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Bears Board & Structure

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
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1,713
Maybe @Red&BlackBear can fill us in with whatever boardroom & board member developments he hears abouts.

West Aussie appointees; 3 spots
Peter Tinley looks likely to be chairman.
Plus 2x West Aussie locals to be BM’s.

An article below has Pete Cumins, Christina Matthews and Brad Wira (Aussie rules?) linked.

Norths appointees; 2 or 3 spots
Joe Hockey looks set to be a BM based on an article in the papers today.

James Bracey, Tony Crawford & Billy Moore are other names being touted. I think there will be 2 or 3 Bears peoples, if not now then eventually. Red&BlackBear has alluded to this for months.

ARLC appointees; 2 or 3 spots (and only voting rights)
Tony Crawford technically could be a name here too. Not sure who the ARLC have in mind for their 2 or 2 independent spots.

I think structure will look like;

Member 1 & Chair WA Background
Member 2 WA Background
Member 3 WA Background
Member 4 Norths Background
Member 5 Norths Background
Member 6 ARLC Independent
Member 7 ARLC Independent
Member 8 ARLC or Norths
 
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SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,713

Franchise leadership to be appointed​

News Corp has reported that the NRL plans to establish a seven-member board and appoint both a chief executive officer and coach within the next month to lead the new franchise.
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
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1,713

Red&BlackBear

First Grade
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5,799
Anyone able to paste full article please

How V’landys got Stokes’ man​

The NRL boss has been talking to Seven news chief Anthony De Ceglie for weeks ahead of becoming new CEO of the Perth Bears.
Mark Di StefanoColumnist
May 15, 2025 – 7.49pm
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NRL’s chief Peter V’landys decision to poach Seven news boss Anthony De Ceglie to be the inaugural CEO of the Perth Bears may have rattled the country’s entwined media and sport circles. It happens to have been rumbling for weeks.
The pair put their heads together at a Sydney wedding two weeks ago. It was the nuptials of talent agency boss George Moskos at the Deckhouse in Woolwich on Sydney Harbour. Moskos has moved around various levels of Sydney’s social circles, with his agency booking musical acts for V’landys’ big horse race, The Everest. Others at his wedding included Olympic swimmer Michael Klim, Sky News hosts Peter Stefanovic and Tim Gilbert, and tooth-gap-famous model Jessica Hart.
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Here come the Bears Kerry Stokes (left), Anthony De Ceglie and Peter V’landys. Bethany Rae
V’landys pitched up to De Ceglie. They talked about the impending announcement that the old North Sydney Bears would be heading to Western Australia. De Ceglie had been bruised after a torrid first year running Seven’s news division in Sydney. He told people his two young kids missed Perth and he harboured ambitious to be a CEO.
The rugby league boss isn’t one to miss an opportunity to make a brave call. V’landys dined privately with Seven West Media’s proprietor, Kerry Stokes, in Perth last week. The pair are old friends, but the fact of the dinner is almost too delicious, isn’t it? Rugby league venturing behind enemy lines in AFL-mad Perth. The King of NSW breaking bread with the King of WA. Who kisses whose ring?
The topic of De Ceglie didn’t come up. Arrangements were being made for his appointment in the background. De Ceglie would tell Stokes later about the reasons he was leaving the network.

This was a dramatic announcement that landed on Thursday for many reasons. For one, it seems like Seven staff were completely blindsided.
De Ceglie was standing in the middle of Seven’s Eveleigh newsroom in the mid-morning with the usual TV and radio playing in the background. 2GB breakfast host Ben Fordham had finished, but called in live, to read aloud Zoe Samios’ scoop directly from this masthead. One person said eyes around the newsroom slowly turned to the news boss, who muttered “it’s true” before walking off.
Stokes tapping De Ceglie (who until then had been editor-in-chief of The West Australian) was a surprise even last year. But his media company was at a desperate nadir. It had a news division with a sewer rat reputation after the Bruce Lehrmanntrial showed how its senior producers had paid him off with rent, cocaine and Asian massages. On the day Lehrmann became the country’s most infamous rapist, Seven announced Spotlight executive producer Mark Llewellyn was gone. Two weeks later, Craig McPherson (husband of network host Sonia Kruger) was pushed out for De Ceglie.
He may have pulled them out of that nosedive. But TV news (with its well-paid anchors and 30-minute bulletins) is in structural decline. De Ceglie’s ideas – such as putting a comedian and star signs on the 6pm news – haven’t worked. Seven is losing ground to Nine (owned by the same company as the Financial Review). Seven West Media’s share price is down 17.5 per cent over the past 12 months, to 16¢ per share. It has a $263 million market cap, with $260 million in debt. If only he kept the astrologer on staff, he may have seen it all coming!
That’s before getting to the sweeping redundancies in the news division. They end careers and destroy morale. De Ceglie also wouldn’t be the first C-suite in the media sector to get demoralised from sacking people. Any wonder he’s jumped at the chance to escape back to Perth.
Of course, there’s plenty of friendly fire waiting for him. It puts him in the path of Chris Dore, his successor as editor-in-chief of The West Australian. The publication welcomed the Perth Bears announcement last week by calling them “NRL rejects” under the headline: “The Bad News Bears”. The joys of a one newspaper town.

Perth-based Ray Kuka has been named as the Seven news boss. As this column revealed last year, Kuka was one of the execs who sat nearby when the scandal-plagued company marked six months to Christmas by hiring long-legged, sexy Santa dancers to dance to Mariah Carey.
Did anyone say: half-time entertainment? They have until 2027 to practise those high kicks. Goooooo Bears!
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,713

Seven’s paper bagged the Bears, now its old boss is club’s CEO​

He was considered to be Kerry Stokes’ right-hand man but Anthony De Ceglie will soon be at the helm of the Perth Bears, the very club Stokes’ media empire opposed.
Matthew Benns
@MatthewBenns

3 min read
May 16, 2025 - 5:00AM
https://archive.md/HnmH6/again?url=...ory/caf41ef17ba9b0b9e422f8984f45bd8d#comments

Anthony De Ceglie. Picture: Colin Murty, The Australian
The NRL has poached West Australian billionaire Kerry Stokes’ key general to lead new club the Perth Bears in the heart of enemy AFL territory.
Channel 7 boss Anthony De Ceglie yesterday quit the network to take up the job as CEO of the newly formed Perth Bears NRL team.
Seven moved quickly to appoint current Perth news boss Ray Kuka to replace De Ceglie who will leave at the end of the financial year.
Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys said De Ceglie was the right man to open doors for the NRL in the heartland of rival code the AFL. The deal to sign him was only negotiated and inked in the last few days.
“To succeed in Perth, you need a well connected local who knows how to get things done and has a can do attitude,” Mr V’landys said.
“Anthony is a brilliant operator with a proven track record and a genuine Western Australian, and I am excited about what he can do for us as we grow rugby league in the WA market.”
Until the shock move De Ceglie, 39, was considered Seven West Media boss Kerry Stokes right-hand man.

Peter V'landys AM at The Everest barrier draw dinner for the 2024 running of the 20 million dollar race. Picture: Richard Dobson
The appointment appears to put De Ceglie at odds with Stokes whose Seven Network signed a $1.5 billion deal to broadcast the AFL in 2022 and has used his media empire to oppose the Bears and stop the NRL getting a foothold in the west.

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Seven West Media news boss Anthony De Ceglie speaking at the Melbourne Press Club. Photo: Emily Kulich/Melbourne Press Club.
However it is understood Stokes is keen to be in the running for NRL broadcast rights when they are negotiated in coming months and had dinner with Mr V’landys and NRL CEO Andrew Abdo when they were in Perth last week to launch The Bears.
Officially Stokes showed no hard feelings saying at the loss of De Ceglie saying: “We thank Anthony for his contribution and leadership and wish him every success in his future role, which sees him return to Perth.”
De Ceglie was editor-in-chief of Stokes’ The West Australian before moving to Sydney last year to head up Seven’s news and current affairs where he wielded the axe on 150 jobs to save $100 million in costs.
Among those who lost their jobs were Sydney news director Neil Warren, Melbourne crime reporter Cameron Baud and popular Queensland newsreader Sharyn Ghidella, who posted about her axing on social media.

Kerry Stokes. AFL Grand Final lunch held at Crown Casino Palladium. Picture: Jason Edwards
“When you work in TV for as long as I have, not a day goes by when you aren’t expecting the proverbial tap on the shoulder … after 38 years, my shoulder tap has finally come,” she wrote.
Privately De Ceglie is understood to have told friends that he is keen to move into a growing industry where he can spend money hiring people rather than firing them. He will be tasked with building the new club from the ground up
He told his team at Seven yesterday “It is every kid’s dream to run a sporting club and this is far too good an opportunity for me to pass up.”.
He told them he is happy that the new role leading a team built from its origins in North Sydney will maintain his links with the Harbour City with at least one home game a year being played here.
The move will also take De Ceglie and his young family back to Perth which was a key driver in his departure from his role as deputy editor at The Daily Telegraph to join Seven West Media six years ago.
But it will pit him against his former paper The West Australian which ran a front page last week announcing the arrival of the new NRL team with the headline “The Bad News Bears”.
Last week’s headline came the day after Premier Roger Cook announced $60 million in direct funding and further $5 million in match-day support and marketing for the new club, which will play its first game in 2027.

Western Australia Sport and Recreation Minister Rita Saffioti, National Rugby League CEO Andrew Abdo, Western Australian Premier Roger Cook and Peter V’landys. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images
The coverage saying “rugby mad” premier Roger Cook “forces” WA taxpayers to pay “Sydney NRL rejects $65 million to play in Perth” prompted a piece on ABC’s Media Watch.
In response The West Australian’s Editor-in-Chief Christopher Dore issued a statement saying that “Rugby League is just not a thing in WA.
“There is no significant, profitable fan base in this town and nor is there likely to be one.”
Dore, a former editor of The Daily Telegraph, said the paper “does not have any beef” with the new NRL club but had “a problem with the State Government paying for it to happen”.
One of the first items on De Ceglie’s to-do list will be the selection of the team coach. The ARL Commission is understood to be conducting interviews for the role this week.
The three key contenders for the role are Kangaroos coach and rugby league immortal Mal Meninga, cross-code star Sam Burgess and former Parramatta coach Brad Arthur.
The coach will be expected to closely work with De Ceglie to shape the culture of the new club from day one.

 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
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1,713

Ex-newsman’s tabloid past comes back to bite Bears​

Anthony De Ceglie’s media career has left him off-side with many of those people he will now need to court in his role with the Perth Bears.

This article contains features which are only available in the web versionTake me there
One of Perth’s most prominent businessmen has delivered an excoriating spray towards former Seven West Media executive and new Perth Bears chief Anthony De Ceglie, saying he and many other senior figures across the city will be actively cheering for the former newspaper editor to fail in his role.
John Poynton – a former Reserve Bank board member, veteran investment banker and prominent company director who along with his wife, Di Bain, was the target of numerous negative stories during Mr De Ceglie’s time as editor of Seven West Media’s The West Australian newspaper – told The Australian that the NRL had made a major blunder in appointing Mr De Ceglie to the helm of the new club.
“There’s a typical sort of arrogance and hubris about this, that De Ceglie would think that he could walk into town after upsetting pretty much everybody, some more than others, and think that it was going to be an easy run,” Mr Poynton said.
NRL: The NRL and ARLC have confirmed that the Perth Bears will enter the competition in 2027.
“That’s the problem about making a prick of yourself – it’s hard when you have to come back and face the very same people.”
The long-lasting enmity between Mr Poynton and Seven West Media major shareholder Kerry Stokes has been the stuff of legend in Perth and dates back decades.
He and Ms Bain – who ran against Seven West personality Basil Zempilas for lord mayor of the City of Perth – were both on the receiving end of a series of negative stories during Mr De Ceglie’s time at the helm of Seven West’s The West Australian newspaper.
Mr Poynton, one of Perth’s best-connected business figures, with longstanding ties to many of the city’s most prominent names, said he believed there would be many other senior people in Perth who would be opposed to Mr De Ceglie’s involvement in the Bears.
“I do know there’s a whole lot of other people who either were touched up personally, or saw what he was doing to other people, who knew it was him – whether it was at Kerry’s bidding or not – and who don’t forget, and who haven’t forgotten,” he said.

“He needs to be taught a lesson and taught a lesson he will be.”
Mr Poynton’s comments are the most stark example yet of how Mr De Ceglie’s appointment has divided opinion in Perth.
The 39-year-old was a shock appointment when he was named as the club’s new chief just days after NRL boss Peter V’landys joined WA Premier Roger Cook to announce the deal to resurrect the North Sydney Bears out of Perth.
While many in Perth’s corporate, sporting and media sectors believe Mr De Ceglie will bring the Perth and Sydney contacts at both a corporate and political level that are needed to help the Bears survive, others think memories of his time in the media and his lack of prior experience running a sports organisation could hinder a club that needs a lot to go right for it to succeed.
“He probably does know everyone in Perth, but half of them hate his guts because they’ve been smashed by him,” says one prominent corporate figure, who has been involved at a senior level with one of Perth’s major sports teams.
Another source close to one of Mr De Ceglie’s former targets at The West is adamant their organisation won’t be supporting the Bears because of him. “Life catches up with you and Anthony has made his bed with us,” they said.
Not everyone who was on the receiving end of the West under Mr De Ceglie is quite as negative as Mr Poynton. One Perth corporate identity who had been put through the ringer by The West under Mr De Ceglie – “It is what it is. You just get on with your life and put it down to experience. I guess,” he said – believed the De Ceglie’s appointment was a good one. “Obviously he’s got a good relationship with V’landys, which is really important. He’s the most powerful figure in rugby league and (a good relationship with V’landys) is going to be important to make this successful,” he said.
“It’s probably a bit left-field, but it makes good sense for where they want to go at the club.”
The West Australian under Mr De Ceglie developed a reputation for headlines and front pages that some of the paper’s targets felt crossed a line. The paper was singled out for criticism by Fortescue founder Andrew Forrest in February 2023, when the mining magnate attacked what he described as biased, inflammatory and inaccurate reporting by The West, alleging the paper’s editorial direction was a product of Fortescue’s decision to purchase electric trucks from a rival of Mr Stokes’s WesTrac.
So incensed was Dr Forrest by The West’s coverage of his company’s executive departures and the breakdown of his marriage that he took out full-page advertisements in rival newspapers attacking the paper. The ads included tear-outs from The West accompanied by the punchline “Don’t be hooked by headline trash”.
While Dr Forrest’s relationship with The West has warmed since Mr De Ceglie left the editor’s chair, he did not appear on Seven’s news and current affairs programs during Mr De Ceglie’s time at the helm of that network.

Mr De Ceglie has a line of communication to John Hartman, the man running Andrew and Nicola Forrest’s private family office Tattarang, but it is understood the De Ceglie-led attacks on Dr Forrest and Fortescue have not been forgotten.
The Forrests bankroll the Western Force rugby union side, which is set to work very closely with the Bears. The two teams will share facilities, while Mr V’landys flagged they might even end up sharing players across the codes.
RugbyWA’s president, former Wallaby and mining executive John Welborn, who has close ties to Dr Forrest, is supportive of the move to bring the Bears to Perth.
Mr Welborn has been calling for the rival rugby codes to work together for years, and believes their main hope is to co-operate rather than cannibalise each other. “The best thing both sports could do is actually bring themselves together,” he said.
“The economy of Super Rugby is challenged. Rugby league has got a fantastic rugby economy but they need to go international, and I’m not sure getting gambling revenue by playing in Las Vegas once a year is their best pathway.
“The potential for rugby league players to be exposed to an Olympic sport and the world’s third-largest event would be really fun.”
One senior Perth sports and business figure said his biggest concern about Mr De Ceglie’s appointment was not his relationships with Perth’s C-suite but his lack of experience running a professional sporting organisation.
Mr De Ceglie steps into the role after a career as a newspaper journalist and editor followed by a brief stint running Seven’s television news that was marred by a pronounced drop in network ratings.
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
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1,713
In contrast, the AFL appointed Brendan Gale as the chief executive of its latest expansion club, the Tassie Devils. He was an AFL captain, a solicitor at K & W Mallesons, a chief executive of the AFL Players Association, and the chief executive who led the Richmond Tigers to an on- and off-field revival that included three premierships.
“De Ceglie is a smart guy. Love him or hate him, he’s a smart operator and he’s going to learn fast,” the Perth sports and business figure said. “But to appoint a new CEO with no prior history running a club? Oh my God. That’s the fascinating thing.”
One undoubted strength Mr De Ceglie brings to the table, however, are his political connections.
On the day his appointment was announced, Mr Cook described Mr De Ceglie as a “mate” and revealed he had had informal discussions with him during the months of at-times tense negotiations between the government and the NRL.
“I know he knows Peter V’landys. As you know, mine and Peter V’landys’s relationship hasn’t been completely smooth throughout this whole process,” he said.
Mr De Ceglie also has a long and positive history with Mr Zempilas, now state opposition leader.
His appointment also adds an interesting layer to the Perth media dynamic.
The West – under the leadership of The Australian’s former editor Chris Dore – has been highly critical of the deal to bring the Bears to Perth, famously splashing its front page with the headline “The Bad News Bears” on the day the deal was announced. Seven holds the rights to broadcast free-to-air AFL matches and has a commercial imperative to see the NRL struggle to match the national reach of AFL.
If De Ceglie can help get The West behind the Bears, he will go a long way to justifying the V’landys’ decision to appoint him.
Conversely, Nine holds the rights to NRL and is financially motivated to see the Bears succeed. Nine and Seven are mortal enemies, and anyone in the network who still sees Mr De Ceglie as a Seven man will need to put that animosity aside and find a way to work with him.
WA has a mixed record with professional sporting teams. The West Coast Eagles and Fremantle Dockers are the state’s two dominant teams – even if their on-field results are not going that well – the Perth Wildcats are by far the strongest franchise in the National Basketball League, and the Perth Scorchers are the most successful side in cricket’s Big Bash League.
But the Perth Glory soccer team is only just emerging from administration while the Western Force has been kept alive by the Forrests since it was controversially axed from Super Rugby. Without the support of the Forrests, it would have been unlikely to have found its way back into the competition.

Many point to Perth’s strong English, New Zealand and South African expat populations as a positive for the Bears’ prospects, but those expats were not enough to sustain soccer and union ventures in Perth.
The Brand Agency chief executive Steve Harris – also a former chair of the Dockers – says the Perth Bears will be fantastic for WA and should prove a good business decision for the NRL in the long run. The value in the club will not be in the size of the Perth crowds but in the NRL’s ability to secure a bigger broadcast deal through more games and a truly national audience.
“Look at Greater Western Sydney, look at Gold Coast Suns – both of those decisions I was involved in when I was at the Dockers with the AFL, and they’ve turned out to be fantastic for the sport of AFL, they’ve turned out to be fantastic for TV ratings, they’ve added to the amount of money in the pot for players to get paid, for administrators to get paid, for tax to be paid.
“In every sense they stimulate the economy, drive tourism and drive profile and drive the spirit in the community,” he said.
“The big advertisers out of Sydney and Melbourne want to buy national packages, and that’s the strength of the Bears because otherwise if you buy an NRL package, and it doesn’t run in WA, there’s almost three million people (there) who want to buy cars and clothes and choc milks and cans of Coke who you miss.
“The TV is the missing piece and this links in really nicely with the next TV negotiation.”
Mr De Ceglie was approached for comment.

 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
16,676
If these moaners have an issue with Stokes and the West Australian (Poynton has been feuding with him for years apparently ) …you think they would be in favour of the Bears who seem to be on the wrong side of the fence also with those media entities … just sounds to me a convenient excuse to hate on the Bears I suspect , and it wouldn’t matter to some of the haters who the CEO was …
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
73,109
Welcome to Perth lol. Its dog eat dog on the Terrace with a lot of Western burbs Alpha males who are very rich men ruling the roost.
 
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