Get Rid of The Donkeys
Coach
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Rugby league spread to Adelaide, Melbourne and Perth in the mid-20th century. The problem is it never caught on like it did in Queensland and NSW. You cannot blame Queenslanders and New South Welshmen for the apathy shown towards the game by Victorians, South Australians and Western Australians over the last 70 years.I was talking about the early days of Rugby, pre-schism. What the ARU/RA did later is irrelevant to my point, which is that the early purveyors of Rugby rules didn’t have your attitude, hence the spread of the game.
Without the early expansion and spread of Rugby rules from where it began, the NRL wouldn’t have existed. At least not in the form we know it today.
TBH, it's a wonder the game managed to survive in Queensland. It's faced all sorts of obstacles since 1909. Not only did it survive, but it has gone on to thrive over the last 30 years. The game's growth and success over the last four decades is due to the Queensland vs NSW rivalry. We need to preserve this at all costs because if if declines then so does the game.
It doesn't surprise that wankers from Canberra, Hull and Perth are happy to erode the Queensland vs NSW rivalry. They're bitter because they'll never be part of it.
I'm shocked that you're singing from the same hymn sheet.
We should be doing all that we can to make the Queensland vs NSW rivalry stronger. Pissing money up a wall on Adelaide and Perth while fumbleball has its eyes on Queensland is one of the dumbest strategies we could take. For a start, we don't have the money to match them on junior development and marketing. Secondly, if fumbleball makes further inroads in Queensland then it could weaken RL in Queensland. We've now got about 34k registered fumbleball players competing in organised competitions across Queensland. AFLQ has seen a huge growth in Ipswich and is investing heavily in Logan. The last thing the QRL and NRL can afford is to lose their stranglehold on cities that have produced stars like Langer, the Walters brothers, Walker brothers, Corey Parker, Tony Carrol, Cam Smith and the Smith brothers.
Another team in Brisbane is needed to provide the juniors in Ipswich and Logan with a pathway to the NRL. Kids in Ipswich and Logan don't grow up dreaming of playing for upstart clubs in Adelaide and Perth. They want to play for Queensland and the local club that they support. A third club will allow more to do just that.