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CONFIRMED - Canadian team to enter English leagues

Evil Homer

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Staff member
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Major press conference attended by the mayor of Toronto and celebrities like Lennox Lewis.

ChDulotUgAA6wEe.jpg


http://globalnews.ca/news/2664663/t...m-to-join-rugby-football-league/?sf25189696=1

Canada becomes the 7th nation to have a pro RL team, and the first professional team in North America which is something that I know a lot of people on this forum have been waiting for for a long time.
 
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http://www.sportinglife.com/rugby-l...ck-set-their-sights-on-sights-on-super-league

Toronto Wolfpack was launched in Leeds via a video link to the Canadian city, where former Bradford, Wigan and Great Britain coach Brian Noble was confirmed as director of rugby working alongside ex-Leigh boss Paul Rowley as head coach.

The team will play in the Kingstone Press League 1 from next March and take part in the 2017 Ladbrokes Challenge Cup.

"Rugby league has always had a pioneering philosophy throughout its history and this initiative offers further evidence of the sport's wide appeal and readiness to embrace innovation," said Rugby Football League chief executive Nigel Wood on the video link from Toronto.

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The initiative came from Toronto-born businessman Eric Perez, who will become the club's chief executive, and is financed largely by wealthy Australian businessman David Arygle, a 55-year-old mining investor.

Also on the club's board will be rugby player-turned-actor Adam Fogerty, who made the initial approach to Noble, who remains the most successful coach in Super League following his spell with Bradford from 2000-06.

"I met Adam over a couple of breakfasts, went to see David Argyle in his apartment in London alongside Eric Perez and I thought I'd love to be a part of it," Noble said.

"It's brand new - I've done a lot of things in the game but to be involved in this and to take something from nowhere is exciting. Old Trafford is our ambition so it's hugely appealing.

"I'm very ambitious as we all are. We really want to do it the right way and build it the right way. I'm an expansionist at heart and it's exciting for this sport."

Noble had no hesitation in recommending Rowley, who was already a big enthusiast of Canadian rugby league, after he became available after quitting his job at Leigh on the eve of the season in February.

"I've known Eric for five years and believed in Canadian rugby league," Rowley told the press conference. "More importantly, I believe in Eric's dream for the sport.

"I see an enthusiastic population who adore sport. They've not had full exposure to rugby league yet but it's a great opportunity.

"We're not in it for a holiday. Brian is the most successful coach in Super League history and we want to progress and progress at a fast rate. We've got the support and the infrastructure and a sports-mad city to embrace it."

The club will not receive central funding from the RFL but are likely to get special dispensation to exceed the salary cap to enable them to run a full-time team and have pledged to cover all costs of visiting teams, who will fly out on a Thursday, play on Saturday and return the following day.

The Canadians squad, which is initially expected to comprise largely of English players, will be based at Bradford Bulls' training base and fly out to Toronto to play fixtures in four or five-match blocks at the Lamport Stadium.

The Wolfpack's player recruitment drive will include a reality television series called "Last Tackle" which, according to Noble, will raise the club's profile as well as potentially attract players.

"It doesn't work for me if there isn't a Canadian influence," Noble said. "We'll have to work out the numbers but I'd be disappointed if we don't have five or six Canadians eventually but with the speed we want to go at we'd need some substantial players.

"We'll have six trials in major USA and Canadian cities trialling people who want to be part of it."

Like Toulouse, who entered League 1 this year, the aim will be to gain immediate promotion to the Championship before making an assault on Super League.

like the logo... simple but smart, i'll have to buy a jersey for sure
 

adamkungl

Immortal
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42,971
I'm tipping France to have its 2nd top league team before NZ does
and Canada to have its 1st before Perth :lol: f**king NRL
 

juro

Bench
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3,826
Toronto Wolfpack to enter League One next season, RFL announces
• Great Britain’s former rugby league coach Brian Noble joins as director
• Wolfpack to pay travel expenses of division’s 13 other sides
Aaron Bower
Thursday 28 April 2016 01.26 AEST Last modified on Thursday 28 April 2016 01.52 AEST

The Rugby Football League has confirmed that a Canadian side will be introduced into English rugby league from next season. Toronto Wolfpack will enter League One – the sport’s third tier – and will play home and away fixtures in blocks of four or five, staying in Yorkshire while playing away and training in Bradford.

The Wolfpack will play their home games at Toronto’s Lamport Stadium, home of the Canada national side, and have already confirmed an impressive off-field team to head up the organisation. The former Great Britain coach Brian Noble will join as director of rugby with the former Leigh coach Paul Rowley working as head coach. “It’s brand new – I’ve done a lot of things in the game but to be involved in this and to take something from nowhere is exciting,” Noble said.


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The Guardian revealed last year that talks were taking place about the RFL admitting a side from across the Atlantic, and the Wolfpack will fund the expenses of the other 15 League One sides, 12 of which are part-time, when they travel to Toronto.

“Toronto is a city ready to embrace the first transatlantic sports team, and we’re proud to be behind it,” said Eric Perez, the club’s CEO. “We have a consortium of very successful businessmen and we’ve set up platforms of exposure for sponsorship that will ensure the team is well-backed and well-funded.”

With the infrastructure and launch of the club confirmed, attention will now turn to recruiting the players for the inaugural season in 2017. Rowley and Noble both confirmed that they will conduct a wide search for talent, but the former insisted it is vital there is a Canadian presence in the squad – an area of the world in which rugby league is relatively unknown at the moment.

“It’s important to have homegrown flavour,” Noble said. “The immediate goal is winning but we’ll be spending a month here to ensure we find the top athletes this country is producing: there will be north American roots.”

Noble also said he sees no reason why the club cannot aim for the highest level in the shortest space of time. “If you have a dream you’ve got to dream as big as you can,” he said. “If you speak to everyone involved their goal is Super League – and once you’re in there, you’ve a chance of winning it. We want to be right up there.”
http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/apr/27/toronto-wolfpack-rugby-league-one-2017-brian-noble
 

bowes

Juniors
Messages
1,320
Not sure whether to put this here or in SL or North American forum..

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...part-of-super-league-bid-20160421-gobk7i.html



This is pretty big news if it comes off.

IF (and its a big IF) they can sustain themselves financially it opens up massive doors for international Rugby League. Could we see the floodgates open for a truly international Super League?
A 3 division structure including entries potentially from
England
France
Wales
Canada
Scotland
Ireland
Spain
Italy
USA
Serbia

If a team from Toronto hits the right funding and player model, it should encourage copycats from all around.

Exciting times!

(bring on the skeptics :lol: )
How do you expect semi-professional English expansion clubs, often below the standard of the top amateurs, to travel to all those places?
 

langpark

First Grade
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5,867
Canada managed to pull crowds of 5-7000 a few times at this very stadium. What would they be aiming for (realistically) now for their regular League One matches?
 

miguel de cervantes

First Grade
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7,474
Wow. But I just can't see this being a long term thing. We can only hope that the initial excitement and media coverage somehow inspires others to invest in a pro Canadian or North American League.
 

adamkungl

Immortal
Messages
42,971
How do you expect semi-professional English expansion clubs, often below the standard of the top amateurs, to travel to all those places?

I don't, really. Scotland, Ireland, France and Wales are mostly manageable.

Hypothetically though, travel would have to be funded by the expansion team at low levels. At top level you would hope the League could fund it.

It might be difficult for the local town teams to handle the logistics of international travel every few weeks. If (HUGE if) there was an influx of strong international teams, it would move towards a Euro-league more than an English league. Local teams that can't handle it would be pushed to a lower division. Maybe the 2nd div would be minimum standard for international entries and some local teams would shift down 1. Raising the standard and financial worth of both, ideally.

Who's to say. That might be the way the game is heading. In Aus we have teams from PNG and soon Fiji, probably with Samoa and Tonga not far behind, playing 2nd div.
 

Emu01

Juniors
Messages
833
I believe this one of the biggest developments In Rugby league I have seen..If this all goes well and they make it to Super League the sky is the limit..

This is a new player in Rugby league a new continent a new audience a new tv deal and if all goes well I would think a team from USA might follow down the track.

I hope this works out for Toronto.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
70,867
I'm expecting Beijing to have a SL team before the nrl expands lol

I really hope this works. We've tried and failed in Paris, Sheffield, ,london and Wales. We are due an expansion success story!
 

ParraEelsNRL

Referee
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27,731
All those places have teams still, just because they aren't in superduper league doesn't mean they are all failures.

Some teams even managed to inspire other teams to shoot up in the areas where the game supposedly"failed". If any were a failure and there was a big one, it was Paris simply because the club was put there instead of where it should have been put in the first place. That has been rectified since. Wales now has two clubs in the pro ranks when 15 years ago they had none, Sheffield is supposedly doing some good things on and off the field and still fighting, what did they fail at, survival? Now we even see teams from Oxford, Coventry and a few new Southern clubs from London and other areas. That's proper expansion, making them work for their position, not just plonking a team in Super League and hoping for the best, we've been there and done that and it doesn't work in the UK bar the Catalans and we know why they are a success yet the RFL went away from that with Toulouse, their call.

So called rl fans always looking for doom and gloom and never see the positive side to anything do far more damage to the game imo than any troll could ever do, don't know why they do it.

Good luck with this venture, I hope it has all the success in the world and brings about a professional North American league eventually in the future, until then, good luck with making Super League and good luck in spreading the game across Canada.
 

RoosTah

Juniors
Messages
2,257
If there is one advantage to a promotion-relegation structure, this has to be it. Very interesting development.

I wonder what the impetus was for Argyle getting involved. Either way, the game seems to have had very healthy growth in Canada, with attendances already rivaling union.
 
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