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Fans get their game back

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/nrl/deal-gives-fans-their-game/story-e6frfgbo-1225804908450

Fans get their game back

* By Phil Rothfield
* From: The Sunday Telegraph
* November 28, 2009 5:50PM

THE game of rugby league is on the verge of being handed back to the people with the long-awaited independent commission just weeks away from becoming a reality.

In the most stunning administration shake-up since Super League, News Ltd and the Australian Rugby League are putting the finishing touches to an agreement that will see independence day arrive before the March kick-off of the 2010 season.

"It could be sorted by Christmas - if not before the start of next season," said a prominent official who has been involved in months of negotiations to deliver a watershed moment in the code's history.

The Sunday Telegraph has learned a series of high-powered meetings has resolved the major sticking points and lawyers for both parties are now nutting out the finer details.

As part of establishing the commission, those details are:


Melbourne
Storm is likely to be sold to a consortium for just $1 in a paperwork transaction that allows News Ltd to leave the game;

David Gallop will remain as CEO for three to five years;

ARL
supremo Colin Love will be the inaugural chairman for two years;

The 16 NRL clubs will have an equal share in all profits after grants are paid to the respective leagues to look after the grass roots, and;

Two
new clubs will be added by 2013 to increase bargaining power when the commission negotiates the next television deal.

The
key to any agreement has been the future of the Melbourne Storm and the reluctance of the Queensland Rugby League and the NSW Rugby League to come on board.

The Melbourne Storm sale


CEO Brian Waldron has been told by News Ltd to pull together a consortium to buy the club. He has approached several investors in recent weeks and it is believed he already has Gerry Ryan, the founder and managing director of Jayco Caravans, on board.

Former Super League boss and former Melbourne CEO John Ribot is also believed to be part of the consortium. However, the Storm have been told to keep his name away from the media because he is still regarded as damaged goods from the Super League war.

Waldron's problem is finding investors prepared to put around $25 million into a business that has been losing around $6 million a year. To make the sale viable, News Ltd will use an exit payment of up to $20 million which it will then drip-feed back into the club and the new owners.

Melbourne Storm's future must be secured because senior officials know the value the club provides in television negotiations in a national competition.

The NSWRL and QRL dilemma

The key negotiators are still waiting for final sign-off from the state bodies but are confident of getting their support, even if it means using fear tactics.The NSWRL and QRL will be told that the clubs are so determined to have the independent commission that they are prepared to go it alone if no agreement is reached.

"The clubs would quit the NSWRL," an insider told us. "It's as simple as that. They would form their own body and work under the new commission."

Who will own the game?


The 16 clubs will hold an equal share. Currently, all profits from the NRL are divided between the Australian Rugby League and News Ltd. News Ltd spends its share on bank-rolling the Storm - the Australian Rugby League uses its money to run the game and develop it at the grass-roots level.

The new independent commission will be set up as a non-profit trust with each of the 16 clubs getting an equal share after grants to the NSWRL, QRL and CRL.

Who will be on the commission and what role will they play in running the game?

Earlier plans to appoint former Prime Minister John Howard as inaugural chairman have been abandoned. Instead, Australian Rugby League supremo Colin Love will get the job for the first two years.Love's appointment does not have overwhelming support from News Ltd or from the clubs.

However, significant concessions are being made on both sides to get the deal over the line before the start of next year's premiership.

The Sunday Telegraph understands three of Australia's top business leaders - Katie Page, Gary Pemberton and Geoff Dixon - have agreed to sit on the commission.Others, including the likes of banking heavyweight Mark Bouris, will be approached to form an eight-man board.

What does this mean for David Gallop?


Senior officials have told Gallop he will remain as chief executive and will be offered a contract for between three and five years.Instead of reporting to two NRL boards, as he does under the current administration, he will report to the commissioners and be responsible for the day-to-day running of the game.

What are the key areas for the new commission?

A new television deal and the expansion of the game will be top priorities. The current deal with Channel Nine and Fox Sports expires at the end of 2012 and many believe the last contract was undersold. The AFL has already started negotiations with all free-to-air networks and rugby league will be left behind unless talks get underway soon for the next deal.

Channel Seven boss David Leckie has confirmed his network will be challenging Channel Nine for the rights but is waiting for News Ltd's exit before he enters into serious discussions. Two new clubs - possibly from the Central Coast and a second team in Brisbane - will be added to the premiership by 2013. This will provide an extra game and extra television programming.

The rights could be divided among two free-to-air networks and Fox Sports to maximise revenue, like Ten and Seven sharing AFL broadcasts. State of Origin and representative football will be sold separately. The new deal could be worth as much as $1 billion.

How the commission deal was done


Roosters supremo Nick Politis and Gold Coast managing director Michael Searle have been the key players - Searle in a very public way, Politis on the quiet, regularly meeting with News Ltd executives over the past 12 months.

Significant progress was made at a meeting last week between Politis, Searle and New Ltd's chief operating officer Peter Macourt about the major hurdle - the future of the Melbourne Storm. News Ltd wanted a guarantee that the Storm would continue to get funding from the game for three more years until they are established in their new stadium in Melbourne.

"The clubs wouldn't wear that," one insider told us. "Why should the commission be handing out $6 million a year to Melbourne when clubs like Cronulla are struggling to stay afloat? It gives them an unfair advantage over everyone else."

News Ltd wanted Melbourne's future assured because of the value they bring in television negotiations - for which the company will hold first and last rights - by ensuring it is a national competition. Instead of the Storm getting $6 million a year from the commission, News is likely to get a severance payment of around $18 million when it exits the game.

That money will be drip-fed into the Storm over the next three years to make the sale more attractive to prospective investors.

Is the future of all clubs assured or will there be mergers?

Financially struggling clubs like the Cronulla Sharks and the Newcastle Knights will have far greater hope of survival under the commission. At the moment, the NRL has no money in the bank to prop up a club that goes broke. Even if a club decides to relocate to the Central Coast, the original $10 million relocation offer is not available anymore because the cash just isn't there.

The commission will be looking to bank money each year to set up a war chest to fight the AFL in Sydney's west and on the Gold Coast.

"All clubs will be equal shareholders and it will be in all their interests to ensure no one folds," one senior official said. "One less team would mean one less game, which would seriously affect their income from TV rights. The struggling clubs will be far more secure under the new administration."

Will the commission be genuinely independent?


News Ltd will have no representatives on the board. The Australian Rugby league will have only one - Colin Love.

Nick Politis is one of the most powerful and influential figures in the history of the game and has been the key player, along with Searle, in all talks and private dealings to set up the commission.

But he has told those closest to him that once the commission is set up, he feels that, at 67, he is ready for a backseat role and will concentrate solely on his job at the Roosters.

What happens to the ARL, NSWRL, QRL and CRL?

The new independent body will be called the Australian Rugby League Commission, but the competition will still be called the Telstra NRL premiership. The NSWRL and Queensland Rugby League will come under the umbrella of the commission but will still oversee their state competitions and run the State of Origin series.

All revenue will go to the commission, which in turn will provide grants to the respective leagues. The CRL will continue to run bush football, while the independent commission will oversee all international football.
 
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OVP

Coach
Messages
11,625
Well done Uncle Nick and Michael Searle. Thank you.

Anyone like to guess who the others on the board will be ?
 

Scarves

Juniors
Messages
612
This is like the first step on a moonwalk in 1969. Positive and full of good feeling. Let's all hope Rugby League progresses a little quicker than the NASA space program has as we should all be going to RECALL for holidays on the cheap by now.
 

Titanic

First Grade
Messages
5,927
But on the bright side, he wont be News' lackey anymore. He might actually act in the best interests of the game when this happens.

I have no reservations about that structure but again it all boils down to personalities...

Love, Gallop, Livermore, Ribot and so on :(

We have learnt very little over the years imho and as far as the topic is concerned: sarcasm at best and at worst what state will we get it back in?
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
But on the bright side, he wont be News' lackey anymore. He might actually act in the best interests of the game when this happens.

i just hope he has nothing to do with TV rights negotiations or expansion. i don't want to even hear him comment on either
 

Titanic

First Grade
Messages
5,927
i just hope he has nothing to do with TV rights negotiations or expansion. i don't want to even hear him comment on either

Yes sure but then who will?

Whoever it is under this set-up (and jobs for the boys) won't be "doing the cat - they'll just be holding its tail."

I really think that apart from a handover period, the top jobs have got to go to new blood.
 

juanfarkall

Coach
Messages
10,071
This is like the first step on a moonwalk in 1969. Positive and full of good feeling. Let's all hope Rugby League progresses a little quicker than the NASA space program has as we should all be going to RECALL for holidays on the cheap by now.

Nice way of putting things.
40 years on f**k all has changed in relation to the moon.
Similarly regarding the muppets "running" the game... same sh*t different bucket.
 

miguel de cervantes

First Grade
Messages
7,470
Not a bad move to keep some old heads in for a while after the changeover IMO, as much as it may draw criticism. Stability is crucial for investors and fans during such a monumental change.
 

m0nty

Juniors
Messages
633
This is like the emissions trading scheme negotiations. Colin Love as Minchin, Nick Politis as Macnamara, Gallop as Turnbull. And just like the ETS, it's going to be a case of a compromised deal struck to the immediate benefit of no one, but with a glimmer of hope that things will turn out alright by the end because the parties have at least agreed on a structure which may, in the future, deliver something that is actually beneficial to the average punter.

Things that struck me in among all the positive stuff:
- NSWRL and QRL were not subsumed into the new commission as probably should have happened
- the two new teams are not going to be in non-heartland areas
- News has first and last rights on media rights
- clubs didn't want to give up $6m to the Storm per year over three years, but are happy to give News $18m in a lump sum up front to funnel back to the Storm... WTF?
- Gallop.
 

Angry_eel

First Grade
Messages
8,604
Well after all that sh*t, we have some positives. Although I hope instead of Central Coast ans Second Brisbane they look at Perth and Second Brisbane.
 
Messages
1,520
Great news. Pure and simple.

Politics is politics, simply because no one can do anything of great value all by themselves. People need to be pleased, bargains made. Its the nature of the world.

We all have ideals. It should be this way or that way by rights. But the world is the place for realists too.

I am happy with whats going to happen. And the Storm get the help they need.

The tv deal better be a very big one. All signs point to yes.
 

Nuke

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
5,124
Despite all this, I doubt very much that we'll get $1billion from the next tv rights deal, but it sounds good!
 

1 Eyed TEZZA

Coach
Messages
12,420
Couple of you guys are friggin pedantic, this is great news and ten times better then what we have now. If this is confirmed to be true, it will be celebration time for Rugby League.
 
Messages
15,637
I am hopeful & as for Gallop ,if he is not a news lackey anymore he has a chance to show some real leadership...hopefully being shsckle free he surprises everyone.

I would love to see a thread on here in a few yrs saying how wrong we were about him.
 

Bezant

Juniors
Messages
178
Sure its a compromise deal but is the glass half full or half empty? Personally I think there more positives in this than negatives. Also since the independent commission will be in charge of international rights there is scope for that part of the game to get back the support and recognition it deserves again.

The future will be interesting, that much is sure.
 
Messages
1,253
This is like the emissions trading scheme negotiations. Colin Love as Minchin, Nick Politis as Macnamara, Gallop as Turnbull. And just like the ETS, it's going to be a case of a compromised deal struck to the immediate benefit of no one, but with a glimmer of hope that things will turn out alright by the end because the parties have at least agreed on a structure which may, in the future, deliver something that is actually beneficial to the average punter.

Things that struck me in among all the positive stuff:
- NSWRL and QRL were not subsumed into the new commission as probably should have happened
- the two new teams are not going to be in non-heartland areas
- News has first and last rights on media rights
- clubs didn't want to give up $6m to the Storm per year over three years, but are happy to give News $18m in a lump sum up front to funnel back to the Storm... WTF?
- Gallop.

Good points here, though I can put up with Gallop and Love if it means the independent commission is delivered. Melbourne must be maintained. It's interesting to see the difference in language between the AFL and NRL when it comes to expansion. The $200 million AFL is prepared to spend on its loss making adventure in Western Sydney is regaded by that code as an "nvestment"in its future, it's never described as a loss. By contrast the relatively paltry $5 million it has cost to keep league going in Melbourne is always denigrated by us leaguies as some sort of terrible waste of money. At the very least the Storm's presence in Melbourne has helped deliver a fantastic new $200 million venue for rugby league in the southern capital -- and all paid for by the Victorian taxpayer!! In any event, if we don't have enough faith in oru game to believe inits future in one of Australia's richest sporting markets, we might as well all pack up now and revert to state-based competitions.

Also agree that at least one of the two new clubs must be in non-heartland area...preferrably Perth.
 
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elbusto

Coach
Messages
15,803
Good points here, though I can put up with Gallop and Love if it means the independent commission is delivered. Melbourne must be maintained. It's interesting to see the difference in language between the AFL and NRL when it comes to expansion. The $200 million AFL is prepared to spend on its loss making adventure in Western Sydney is regaded by that code as an "nvestment"in its future, it's never described as a loss. By contrast the relatively paltry $5 million it has cost to keep league going in Melbourne is always denigrated by us leaguies as some sort of terrible waste of money. At the very least the Storm's presence in Melbourne has helped deliver a fantastic new $200 million venue for rugby league in the southern capital -- and all paid for by the Victorian taxpayer!! In any event, if we don't have enough faith in oru game to believe inits future in one of Australia's richest sporting markets, we might as well all pack up now and revert to state-based competitions.

Also agree that at least one of the two new clubs must be in non-heartland area...preferrably Perth.
Well said mate - we accuse Victorians of being inward looking but then criticise the investment in teh Storm. It really annoys me. The Storm are a required Club otherwise goodnight nurse. Its as simple as that.
 

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