Niukore.

The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Mal Meninga is keen on 22-year-old Cole, who is stuck behind Nathan Cleary and Blaize Talagi at the Panthers. Niukore and Cole are both without contracts for 2027 and would add immediate strike to the Bears' inaugural team.

They're also said to be chasing Siosifa Talakai from Cronulla, after already signing Henry, Sorensen, Nick Meaney, Tyran Wishart, Sean Russell, Josh Curran, Chris Vea'ila, James McDonnell, Harry Newman, Luke Smith, Toby Sexton, Emarly Bitungane and Iszac Fa’asuamaleaui.
sharkies reserved that they'll lose some players with 14 off contract

 
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16,901
sharkies reserved that they'll lose some players with 14 off contract
Here's the original article on this one mate.



Cronulla chief executive Dino Mezzatesta concedes it is “inevitable” that the most settled roster in the NRL undergoes significant turnover at the end of 2026, with more than half the Sharks top 30 squad unsigned beyond this season.
Cronulla’s 16 off-contract players are the most of any club on the eve of round one and aside from splashing $1 million for front-rower Addin Fonua-Blake last season, have maintained the same core of key players throughout Craig Fitzgibbon’s coaching tenure.

Back-to-back preliminary finals has been the Sharks deserved payoff. But internally, Cronulla are resigned to losing several key figures from their rise as one of the game’s most consistent sides.
Former NSW Origin utility Siosifa Talakai, props Toby Rudolf and Braden Hamlin-Uele, injured skipper Cameron McInnes, fullback Will Kennedy and outside backs Jesse Ramien and Sione Katoa headline the best Sharks still uncontracted for next season, with another nine NRL squad members also unsigned.

Between them the off-contract septet have played 1042 NRL games alone, and all bar Kennedy and Katoa would fetch a market value of $500,000 or more.
Talakai is expected to make a call on a three-year offer from the Perth Bears for 2027 in coming days, Ramien has been linked to the Gold Coast and North Queensland, while both Rudolf and McInnes have publicly declared interest in signing as franchise players for the PNG Chiefs from 2028.

Mezzatesta acknowledged “it’s going to be hard to compete on the money terms alone” with cashed up expansion outfits, and said the Sharks would not stand in the way of any player able to accept a longer or more lucrative deal than the club can offer.
“It’s going to be inevitable, we won’t be able to keep everyone,” Mezzatesta said at the Sharks season launch on Cronulla Esplanade this week.


“It just won’t work. And I think as a message for the younger boys coming through, they need to know that they’re going to have their chance as well.

“So it is probably time that we start looking at who’s coming through the ranks. But our intent would be we’ll try and get as many [contract extensions] done as possible … for some of these guys that are at the end of their career when they’ve still got maybe a contract worth two or three years, it’s going to be hard to compete just on the money terms alone, let alone wanting us to keep everyone.
“But I think we’re realists as well. We’re not going to be able to fit everyone in the roster.”
Despite the looming upheaval, Cronulla have stars Blayke Brailey (signed until 2030), Nicho Hynes and KL Iro (2029) and Braydon Trindall, Ronaldo Mulitalo and Fonua-Blake (2028) all signed long-term. Fitzgibbon is also signed until the end of 2027.

Mezzatesta backed Sharks management to ensure the potentially “unsettling” contract talks do not derail the side’s premiership tilt.
Several Sharks players have spurned better money on the open market - most notably Bears target Brailey last year and Hamlin-Uele when the Warriors came calling in 2024 - to stay, while Kennedy accepted a six-figure pay cut in his deal.
“I think honesty and transparency is really important at this stage, and in particular for them at this point in their career,” Mezzatesta said.
“Toby Rudolf has been very vocal about getting out there to suggest he wants to look for a [rival offer] ... but clearly before he’s done that, he’s had a conversation with us as well.

“And I think you’ll find there’ll be a couple of other conversations along the similar sort of lines.
“If there is something out there for you which is going to give you tenure and a lot more money, then we’re certainly not going to stand in your way.
“Every player, their number one priority would be to stay with the club. But it’s going to be unfortunate if we can’t make it work mathematically.”

Cronulla have 16 unsigned players. Their CEO says big-name exits are ‘inevitable’
 
Messages
3,624
Here's the original article on this one mate.



Cronulla chief executive Dino Mezzatesta concedes it is “inevitable” that the most settled roster in the NRL undergoes significant turnover at the end of 2026, with more than half the Sharks top 30 squad unsigned beyond this season.
Cronulla’s 16 off-contract players are the most of any club on the eve of round one and aside from splashing $1 million for front-rower Addin Fonua-Blake last season, have maintained the same core of key players throughout Craig Fitzgibbon’s coaching tenure.

Back-to-back preliminary finals has been the Sharks deserved payoff. But internally, Cronulla are resigned to losing several key figures from their rise as one of the game’s most consistent sides.
Former NSW Origin utility Siosifa Talakai, props Toby Rudolf and Braden Hamlin-Uele, injured skipper Cameron McInnes, fullback Will Kennedy and outside backs Jesse Ramien and Sione Katoa headline the best Sharks still uncontracted for next season, with another nine NRL squad members also unsigned.

Between them the off-contract septet have played 1042 NRL games alone, and all bar Kennedy and Katoa would fetch a market value of $500,000 or more.
Talakai is expected to make a call on a three-year offer from the Perth Bears for 2027 in coming days, Ramien has been linked to the Gold Coast and North Queensland, while both Rudolf and McInnes have publicly declared interest in signing as franchise players for the PNG Chiefs from 2028.

Mezzatesta acknowledged “it’s going to be hard to compete on the money terms alone” with cashed up expansion outfits, and said the Sharks would not stand in the way of any player able to accept a longer or more lucrative deal than the club can offer.
“It’s going to be inevitable, we won’t be able to keep everyone,” Mezzatesta said at the Sharks season launch on Cronulla Esplanade this week.


“It just won’t work. And I think as a message for the younger boys coming through, they need to know that they’re going to have their chance as well.

“So it is probably time that we start looking at who’s coming through the ranks. But our intent would be we’ll try and get as many [contract extensions] done as possible … for some of these guys that are at the end of their career when they’ve still got maybe a contract worth two or three years, it’s going to be hard to compete just on the money terms alone, let alone wanting us to keep everyone.
“But I think we’re realists as well. We’re not going to be able to fit everyone in the roster.”
Despite the looming upheaval, Cronulla have stars Blayke Brailey (signed until 2030), Nicho Hynes and KL Iro (2029) and Braydon Trindall, Ronaldo Mulitalo and Fonua-Blake (2028) all signed long-term. Fitzgibbon is also signed until the end of 2027.

Mezzatesta backed Sharks management to ensure the potentially “unsettling” contract talks do not derail the side’s premiership tilt.
Several Sharks players have spurned better money on the open market - most notably Bears target Brailey last year and Hamlin-Uele when the Warriors came calling in 2024 - to stay, while Kennedy accepted a six-figure pay cut in his deal.
“I think honesty and transparency is really important at this stage, and in particular for them at this point in their career,” Mezzatesta said.
“Toby Rudolf has been very vocal about getting out there to suggest he wants to look for a [rival offer] ... but clearly before he’s done that, he’s had a conversation with us as well.

“And I think you’ll find there’ll be a couple of other conversations along the similar sort of lines.
“If there is something out there for you which is going to give you tenure and a lot more money, then we’re certainly not going to stand in your way.
“Every player, their number one priority would be to stay with the club. But it’s going to be unfortunate if we can’t make it work mathematically.”

Cronulla have 16 unsigned players. Their CEO says big-name exits are ‘inevitable’
happy friday and thanks mate,
good linking.
 
Messages
3,624
might be almost word for word like daily telegraph article sorry.
more on cole and niukore.

BEARS’ RECRUITMENT DRIVE HEATS UP

The Perth Bears are quickly building their roster ahead of their inaugural season in 2027, with 14 players now locked into contracts, but that number could soon increase.

Code Sports are reporting that the Bears have held talks with Warriors forward Marata Niukore and Panthers playmaker Jack Cole.

Niukore is approaching 30 but his signing would be a very handy pick-up for the Bears.

When on, Niukore is hard to stop and his physical style will be infectious.

Meanwhile, Cole would provide handy cover for the Bears’ likely starting halves pairing of Toby Sexton and Tyran Wishart.

The Bears have been linked to Gehamat Shibasaki as well, but seem resigned that the Broncos star’s price might be beyond them.

You don’t discard those types of players, but he could be a bit dear for us. I just think Gehamat could price himself out for us,” Bears coach Meninga told Code Sports.

“We haven’t pursued it too much, I just assumed he would stay with the Broncos.”

Meninga is so far happy with the Bears’ haul 12 months out from their first NRL game, but knows there’s still a fair bit of work to do to fill the rest of the roster out.

“We’re pretty happy with who we have signed but we have a bit of work to do,” he said.

“It is a challenge because the other 17 clubs are not dumb, they are locking in all their major talents for the longer haul so we have to be smart with the guys we target.”

 
Messages
3,624
You missed the joke. My mate Gobby might get it though.
ah i got ya. mal signing titans as self interest even though if he signs hau he'd be the only 1 out of 15 (if he were the next player signed after soro who was 14. But if bears do get talakai, geyer, niukore and cole plus another sharkie or 2 then hau would be 1 titan out of 19 or 20 or 21...).
 
Messages
3,624
Here's the original article on this one mate.



Cronulla chief executive Dino Mezzatesta concedes it is “inevitable” that the most settled roster in the NRL undergoes significant turnover at the end of 2026, with more than half the Sharks top 30 squad unsigned beyond this season.
Cronulla’s 16 off-contract players are the most of any club on the eve of round one and aside from splashing $1 million for front-rower Addin Fonua-Blake last season, have maintained the same core of key players throughout Craig Fitzgibbon’s coaching tenure.

Back-to-back preliminary finals has been the Sharks deserved payoff. But internally, Cronulla are resigned to losing several key figures from their rise as one of the game’s most consistent sides.
Former NSW Origin utility Siosifa Talakai, props Toby Rudolf and Braden Hamlin-Uele, injured skipper Cameron McInnes, fullback Will Kennedy and outside backs Jesse Ramien and Sione Katoa headline the best Sharks still uncontracted for next season, with another nine NRL squad members also unsigned.

Between them the off-contract septet have played 1042 NRL games alone, and all bar Kennedy and Katoa would fetch a market value of $500,000 or more.
Talakai is expected to make a call on a three-year offer from the Perth Bears for 2027 in coming days, Ramien has been linked to the Gold Coast and North Queensland, while both Rudolf and McInnes have publicly declared interest in signing as franchise players for the PNG Chiefs from 2028.

Mezzatesta acknowledged “it’s going to be hard to compete on the money terms alone” with cashed up expansion outfits, and said the Sharks would not stand in the way of any player able to accept a longer or more lucrative deal than the club can offer.
“It’s going to be inevitable, we won’t be able to keep everyone,” Mezzatesta said at the Sharks season launch on Cronulla Esplanade this week.


“It just won’t work. And I think as a message for the younger boys coming through, they need to know that they’re going to have their chance as well.

“So it is probably time that we start looking at who’s coming through the ranks. But our intent would be we’ll try and get as many [contract extensions] done as possible … for some of these guys that are at the end of their career when they’ve still got maybe a contract worth two or three years, it’s going to be hard to compete just on the money terms alone, let alone wanting us to keep everyone.
“But I think we’re realists as well. We’re not going to be able to fit everyone in the roster.”
Despite the looming upheaval, Cronulla have stars Blayke Brailey (signed until 2030), Nicho Hynes and KL Iro (2029) and Braydon Trindall, Ronaldo Mulitalo and Fonua-Blake (2028) all signed long-term. Fitzgibbon is also signed until the end of 2027.

Mezzatesta backed Sharks management to ensure the potentially “unsettling” contract talks do not derail the side’s premiership tilt.
Several Sharks players have spurned better money on the open market - most notably Bears target Brailey last year and Hamlin-Uele when the Warriors came calling in 2024 - to stay, while Kennedy accepted a six-figure pay cut in his deal.
“I think honesty and transparency is really important at this stage, and in particular for them at this point in their career,” Mezzatesta said.
“Toby Rudolf has been very vocal about getting out there to suggest he wants to look for a [rival offer] ... but clearly before he’s done that, he’s had a conversation with us as well.

“And I think you’ll find there’ll be a couple of other conversations along the similar sort of lines.
“If there is something out there for you which is going to give you tenure and a lot more money, then we’re certainly not going to stand in your way.
“Every player, their number one priority would be to stay with the club. But it’s going to be unfortunate if we can’t make it work mathematically.”

Cronulla have 16 unsigned players. Their CEO says big-name exits are ‘inevitable’

more on this
 

Centy Coast

Juniors
Messages
2,135
The thing is, if the Bears had Ezra Howe on their books they may have ended up with Jayden Campbell, Tino and Beau Fermor, when that fell through they ended up with Dane Campbell and they signed Tyran Wishart and Nick Meaney, the Bears signed assistant Coach and Samoan Coach Ben Gardiner, they have signed Liam Henry and Scott Sorensen from Penrith and possibly Mavrick Geyer.
I was a big fan of the Bears signing the Gold Coast players but at the end of the day, when you compare them to the players that the Bears have signed, the Bears have signed four seasoned Premiership winners as compared to three players who have never played Finals footy.
 
Last edited:
Messages
16,901
The Perth Bears have landed another major blow in the player market after signing Sharks powerhouse Siosifa Talakai.
This masthead understands that Talakai is set to join the Bears for their inaugural season after agreeing to a three year deal which will see him stay until at least the end of 2029.

The former NSW State of Origin star becomes the Bears’ second major signing in a matter of days after they secured Penrith premiership winner Scott Sorensen on a two year deal.

The Bears have now secured more than a dozen signatures as they continue to make inroads in the player market.


The Perth Bears are closing in on Sharsks enforcer Siosifa Talakai, after agreeing to a three-year deal. Picture: Getty Images

The Perth Bears are closing in on Sharsks enforcer Siosifa Talakai, after agreeing to a three-year deal. Picture: Getty Images
Slowly but surely they are piecing together a solid squad for their maiden season.

Their next challenge is to land some genuine star power as they look to make a splash in their first year..

Talakai played 11 games with South Sydney before moving to the Sharks, where he has played 122 games and been a regular member of coach Craig Fitzgibbon’s first grade side.

However, the salary cap was always going to bite at the Sharks and Talakai is the first casualty in a coup for the Bears.

A handful of Sharks players remain off contract at the end of the season including Cameron McInnes, Sione Katoa, Tony Rudolf, Will Kennedy and Braden Hamlin-Uele.

 

Gobsmacked

First Grade
Messages
5,931
The thing is, if the Bears had Ezra Howe on their books they may have ended up with Jayden Campbell, Tino and Beau Fermor, when that fell through they ended up with Dane Campbell and they signed Tyran Wishart and Nick Meaney, the Bears signed assistant Coach and Samoan Coach Ben Gardiner, they have signed Liam Henry and Scott Sorensen from Penrith and possibly Mavrick Geyer.
I was a big fan of the Bears signing the Gold Coast players but at the end of the day, when you compare them to the players that the Bears have signed, the Bears have signed four seasoned Premiership winners as compared to three players who have never played Finals footy.
It means very little that someone is a finals player...
Talent is talent. Nobody in their right mind would trade those Titans players you mentioned for the one's they signed becauses they've played finals.
I know Perth fans want to feel positively about their signings but be realistic.
Plenty of superstars that won't play finals this year and plenty of duds that will, it's guaranteed, that what the salary cap is for.

If you're trying to get the best pure talent, buying finals players or grand final winners is almost certainly the worst strategy as your paying for the same talent only at a premium.

Tyran Wishart for example is on a reported 800k at Perth, if you identified the same level of talent at a less prestigious club, you'd get him at half that.
 
Messages
16,901
It won’t be Jesse Ramien, he won’t leave family that are based on the Central Coast.
Not so sure about that.

Sharks centre Jesse Ramien has been shopped to the Melbourne Storm as the grand finalists sweat on the future of controversial Parramatta star Zac Lomax.
This masthead can reveal Ramien has attracted interest from Manly, while the off-contract Cronulla three-quarter has been offered to the Storm as a Plan B recruit if Lomax’s planned move to Melbourne collapses.

It is understood Storm bosses are open to preliminary dialogue with Ramien’s camp pending the outcome of their NSW Supreme stoush with the Eels for the services of Lomax.

Ramien is a free agent and is determined to honour the final year of his deal with the Sharks, meaning he wouldn’t be available for any NRL suitor until 2027.

The 28-year-old was offered a deal by the Cowboys but it is understood the figure was well below Ramien’s asking price, said to be north of $500,000 a season.

The Sea Eagles are also interested in the services of Ramien, who has amassed 170 first grade games since his NRL debut for the Sharks in 2017.

The Storm have not tabled an offer for Ramien as they await the final outcome of the messy Lomax saga which has dragged on for months.

Ramien has been squeezed out of Cronulla due to salary-cap pressures and his manager said the Indigenous All Stars powerhouse is also open to being a foundation recruit for the PNG Chiefs.

“Jesse would definitely be keen on going to Papua New Guinea,” his agent Trevor Conroy said recently.

“He has told me directly he would have no concerns at all about living in Port Moresby.

“The Sharks were happy for us to go on the open market and see what was out there.

“Jesse feels he is hitting his peak performance over the next two or three years so he wants to capitalise on it.

“PNG is a definite option for him and of course the tax-free dollars is an attraction for any player.”

 
Messages
3,624
The Perth Bears have landed another major blow in the player market after signing Sharks powerhouse Siosifa Talakai.
This masthead understands that Talakai is set to join the Bears for their inaugural season after agreeing to a three year deal which will see him stay until at least the end of 2029.

The former NSW State of Origin star becomes the Bears’ second major signing in a matter of days after they secured Penrith premiership winner Scott Sorensen on a two year deal.

The Bears have now secured more than a dozen signatures as they continue to make inroads in the player market.


The Perth Bears are closing in on Sharsks enforcer Siosifa Talakai, after agreeing to a three-year deal. Picture: Getty Images

The Perth Bears are closing in on Sharsks enforcer Siosifa Talakai, after agreeing to a three-year deal. Picture: Getty Images
Slowly but surely they are piecing together a solid squad for their maiden season.

Their next challenge is to land some genuine star power as they look to make a splash in their first year..

Talakai played 11 games with South Sydney before moving to the Sharks, where he has played 122 games and been a regular member of coach Craig Fitzgibbon’s first grade side.

However, the salary cap was always going to bite at the Sharks and Talakai is the first casualty in a coup for the Bears.

A handful of Sharks players remain off contract at the end of the season including Cameron McInnes, Sione Katoa, Tony Rudolf, Will Kennedy and Braden Hamlin-Uele.

thanks mate
More on Talakai

 
Messages
2,988

more on jack cole and marata niukore

Perth Bears eye another player from Panthers​

Meanwhile, the Perth Bears have reportedly identified their next signing targets. Fresh from snaring Panthers players Liam Henry and Scott Sorensen, the Bears will reportedly now target young Penrith half Jack Cole and Warriors forward Marata Niukore.

The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Mal Meninga is keen on 22-year-old Cole, who is stuck behind Nathan Cleary and Blaize Talagi at the Panthers. Niukore and Cole are both without contracts for 2027 and would add immediate strike to the Bears' inaugural team.

They're also said to be chasing Siosifa Talakai from Cronulla, after already signing Henry, Sorensen, Nick Meaney, Tyran Wishart, Sean Russell, Josh Curran, Chris Vea'ila, James McDonnell, Harry Newman, Luke Smith, Toby Sexton, Emarly Bitungane and Iszac Fa’asuamaleaui.
Jack Cole is a fine player. Not sure why he fell out of favour at Penrith but would be a great signing for the Bears. Can play Fullback,Centre, 5/8, 1/2 and Lock at a pinch and is a good defender. I was hoping he would be the 6 at Penrith but they signed Blaize.

Would slip straight into the 6 at Perth no problems. Hopefully he signs and gets well deserved start in an NRL team. Ben Gardiner seems to be doing exactly what Garth Brennan and Cameron Ciraldo did before him, taking some Panthers with him.
 
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