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Eels in the media

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16,306
I can't access the text of this to post, it's behind a paywall :-(

Eels fans might find it of interest -

Slippery slope? Shadow of former boss looms over Parramatta again
Chris Barrett
February 2, 2026 — 11:00am

Former Eels chairman Roy Spagnolo is backing a bid to unwind reforms introduced after years of bitter factionalism at Parramatta in what the club’s board says would be a backward step towards its dark old days.

Members of Parramatta Leagues Club, which owns the NRL team, will vote this month on a proposal to dump postal and electronic voting for elections and to relax director eligibility rules under which Spagnolo can’t run for a seat on the board.

The property developer appears on a list of names endorsing the changes, along with a range of his relatives and associates.

They include three other members of the Spagnolo family, brother-in-law Domenic Sergi, friend Vince Lombardo and neighbour Ross Mittiga, as well as fellow former Parramatta director Mario Libertini and ex-club executives Bob Bentley and Tony Cinque. Among the other petitioners are former Soccer Australia president Tony Labbozzetta and Anthony Ange, the son of porn king Con Ange and a candidate for election to the Parramatta board.

Club president Mark Jenkins, a former NSW Police assistant commissioner, wrote to members that the board viewed the proposals as an attempt to “dismantle reforms that made our club strong”, vowing Parramatta “will not return to the dysfunction that harmed our club”.

Spagnolo, who headed the board between 2009 and 2013, believes they would improve governance and transparency at the western Sydney gaming, hospitality and entertainment juggernaut, which has tens of thousands of members.

Remote voting for club elections and staggered terms for directors were brought in after Parramatta hit rock bottom with a salary cap rort that led the state government to intervene and place an administrator in charge.

Those moves were intended to counter the ability of election tickets to gain control of the club by mobilising a fraction of the membership base to attend its annual general meeting.

It was under the regime of multiple Eels premiership winner Steve Sharp, not Spagnolo’s, that Parramatta was found cheating the cap, resulting in a $1 million fine and a deduction of 12 competition points in 2016.

But during a tumultuous era in the years leading up to the scandal in which there were three regimes within four years, there had been constant in-fighting at Parramatta.

“It really takes us backwards, in particular the notion that people have to turn up to a club during certain times to physically vote,” Jenkins said.

“What we’ve done is bring availability to vote for all 65,000 of our members.”

Spagnolo said electronic and postal voting had made little difference to low overall engagement.

At the board election in 2024, at which he finished third, missing out on the two available positions, there were 2749 votes lodged.

“In 2009, when I ran and there were people that were interested, 2000 or more members turned up because they wanted change. I just think if you’re interested, you turn up,” Spagnolo said.

“The federal government and state governments don’t have electronic voting.”

Spagnolo is unable to contest another board election himself after Parramatta members last year approved a constitutional amendment disqualifying individuals from serving as directors if they had been deemed as not fit and proper by a relevant authority.

The petitioners are also pushing to remove that barrier, which would clear the way for the former chairman to put his hand up again in future.

Spagnolo in 2015 was found to be “not a fit and proper person to be a member of the governing body of a registered club” by the Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority, which determined he had not adhered to proper processes in claiming expenses for parties at his house and that he had authorised a bonus to then chief executive Bentley based on poker machine revenue.

ILGA at the time also considered a more serious allegation that membership details of Spagnolo’s friends and associates had been backdated to render them eligible to vote but it said that while the tampering claims warranted further investigation, they were not proven by the material before it.

The authority did not impose disciplinary action against Spagnolo, who was no longer a director by then, and it concluded there was no reason to cast doubt on his honesty.

He said they were technical breaches and he had “only done good for the club”.

The Spagnolo-aligned group also wants Parramatta Leagues Club to establish an independent disciplinary panel to deal with issues of alleged misconduct. Such matters are handled by the boards of registered clubs.

The proposals are being put to members ahead of the Parramatta Leagues Club AGM on February 24.

The Eels have been governed by a separate appointment-only board since 2017, distancing NRL team matters from Parramatta Leagues Club, although it nominates two of the seven football club directors.
 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,713

David Elliott: It doesn’t matter who you support, go Parra!​

Parramatta Eeels fans are some of the longest suffering in the NRL. But as the new season starts, Eels fan David Elliott gives nine reasons why it’s their time for glory.
David Elliott

3 min read
February 27, 2026 - 7:02AM
Jordan Samrani of the Eels celebrates his try during the NRL pre-season match between Sydney Roosters and Parramatta Eels at Polytec Stadium, on February 21, 2026 in Gosford. Picture: Brendon Thorne

Jordan Samrani of the Eels celebrates his try during the NRL pre-season match between Sydney Roosters and Parramatta Eels at Polytec Stadium, on February 21, 2026 in Gosford. Picture: Brendon Thorne
It’s finally here! After a long, hot summer of cricket, we now switch seasons and return to that wondrous seven months where political allegiances, religious conviction and family loyalty all take second fiddle to that one true and unifying Australian pursuit, footy.
Regardless of your code or colours, I know you join me in wishing the Parramatta Eels Rugby League Football Club a successful and victorious 27 rounds as we seek to break our 40-year drought.
I don’t know about you, but I just have this tingling sensation that this is our year. Here’s why:
COMMBANK STADIUM
If you’ve yet to attend a game played on the hallowed turf of CommBank, do yourself a favour and invest in a few home-game tickets. Take it from me, this venue was worth all the pain and suffering it caused local Liberal candidates in the lead-up to the 2019 state election.
And if you think sporting facilities aren’t a top-of-mind issue for us Westies then think again. And besides, any piece of infrastructure that can accommodate 30,000 Eels fans, or two per cent of our fan base, should be treated with all the reverence of the Holy See.
The blue and gold uniforms should be a magnet for a premiership, reckons David Elliott. Picture: Brendon Thorne

The blue and gold uniforms should be a magnet for a premiership, reckons David Elliott. Picture: Brendon Thorne
COLOURS
Yup, blue and gold. Blue, being the traditional colour of monarchy, and gold, being the colour of first-placegetters proves that we have the perfect blend to attract a right royal premiership. Just you wait.
CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE
I don’t want to boast because we did get smacked on the bum by a rainbow when all the planets came into alignment with this proposal, so I get why so many other teams are desperate to replicate it, but you know what they say about poor tradies and tools. Well, we no longer have that excuse.
EELS FOUNDATION
To effect greatness in any team, the first, second and third necessary characteristics are culture. The military knows it, business knows it and sport relies on it. The Eels Foundation has proven to be a cracking way for fans to take ownership of the long-term future of the club by providing an avenue to invest in junior players who may not have the same level of opportunity as others. That’s just what we do.
HOLY MOSES
I know, I know. There’s no “I” in teamwork and a champion team trumps a team of champions, but strike me pink, can skipper Mitchell Moses move! It’s as if he knows what’s going to happen three plays before it actually does.
JASON AND JIM
I’ve still got PTSD from the days when it seemed the Eels leadership had a revolving door that moved faster than Josh Addo Carr’s bootlaces, but thankfully the brains trust was able to recruit Gentleman Jim Sarantinos, whose dedication keeps everyone feeling like “it’s all part of the plan”, even when the joint’s going to pastry.
It’s a personal trait that obviously attracted him to recruit Jason Ryles, who is probably one of the more dignified sports administrators I’ve ever met.
Watch Graham Kennedy in The Club to know why that’s important.
POLITICS
Yes, politics. Any organisation that can unite Labor’s elder statesman Chris Brown and yours truly should be in the running to take over all foreign peace negotiations from the UN. The Lord Mayor has bipartisan support to sponsor this icon of Western Sydney, so you shouldn’t need any more convincing that in Australia, sport is a very important part of our national psyche.
ALUMNI
It amazes me how Brett Kenny, Steve Edge, Peter Sterling, Mick Cronin, Peter Wynn, Denis Fitzgerald and so many of the greats just keep turning up to support rookies and fans without any fuss or expectations, albeit, ahem, in larger-sized attire.
VARIETY
The variety of ages, experience and skills has meant that individuals on the team have the opportunity to constantly learn from each other, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is what will keep them coming back for more.
 

TheParraboy

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
74,000

David Elliott: It doesn’t matter who you support, go Parra!​

Parramatta Eeels fans are some of the longest suffering in the NRL. But as the new season starts, Eels fan David Elliott gives nine reasons why it’s their time for glory.
David Elliott

3 min read
February 27, 2026 - 7:02AM
Jordan Samrani of the Eels celebrates his try during the NRL pre-season match between Sydney Roosters and Parramatta Eels at Polytec Stadium, on February 21, 2026 in Gosford. Picture: Brendon Thorne

Jordan Samrani of the Eels celebrates his try during the NRL pre-season match between Sydney Roosters and Parramatta Eels at Polytec Stadium, on February 21, 2026 in Gosford. Picture: Brendon Thorne
It’s finally here! After a long, hot summer of cricket, we now switch seasons and return to that wondrous seven months where political allegiances, religious conviction and family loyalty all take second fiddle to that one true and unifying Australian pursuit, footy.
Regardless of your code or colours, I know you join me in wishing the Parramatta Eels Rugby League Football Club a successful and victorious 27 rounds as we seek to break our 40-year drought.
I don’t know about you, but I just have this tingling sensation that this is our year. Here’s why:
COMMBANK STADIUM
If you’ve yet to attend a game played on the hallowed turf of CommBank, do yourself a favour and invest in a few home-game tickets. Take it from me, this venue was worth all the pain and suffering it caused local Liberal candidates in the lead-up to the 2019 state election.
And if you think sporting facilities aren’t a top-of-mind issue for us Westies then think again. And besides, any piece of infrastructure that can accommodate 30,000 Eels fans, or two per cent of our fan base, should be treated with all the reverence of the Holy See.
The blue and gold uniforms should be a magnet for a premiership, reckons David Elliott. Picture: Brendon Thorne

The blue and gold uniforms should be a magnet for a premiership, reckons David Elliott. Picture: Brendon Thorne
COLOURS
Yup, blue and gold. Blue, being the traditional colour of monarchy, and gold, being the colour of first-placegetters proves that we have the perfect blend to attract a right royal premiership. Just you wait.
CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE
I don’t want to boast because we did get smacked on the bum by a rainbow when all the planets came into alignment with this proposal, so I get why so many other teams are desperate to replicate it, but you know what they say about poor tradies and tools. Well, we no longer have that excuse.
EELS FOUNDATION
To effect greatness in any team, the first, second and third necessary characteristics are culture. The military knows it, business knows it and sport relies on it. The Eels Foundation has proven to be a cracking way for fans to take ownership of the long-term future of the club by providing an avenue to invest in junior players who may not have the same level of opportunity as others. That’s just what we do.
HOLY MOSES
I know, I know. There’s no “I” in teamwork and a champion team trumps a team of champions, but strike me pink, can skipper Mitchell Moses move! It’s as if he knows what’s going to happen three plays before it actually does.
JASON AND JIM
I’ve still got PTSD from the days when it seemed the Eels leadership had a revolving door that moved faster than Josh Addo Carr’s bootlaces, but thankfully the brains trust was able to recruit Gentleman Jim Sarantinos, whose dedication keeps everyone feeling like “it’s all part of the plan”, even when the joint’s going to pastry.
It’s a personal trait that obviously attracted him to recruit Jason Ryles, who is probably one of the more dignified sports administrators I’ve ever met.
Watch Graham Kennedy in The Club to know why that’s important.
POLITICS
Yes, politics. Any organisation that can unite Labor’s elder statesman Chris Brown and yours truly should be in the running to take over all foreign peace negotiations from the UN. The Lord Mayor has bipartisan support to sponsor this icon of Western Sydney, so you shouldn’t need any more convincing that in Australia, sport is a very important part of our national psyche.
ALUMNI
It amazes me how Brett Kenny, Steve Edge, Peter Sterling, Mick Cronin, Peter Wynn, Denis Fitzgerald and so many of the greats just keep turning up to support rookies and fans without any fuss or expectations, albeit, ahem, in larger-sized attire.
VARIETY
The variety of ages, experience and skills has meant that individuals on the team have the opportunity to constantly learn from each other, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is what will keep them coming back for more.


I reckon our best chance of winning the premiership this year is if we all collectively say we ain’t gonna win premership this year…
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
157,822
I reckon our best chance of winning the premiership this year is if we all collectively say we ain’t gonna win premership this year…

Not really, that only works if you say we are not going to win, then we're a shoo in.
 

Grigor

Juniors
Messages
324
They've finally added Brian Kelly's photo to his profile. Looks like they called him in at 5am on a Sunday for his photo.

remote.axd


I can see why he misses tackles as he's got cataracts in both eyes
 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,713

27 years of bad blood: 15 reasons why Parramatta and Melbourne hate each other​

Melbourne and Parramatta has become rugby league’s most passionate modern day rivalry. The ugly Zac Lomax saga reignited a feud which has been simmering for 27 years.
Dean Ritchie
Dean Ritchie
March 4, 2026 - 4:00PM
b2f7875a6896ba204134ffd297f1a61342f5f80f.avif

NRL: Craig Sourpuss Bellamy spoke to the media ahead of round 1 and following the news regarding Zac Lomax.
Conflict between Parramatta and Melbourne has intensified over recent seasons culminating in this week’s ugly contract and legal saga between the two clubs involving Zac Lomax.
Melbourne and Parramatta has become rugby league’s most passionate modern day rivalry, a hostility erected around explosive declarations, biting charges, head slams, poaching, crusher tackles - and a missing premiership that has burned and stung for the past 27 years.
The friction between these two powerhouse clubs will endure another chapter on Thursday night when the Eels and Storm kick-off the 2026 NRL season in Australia at AAMI Park.
FIFTEEN REASONS WHY PARRAMATTA AND MELBOURNE HATE EACH OTHER
1999:
Parramatta was filthy after Eels forward Jason Smith was felled in a high tackle by Melbourne’s Stephen Kearney during a controversial preliminary final. Bizarrely, in what was described as a case of mistaken identity, Storm teammate Rodney Howe was placed on report, but it was Kearney who later escaped censure over the tackle after judiciary chairman Jim Hall was unable to establish any intent.
2002: Eels CEO Denis Fitzgerald controversially predicted Melbourne would die due to a lack of Victorian support. Fitzgerald also forecasted the demise of Manly and Souths.
2004: Fitzgerald called on the NRL to abandon rugby league in Melbourne and pushed for the Storm to relocate to the Gold Coast. “We are up against a religion down there in AFL and we’re better off cutting our losses,” Fitzgerald said. “Promoting rugby league in Melbourne is akin to promoting beach volley ball in Iceland.”
2004: Parramatta’s Adam Peek was suspended for six matches for a dangerous throw in a game against Melbourne. In the same season, Melbourne’s Alex Chan copped a four-game ban for a reckless high tackle on Parramatta’s Nathan Hindmarsh.
2006: Parramatta prop Fuifui Moimoi was referred directly to judiciary for an alleged bite on Melbourne’s Brett White. Moimoi was exonerated.
Brett White shows his alleged bite mark.

Brett White shows his alleged bite mark.
The pair square up. Picture: AAP Image/Action Photographics/Colin Whelan

The pair square up. Picture: AAP Image/Action Photographics/Colin Whelan
2007: Parramatta’s Timana Tahu was outed for two games for a head slam in a game against the Storm.
2009: Melbourne players accused Eels star Jarryd Hayne of laying down and then winking after a penalty was given against Storm forward Jeremy Smith in a qualifying final.
2009: Melbourne beat Parramatta 23-16 in the NRL grand final only for the Storm to be sensationally stripped of their title due to systematic salary cap cheating. The Eels were not awarded the premiership with Parramatta fans still resenting Melbourne.

The Storm address media after being stripped of two premierships. Picture: Fairfaxphotos
2017: Angry Eels supporters claimed they were robbed in a qualifying finals match after Melbourne scored tries from an alleged forward pass and missed knock-on to win 18-16 at AAMI Park.
2018: Melbourne’s Will Chambers was suspended for three games after a crusher tackle on Hayne.
2019: Storm captain Cam Smith slapped Parramatta’s Reed Mahoney after a kick downfield in a finals match. Smith was charged with contrary conduct and later fined.
2021: Melbourne’s Felise Kaufusi head slammed Parramatta’s Ryan Matterson with an elbow and later copped a two-game suspension.
2024: Jason Ryles was lured away from Melbourne where he was an assistant coach to sign as head coach of Parramatta. Included in Ryles’ early release was a clause banning Parramatta from signing Storm players for his first 12 months at the Eels.

Jonah Pezet defected to the Eels. Picture: Parramatta Eels
2025:Parramatta snatched rising halfback Jonah Pezet from Melbourne Storm. In the same season, Eels fans admitted to being “disgusted” that Melbourne displayed the 2009 grand final trophy at a Storm home game.
2026: Parramatta and Melbourne wound up in the NSW Supreme Court over a proposed transfer of star winger Zac Lomax. The Eels took legal action against Lomax to enforce the terms of his Eels release and prevent him from joining Melbourne without their written consent. Parramatta accused Melbourne of acting in “bad faith” by negotiating with Lomax. The parties come to an out-of-court settlement.


 

TheParraboy

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
74,000
2007 - major prelim


Grapple, crusher, ripper - the Melbourne Storm don't know what all the fuss is about.

The NRL premiership favourites became embroiled in yet another furore over their tackling technique today, the latest coming after Parramatta skipper Nathan Cayless suffered a torn pectoral muscle as a result of a Brett White tackle on Sunday afternoon.

Cayless had his arm wrenched behind him as White attempted to put the Kiwi prop on his back, the manoeuvre leading to claims the Storm forward was trying to rip Cayless' arm out of its socket.

But backrower Clint Newton backed his Storm teammate today, Newton claiming White had done nothing wrong and that the controversy over the tackle was just an attempt to unsettle the Victorian side.
"I'm looking forward to the next one, what they come up with," Newton said of the 'ripper' tackle today.


"We've got no problems with our technique.
"If you're going to get penalised because you're better than other teams at wrestling, I think you open up a can of worms there.
 

King-Gutho94

Referee
Messages
20,265
How come the grub/convicted criminal Brett Finch wasnt mentioned in that article of a 27 year history of bad blood between the two sides.

The same f**kwit who walked out and joined Melbourne 3 weeks later who were over the cap

Then beat us in a GF side over the cap
 

Phil Mann Stand

Juniors
Messages
212
2007 - major prelim


Grapple, crusher, ripper - the Melbourne Storm don't know what all the fuss is about.

The NRL premiership favourites became embroiled in yet another furore over their tackling technique today, the latest coming after Parramatta skipper Nathan Cayless suffered a torn pectoral muscle as a result of a Brett White tackle on Sunday afternoon.

Cayless had his arm wrenched behind him as White attempted to put the Kiwi prop on his back, the manoeuvre leading to claims the Storm forward was trying to rip Cayless' arm out of its socket.

But backrower Clint Newton backed his Storm teammate today, Newton claiming White had done nothing wrong and that the controversy over the tackle was just an attempt to unsettle the Victorian side.
"I'm looking forward to the next one, what they come up with," Newton said of the 'ripper' tackle today.


"We've got no problems with our technique.
"If you're going to get penalised because you're better than other teams at wrestling, I think you open up a can of worms there.
The same tackle was done to EG Jr in the same game but luckily he escaped serious injury.
 
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