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18th club, whose next?

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,184
You know what you are getting by accepting PNG in. Not sure why anyone thought it would change
Don't forget he mentioned bears in Pacific and or Perf, most likely it will be Melbourne, since they are now flying their juniors there now for the Storm
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,184
Well Buzz mentioned it he didn't rule it out... No doubt it will start off the whingers on here.

I see no reason to rule out anything
Well buzz does carry a fkn blade around with him, you surely dont dismiss the old man, he'll gut you for disagreeing with him
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,750
How many premierships did Canberra win without Meninga?



You said Feldt has never made any representative teams. He represented for Queensland in Origin and Australia in the RL 9s World Cup.

The biggest problem with Feldt is complacency. He has the skill and size to match the greats. He becomes lazy and tunes in and out of matches. It's why he lost his spot in the Cowboys team lady year. But when he's focused there's nothing he cannot do




Doesn't change the fact that a Perth-based team will have less revenue streams bringing in money. The clubs that have pokies and property developments will always have a financial advantage over Perth.



If you're going by voting trends then Queensland as a whole isn't conservative.

1. You keep clinging to that mate. That doesn’t disprove the quality of all of those players you want to discount. Unless you are arguing that Mal Meninga scored all of the tries, made all of the tackles etc from centre. You are saying a centre (albeit a great one) was the only reason we won those premierships. It is an incredibly idiotic statement.
2. I was wrong with that statement and I apologise however I still wouldn’t class him a great player and if you were to class him a great player then you would have to class Nic Cotric, Jordan Rapana and Ken Nagas as equally great because they played just as much and in some cases more rep football then Kyle Feldt. You won’t though because that would defeat your argument.
3. That doesn’t change the fact that the conditions in 2024 are massively different to the 1980’s right up to and including the Super League. You can argue as much as you want but trying to compare 1997 or the 1980’s BRL era to the fully professional and cashed up NRL now is disingenuous at the very least.
4. Really so the fact that all of those articles have stated that Queensland is more conservative than other states is proof that they are not more conservative. Ok then go and tell all of those political analysts that they are wrong because you have a few family members that don’t vote across conservative lines. By the way if you bothered to actually read the articles they are saying that Queensland is socially conservative but vote Labor in state politics because of two general reasons: that the national party decided to essentially form a formal Coalition with the Liberal Party (which they previously hadn’t) and that the Labor Party have essentially targeted the rural working class which were and are socially conservative and which had previously voted for the National Party under Joh Bjelke Peterson. Essentially focus on the delivery of services to the large regional populations has been a key factor. Heck, I don’t know maybe your personal analogy is more reflective than data and experts.
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,184
1. You keep clinging to that mate. That doesn’t disprove the quality of all of those players you want to discount. Unless you are arguing that Mal Meninga scored all of the tries, made all of the tackles etc from centre. You are saying a centre (albeit a great one) was the only reason we won those premierships. It is an incredibly idiotic statement.
2. I was wrong with that statement and I apologise however I still wouldn’t class him a great player and if you were to class him a great player then you would have to class Nic Cotric, Jordan Rapana and Ken Nagas as equally great because they played just as much and in some cases more rep football then Kyle Feldt. You won’t though because that would defeat your argument.
3. That doesn’t change the fact that the conditions in 2024 are massively different to the 1980’s right up to and including the Super League. You can argue as much as you want but trying to compare 1997 or the 1980’s BRL era to the fully professional and cashed up NRL now is disingenuous at the very least.
4. Really so the fact that all of those articles have stated that Queensland is more conservative than other states is proof that they are not more conservative. Ok then go and tell all of those political analysts that they are wrong because you have a few family members that don’t vote across conservative lines. By the way if you bothered to actually read the articles they are saying that Queensland is socially conservative but vote Labor in state politics because of two general reasons: that the national party decided to essentially form a formal Coalition with the Liberal Party (which they previously hadn’t) and that the Labor Party have essentially targeted the rural working class which were and are socially conservative and which had previously voted for the National Party under Joh Bjelke Peterson. Essentially focus on the delivery of services to the large regional populations has been a key factor. Heck, I don’t know maybe your personal analogy is more reflective than data and experts.
Sorry colk, i could let all this slide, but if you keep replying your going to get more Queenslander...
This is about the 18th team, we've just got word of mouth from the messiah that expansion is set for 20 teams once again, and you're arguing canberra/qlder roots,
Png, brova... stick to the thread
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,750
Sorry colk, i could let all this slide, but if you keep replying your going to get more Queenslander...
This is about the 18th team, we've just got word of mouth from the messiah that expansion is set for 20 teams once again, and you're arguing canberra/qlder roots,
Png, brova... stick to the thread

I know Billy Moore would be proud

Yeah sorry mate I get stuck in sometimes - can’t help myself
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,995


BUZZ: How’s Las Vegas looking? Some narks out there are half bagging it.

PVL: I appreciate the narks because it motivates you. It motivates you to prove them wrong. I can sit back and do nothing and watch the game because it’s doing exceptionally well and rest on my laurels. But I’d be negligent in my duties if I did that.

If you’re the chairman of the game, you’ve got to look at growth. You’ve got to look at how you’re going to improve the game, how are you going to get new revenues. And the one market that we’ve never really attacked is America. There’s 340 million people in the US.

We have 25 million in Australia. When we were looking at Amazon and Apple and all those big players, they kept saying to me, why would we be interested in you when there’s 40 million people in California? And I thought to myself, they’re right in a sense. We’re in a small market. Imagine if we could capture a big market, and even if we got 1 per cent of the American market, we’d have more subscribers in America than we would in Australia on broadcast.

So it’s a big challenge and you can’t do it in one go.

BUZZ: Will you lose money?

PVL: That depends on how you look at losing money. Sometimes you have a loss leader, where you invest money to get money into the future. So it will cost us money this year, but probably no more than what it used to be to launch the season.

BUZZ:I guess if we didn’t have the change you’re talking about, we’d still have 10 or 12 Sydney-based NSWRL teams. State of Origin wouldn’t have happened. We’d still be having interstate blowouts. Everyone bagged Origin back in 1980 – said it was an exhibition game.

VL: Exactly. The first thing that I learned is to turn Twitter off. The majority of people aren’t represented on social media. I can tell you that for a fact, because everywhere I go, I get a different version. And every poll that we do provides a different version. But any game that doesn’t try to improve itself to get the new demographics will perish. There’s examples of that everywhere, where you’ve seen organisations that have just sat back, hoped for the best, and then perished.

BUZZ:I sat there with you at The Everest as Sweet Caroline was being played. I asked you then, is this your greatest achievement as an administrator? Could Las Vegas be rugby league’s Everest? I’m talking long term. I’m not talking three weekends away.

PVL: I think in six or seven years, people will sit back and say, geez, how good was that? I’m very confident of the initiative. But like anything else, if you don’t implement it right, it’s going to fail. The beauty about The Everest is that it was implemented, I think in the best possible premium manner. And we attracted a certain market. We attracted the under-30s. And it’s the same with Vegas. We’re going to get people that like sport.

You’re also going to make revenue out of sports wagering. Sports wagering in America is booming. I mean, they take $200 million in turnover on ping pong, because it’s such a big market. So they’re going to love betting on rugby league.

BUZZ:So what’s successful – 40,000 people in the stadium?

PVL: The crowd is not what’s going to be successful for me. The whole idea of it is to sell our broadcast. Now we’ve got a product called Watch NRL. And it’s a premium product made by Fox. When I was over in the US at the White House, there were some big VIPs there from Australia.

And every one of them that lived in America came and told me how good the Watch NRL app was. I don’t want to tell Matty Johns this, but they loved all the shows, especially the Matty Johns, Cooper Cronk show.

It made me think … we only have 3000 subscriptions in America. I was told no one knows about the app. So the whole idea is to promote it with this game. If we can sell a million subscriptions over five years, you’re going to be generating significant revenues and that’s the whole purpose of this, is to get the new market of people watching. Now there’s 300,000 Australians living in the US, even if you’ve got 150,000 of those, that’s $25m additional revenue each year.

BUZZ:And being live on Fox over there … this event is going to be huge for that sort of awareness?

PVL: Without that we couldn’t do it. For people that don’t know how big Fox One is, it’s the biggest sports channel in America. It’s got 220 million subscribers – and we’re going to be live in peak time with our game. And now that strategy is to try to get one game a week on Fox One. If we can do that, your subscriptions are going to come in very, very quickly.

BUZZ:peter, please don’t have one of your referee crackdowns. That grand final referee – he let the game flow – it was beautiful. It’s gotta be a great spectacle for the US fans.

PVL: No look – I think the game has really evolved well with the rule changes. In the first year, people were getting used to it. But now that everyone’s used to it and it’s sped the game up … I’m a statistics man. You know, we’ve gone to 59 minutes of play. That’s what you want – the consistent play. Rugby union, which I don’t want to kick someone while they’re down – is 33 minutes. You’re getting a lot more entertainment value out of rugby league.

BUZZ:Let’s talk expansion. There’s talk PNG will be announced as 18th team later this year.

PVL: PNG is the favourite. One of the guys I look up to who has been a leader of the game for many years is Nick Politis. I met Nick just before I got on to the commission. He says we should have 20 teams. You’ve got to listen to a successful businessman with his rugby league knowledge. We might not stop at 18. At the end of the day, it’s the broadcasters that pay for it with extra product. As long as we’ve got the talent. That’s why we’re now investing so much on pathways and participation. The idea is to have more boys and girls playing.

BUZZ:please tell me you’re going to include the North Sydney Bears?

PVL: Everywhere I go, that always the question … when are you bringing back the Bears? I didn’t realise they had so many old fans.

BUZZ:Ten and tens of thousands that we lost from the game.

PVL: As I said, it’s the most commonly asked question. They’ve got to be in the equation. They can’t be standalone in Sydney because there’s too many already. However, they can certainly be part of a new team, whether it be in Perth, the Pacific, wherever. They’re so passionate and you want that.

BUZZ: Come on, tell me, will you bring them back?

PVL: I’m only one decision maker.

BUZZ: But you’re a very influential decision maker.

PVL: It makes sense that we bring them back in some capacity, because they’ve got 200,000 members. That’s important. We brought the Dolphins in as 17th team because they were bringing new fans into the game, not people following the Broncos. They did a study and showed they’d bring all these new people to rugby league. That’s vital. You want to bring the casual viewer in to become an engaged fan. The Bears have got that.

BUZZ: Crystal ball. Ten years. We’re back at North Sydney Oval. Not every week.

PVL: Well in 10 years’ time, I would think we’ll have 20 teams.
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,750


BUZZ: How’s Las Vegas looking? Some narks out there are half bagging it.

PVL: I appreciate the narks because it motivates you. It motivates you to prove them wrong. I can sit back and do nothing and watch the game because it’s doing exceptionally well and rest on my laurels. But I’d be negligent in my duties if I did that.

If you’re the chairman of the game, you’ve got to look at growth. You’ve got to look at how you’re going to improve the game, how are you going to get new revenues. And the one market that we’ve never really attacked is America. There’s 340 million people in the US.

We have 25 million in Australia. When we were looking at Amazon and Apple and all those big players, they kept saying to me, why would we be interested in you when there’s 40 million people in California? And I thought to myself, they’re right in a sense. We’re in a small market. Imagine if we could capture a big market, and even if we got 1 per cent of the American market, we’d have more subscribers in America than we would in Australia on broadcast.

So it’s a big challenge and you can’t do it in one go.

BUZZ: Will you lose money?

PVL: That depends on how you look at losing money. Sometimes you have a loss leader, where you invest money to get money into the future. So it will cost us money this year, but probably no more than what it used to be to launch the season.

BUZZ:I guess if we didn’t have the change you’re talking about, we’d still have 10 or 12 Sydney-based NSWRL teams. State of Origin wouldn’t have happened. We’d still be having interstate blowouts. Everyone bagged Origin back in 1980 – said it was an exhibition game.

VL: Exactly. The first thing that I learned is to turn Twitter off. The majority of people aren’t represented on social media. I can tell you that for a fact, because everywhere I go, I get a different version. And every poll that we do provides a different version. But any game that doesn’t try to improve itself to get the new demographics will perish. There’s examples of that everywhere, where you’ve seen organisations that have just sat back, hoped for the best, and then perished.

BUZZ:I sat there with you at The Everest as Sweet Caroline was being played. I asked you then, is this your greatest achievement as an administrator? Could Las Vegas be rugby league’s Everest? I’m talking long term. I’m not talking three weekends away.

PVL: I think in six or seven years, people will sit back and say, geez, how good was that? I’m very confident of the initiative. But like anything else, if you don’t implement it right, it’s going to fail. The beauty about The Everest is that it was implemented, I think in the best possible premium manner. And we attracted a certain market. We attracted the under-30s. And it’s the same with Vegas. We’re going to get people that like sport.

You’re also going to make revenue out of sports wagering. Sports wagering in America is booming. I mean, they take $200 million in turnover on ping pong, because it’s such a big market. So they’re going to love betting on rugby league.

BUZZ:So what’s successful – 40,000 people in the stadium?

PVL: The crowd is not what’s going to be successful for me. The whole idea of it is to sell our broadcast. Now we’ve got a product called Watch NRL. And it’s a premium product made by Fox. When I was over in the US at the White House, there were some big VIPs there from Australia.

And every one of them that lived in America came and told me how good the Watch NRL app was. I don’t want to tell Matty Johns this, but they loved all the shows, especially the Matty Johns, Cooper Cronk show.

It made me think … we only have 3000 subscriptions in America. I was told no one knows about the app. So the whole idea is to promote it with this game. If we can sell a million subscriptions over five years, you’re going to be generating significant revenues and that’s the whole purpose of this, is to get the new market of people watching. Now there’s 300,000 Australians living in the US, even if you’ve got 150,000 of those, that’s $25m additional revenue each year.

BUZZ:And being live on Fox over there … this event is going to be huge for that sort of awareness?

PVL: Without that we couldn’t do it. For people that don’t know how big Fox One is, it’s the biggest sports channel in America. It’s got 220 million subscribers – and we’re going to be live in peak time with our game. And now that strategy is to try to get one game a week on Fox One. If we can do that, your subscriptions are going to come in very, very quickly.

BUZZ:peter, please don’t have one of your referee crackdowns. That grand final referee – he let the game flow – it was beautiful. It’s gotta be a great spectacle for the US fans.

PVL: No look – I think the game has really evolved well with the rule changes. In the first year, people were getting used to it. But now that everyone’s used to it and it’s sped the game up … I’m a statistics man. You know, we’ve gone to 59 minutes of play. That’s what you want – the consistent play. Rugby union, which I don’t want to kick someone while they’re down – is 33 minutes. You’re getting a lot more entertainment value out of rugby league.

BUZZ:Let’s talk expansion. There’s talk PNG will be announced as 18th team later this year.

PVL: PNG is the favourite. One of the guys I look up to who has been a leader of the game for many years is Nick Politis. I met Nick just before I got on to the commission. He says we should have 20 teams. You’ve got to listen to a successful businessman with his rugby league knowledge. We might not stop at 18. At the end of the day, it’s the broadcasters that pay for it with extra product. As long as we’ve got the talent. That’s why we’re now investing so much on pathways and participation. The idea is to have more boys and girls playing.

BUZZ:please tell me you’re going to include the North Sydney Bears?

PVL: Everywhere I go, that always the question … when are you bringing back the Bears? I didn’t realise they had so many old fans.

BUZZ:Ten and tens of thousands that we lost from the game.

PVL: As I said, it’s the most commonly asked question. They’ve got to be in the equation. They can’t be standalone in Sydney because there’s too many already. However, they can certainly be part of a new team, whether it be in Perth, the Pacific, wherever. They’re so passionate and you want that.

BUZZ: Come on, tell me, will you bring them back?

PVL: I’m only one decision maker.

BUZZ: But you’re a very influential decision maker.

PVL: It makes sense that we bring them back in some capacity, because they’ve got 200,000 members. That’s important. We brought the Dolphins in as 17th team because they were bringing new fans into the game, not people following the Broncos. They did a study and showed they’d bring all these new people to rugby league. That’s vital. You want to bring the casual viewer in to become an engaged fan. The Bears have got that.

BUZZ: Crystal ball. Ten years. We’re back at North Sydney Oval. Not every week.

PVL: Well in 10 years’ time, I would think we’ll have 20 teams.

Well PNG is the favourite as we all expected. Not so sure it will go to after 18 teams.
 

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