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BxTom

Bench
Messages
2,577
This has been common knowledge for 12 months. RCG and Waqa. Maybe DWZ too.
I suspect a bit has been added to the true amount, but whatever it is it was worth every penny.
If that's all little Miss Reading the Play has, he might as well be out flying kites.
 

The_Frog

First Grade
Messages
6,390
Craig Gower 2003 Dally M Medal: Campaign to give Panthers legend the award
Phil Rothfield, The Daily Telegraph
September 20, 2020 6:12pm

In the week the Penrith Panthers celebrate their NRL minor premiership, the campaign begins to rectify a 17-year injustice for one of their greatest players.

Back in 2003 when the Panthers last won the title, their skipper and inspirational halfback Craig Gower was robbed of the game’s greatest individual honour — the Dally M award.

He had dominated all year.

In a selfless act, Gower, who was an Rugby League Players Association club delegate, agreed to a boycott of the Dally M medal to fight for improved wages and conditions our current stars now benefit from.


THE VOTING
Going into the final round of the competition, Gower was leading Roosters superstar Brad Fittler and Canberra Raiders fullback Clinton Schifcofske by one point.

This was confirmed by News Corp executive Tony Thomas, who was in charge of auditing the votes each week in the years before the NRL and KPMG took control of voting.

However no votes were recorded for the final round of the competition because of the boycott.

Gower was left stranded so agonisingly close to the honour.

87a90035fd7b937ae3388e932c5219d5

Former Penrith captain Craig Gower with NRL trophy.
THE FINAL ROUND
The Panthers played a local derby against Parramatta at home in front of a crowd of 22,300.

They won 40-22 and Gower had a blinder, picking up the Channel 9 man-of-the-match award.

His statistics from that game were outstanding – he scored a try, had eight runs for 74 metres and made three tackle busts.

Those numbers are better than what this year’s Dally M favourite, Nathan Cleary, averages this year.


Fittler’s Sydney Roosters team beat Shifcoske’s Raiders 23-16 on the same weekend.

The superstar five-eighth, who carried a shoulder injury into the game, kicked a field goal towards the end but got no other mention in the match report by journalist James Hooper.

Canberra coach Matthew Elliott said the Roosters’ kicking game made it difficult for Schifcofske to have an impact on the game.

Fittler was asked about the medal boycott after the game.

“It’s a shame for Craig, who no doubt would’ve won it, which is a big thing,” Fittler said, “but there’s bigger issues I think.”

Results
Should the NRL award Craig Gower the 2003 Dally M Medal?
Yes - he was robbed of award
68%
No - it's a part of history now
32%
1,081 Voters
Fittler said the players’ action over CBA was something which should have happened much earlier.

“The ex-players (are) bitching about it — (but) if they got off their arses 10 years ago we wouldn’t have had a Super League war and we wouldn’t have had a lot of dramas that we’ve had.”

THE DISPUTE
Gower was renowned for his tenacity on and off the field.

He was one of the more militant players when it came to RLPA issues and getting a fair go for players.

The boycott threat came as heated talks broke down between NRL chief executive David Gallop and RLPA boss Tony Butterfield. The anger and tension in negotiations had gone on for weeks.

4c7c6a2ddc9bd247c3e4230092981f1b

The Sunday telegraph’s back page in 2003.
78088a0d062620f1d0daf3db3284f7e3

How The Daily Telegraph covered the boycott.
Neither side would budge.

At the time Gower said the boycott was the right thing to happen.

He has since expressed disappointment.

“It would be great to have that accolade in the back pocket,” Gower said.

“I thought I was doing the right thing to make a stance. Did it have the right outcome it desired? Unfortunately not. That’s the way it is in life.”

THE NRL
Commission chairman Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate the Gower case.

“If someone’s been robbed of a proper entitlement you have to investigate it,” V’landys said. “You’d want to correct that travesty of justice.

“If we can prove he won it, why should we rob him of such a prestigious award?

“How could anyone argue against it if we have sufficient evidence that he did win.

“From what I’ve heard it was such a selfless act at the time.

“It would be horrible not to give him the medal. I would be prepared to take it to the NRL management.”


Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate Gower’s case. Picture: Jonathan Ng
THE UNION
RLPA boss Clint Newton has previously taken the case to the NRL.

Newton revealed he spoke to former Todd Greenberg and NRL awards manager Frank Puletua about Gower’s case last year and again at the beginning of this season.

Typically it was put in the too-hard basket.

“They just ummed and ahhed about it,” Newton said. “They were non-committal but said they’d explore it.

“Any move to give Craig the medal has my full support. It was a huge sacrifice he made and it would be a great thing for the game.”

eeb38d2e75ab2a1434aa9f1350c491b3

The campaign.
THE LEGEND
Fox Sports commentator Greg Alexander knows all about Dally M medals. He won it himself in his second NRL season at Penrith in 1985 and still cherishes it.

“Gowie was clearly the best player in the competition in 2003,” Alexander said.

“The captain of Penrith, minor premiership, grand final win and he played great football for the entire season. He was so dominant.

“To have it taken away by industrial action at the time is wrong.

“He needs to be recognised for it. It’s the highest individual honour in the game.”

THE PRECEDENTS
After a 40 year wait, former St George Dragons halfback Steve ‘Slippery’ Morris was presented with his 1979 Dally M medal at the 2018 awards ceremony.

Until then, the award was officially documented to have started in 1980. Sydney’s Daily Mirror newspaper had in fact conducted a player of the year competition in 1979 which they named the Dally M Medal. Morris won but didn’t receive a medal.

Aussie Rules has similar stories. The VFL righted a wrong in 1989 when it awarded retrospective Brownlow Medals to players who had tied with previous winners but lost on a countback.

Seven players were awarded backdated medals.



WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
The old NRL management before V’landys arrived was notoriously slow to deal with important issues like this one. The facts are clear. No one disputes Gower was best and fairest in 2003.

The skilful little halfback had the same impact in the premiership 17 years ago that Cleary has had this year.

The medal should be on his mantelpiece.

This could be the feel good story of the grand final week.

Plus an opportunity for every player in rugby league to salute a little bloke who so generously put the game ahead of his own personal glory.

He deserves it.
 
Messages
2,579
Craig Gower 2003 Dally M Medal: Campaign to give Panthers legend the award
Phil Rothfield, The Daily Telegraph
September 20, 2020 6:12pm

In the week the Penrith Panthers celebrate their NRL minor premiership, the campaign begins to rectify a 17-year injustice for one of their greatest players.

Back in 2003 when the Panthers last won the title, their skipper and inspirational halfback Craig Gower was robbed of the game’s greatest individual honour — the Dally M award.

He had dominated all year.

In a selfless act, Gower, who was an Rugby League Players Association club delegate, agreed to a boycott of the Dally M medal to fight for improved wages and conditions our current stars now benefit from.


THE VOTING
Going into the final round of the competition, Gower was leading Roosters superstar Brad Fittler and Canberra Raiders fullback Clinton Schifcofske by one point.

This was confirmed by News Corp executive Tony Thomas, who was in charge of auditing the votes each week in the years before the NRL and KPMG took control of voting.

However no votes were recorded for the final round of the competition because of the boycott.

Gower was left stranded so agonisingly close to the honour.

87a90035fd7b937ae3388e932c5219d5

Former Penrith captain Craig Gower with NRL trophy.
THE FINAL ROUND
The Panthers played a local derby against Parramatta at home in front of a crowd of 22,300.

They won 40-22 and Gower had a blinder, picking up the Channel 9 man-of-the-match award.

His statistics from that game were outstanding – he scored a try, had eight runs for 74 metres and made three tackle busts.

Those numbers are better than what this year’s Dally M favourite, Nathan Cleary, averages this year.


Fittler’s Sydney Roosters team beat Shifcoske’s Raiders 23-16 on the same weekend.

The superstar five-eighth, who carried a shoulder injury into the game, kicked a field goal towards the end but got no other mention in the match report by journalist James Hooper.

Canberra coach Matthew Elliott said the Roosters’ kicking game made it difficult for Schifcofske to have an impact on the game.

Fittler was asked about the medal boycott after the game.

“It’s a shame for Craig, who no doubt would’ve won it, which is a big thing,” Fittler said, “but there’s bigger issues I think.”

Results
Should the NRL award Craig Gower the 2003 Dally M Medal?
Yes - he was robbed of award
68%
No - it's a part of history now
32%
1,081 Voters
Fittler said the players’ action over CBA was something which should have happened much earlier.

“The ex-players (are) bitching about it — (but) if they got off their arses 10 years ago we wouldn’t have had a Super League war and we wouldn’t have had a lot of dramas that we’ve had.”

THE DISPUTE
Gower was renowned for his tenacity on and off the field.

He was one of the more militant players when it came to RLPA issues and getting a fair go for players.

The boycott threat came as heated talks broke down between NRL chief executive David Gallop and RLPA boss Tony Butterfield. The anger and tension in negotiations had gone on for weeks.

4c7c6a2ddc9bd247c3e4230092981f1b

The Sunday telegraph’s back page in 2003.
78088a0d062620f1d0daf3db3284f7e3

How The Daily Telegraph covered the boycott.
Neither side would budge.

At the time Gower said the boycott was the right thing to happen.

He has since expressed disappointment.

“It would be great to have that accolade in the back pocket,” Gower said.

“I thought I was doing the right thing to make a stance. Did it have the right outcome it desired? Unfortunately not. That’s the way it is in life.”

THE NRL
Commission chairman Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate the Gower case.

“If someone’s been robbed of a proper entitlement you have to investigate it,” V’landys said. “You’d want to correct that travesty of justice.

“If we can prove he won it, why should we rob him of such a prestigious award?

“How could anyone argue against it if we have sufficient evidence that he did win.

“From what I’ve heard it was such a selfless act at the time.

“It would be horrible not to give him the medal. I would be prepared to take it to the NRL management.”


Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate Gower’s case. Picture: Jonathan Ng
THE UNION
RLPA boss Clint Newton has previously taken the case to the NRL.

Newton revealed he spoke to former Todd Greenberg and NRL awards manager Frank Puletua about Gower’s case last year and again at the beginning of this season.

Typically it was put in the too-hard basket.

“They just ummed and ahhed about it,” Newton said. “They were non-committal but said they’d explore it.

“Any move to give Craig the medal has my full support. It was a huge sacrifice he made and it would be a great thing for the game.”

eeb38d2e75ab2a1434aa9f1350c491b3

The campaign.
THE LEGEND
Fox Sports commentator Greg Alexander knows all about Dally M medals. He won it himself in his second NRL season at Penrith in 1985 and still cherishes it.

“Gowie was clearly the best player in the competition in 2003,” Alexander said.

“The captain of Penrith, minor premiership, grand final win and he played great football for the entire season. He was so dominant.

“To have it taken away by industrial action at the time is wrong.

“He needs to be recognised for it. It’s the highest individual honour in the game.”

THE PRECEDENTS
After a 40 year wait, former St George Dragons halfback Steve ‘Slippery’ Morris was presented with his 1979 Dally M medal at the 2018 awards ceremony.

Until then, the award was officially documented to have started in 1980. Sydney’s Daily Mirror newspaper had in fact conducted a player of the year competition in 1979 which they named the Dally M Medal. Morris won but didn’t receive a medal.

Aussie Rules has similar stories. The VFL righted a wrong in 1989 when it awarded retrospective Brownlow Medals to players who had tied with previous winners but lost on a countback.

Seven players were awarded backdated medals.



WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
The old NRL management before V’landys arrived was notoriously slow to deal with important issues like this one. The facts are clear. No one disputes Gower was best and fairest in 2003.

The skilful little halfback had the same impact in the premiership 17 years ago that Cleary has had this year.

The medal should be on his mantelpiece.

This could be the feel good story of the grand final week.

Plus an opportunity for every player in rugby league to salute a little bloke who so generously put the game ahead of his own personal glory.

He deserves it.

This is awesome! And about bloody time.

My only concern is, why is Phil Rothfield writing a positive Panthers article?
 

Jane Murray

Bench
Messages
2,837
Our top eight sides were already determined last week, but some positions remain up for grabs with the final round of the season to be played next weekend.

Already, this year’s finals will be the first to not feature a Queensland club since 1991, before even the ARL years. We’ve also already seen the Panthers pick up their first minor premiership since 2003, while the Knights will make an appearance for the first time since 2013.

Here are the likely scenarios after Round 20 for each team that’s secured a finals position.

Penrith Panthers (1st)
Plenty of Panther Pride out west with Penrith having already secured first place and the minor premiership by defeating North Queensland on Friday. The Panthers have only lost one game, which was against Parramatta back in mid-June. They’ll finish their home-and-away campaign against the Bulldogs next Saturday.

Melbourne Storm (2nd)
They’ll miss out on a minor premiership this year, but the Storm should be pleased with themselves after yet another impressive season. They guaranteed themselves a “home” final for the first week with their triumph over Wests. Melbourne play the Dragons in the last game of the regular season.

Sydney Roosters (3rd-4th)
The defending premiers have been outstanding once again, and their high point difference means they will have themselves a second chance in the finals. Whether they take on Penrith or Melbourne, however, comes down to how both they and the Eels perform in Round 20. The Roosters will guarantee themselves third place if they defeat South Sydney on Friday, but a loss could allow Parramatta to sneak past them on competition points depending on how they perform.

Parramatta Eels (3rd-5th)
They held top spot early, but some of their more recent performances leave questions to be asked about whether they can be considered genuine premiership contenders. Beating Wests Tigers on Saturday could put them into third if the Roosters lose, but if the Eels lose, a win for Canberra would push them down to fifth and force them to take the long route to the Grand Final.

Canberra Raiders (4th-5th)
The Raiders have kept alive their hopes of a top four berth, which would ease some of the pressure in finals. Due to point difference, if they win next week and the Eels go down, Canberra will book a game against the Panthers. They take on Cronulla on Saturday.

Newcastle Knights (6th-7th)
Newcastle can thank the Bulldogs for keeping them in the race to host an elimination final. The Knights now sit in one of the most contentious positions in the ladder, and can guarantee that position with a win over an improved Titans side on Friday evening. A Rabbitohs loss later that night would guarantee them sixth spot regardless.

South Sydney Rabbitohs (6th-7th)
Souths blew a chance to secure a home final last week in a game they should have won. They could still have another chance, but only if the Knights lose. The Rabbitohs would then need to defeat old foes the Roosters in the very next game to take back sixth place, but if they lose or the Knights win, South Sydney will find themselves stuck in seventh.

Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks (8th)
They did well to secure a finals berth against the Warriors last week but couldn’t back it up against the Roosters, leaving them unable to contest for a home final. Points difference sees them highly unlikely to climb any further up the ladder, and their Saturday game against the Raiders may determine their Week 1 opponents.
 

Whino

Bench
Messages
3,202
Craig Gower 2003 Dally M Medal: Campaign to give Panthers legend the award
Phil Rothfield, The Daily Telegraph
September 20, 2020 6:12pm

In the week the Penrith Panthers celebrate their NRL minor premiership, the campaign begins to rectify a 17-year injustice for one of their greatest players.

Back in 2003 when the Panthers last won the title, their skipper and inspirational halfback Craig Gower was robbed of the game’s greatest individual honour — the Dally M award.

He had dominated all year.

In a selfless act, Gower, who was an Rugby League Players Association club delegate, agreed to a boycott of the Dally M medal to fight for improved wages and conditions our current stars now benefit from.


THE VOTING
Going into the final round of the competition, Gower was leading Roosters superstar Brad Fittler and Canberra Raiders fullback Clinton Schifcofske by one point.

This was confirmed by News Corp executive Tony Thomas, who was in charge of auditing the votes each week in the years before the NRL and KPMG took control of voting.

However no votes were recorded for the final round of the competition because of the boycott.

Gower was left stranded so agonisingly close to the honour.

87a90035fd7b937ae3388e932c5219d5

Former Penrith captain Craig Gower with NRL trophy.
THE FINAL ROUND
The Panthers played a local derby against Parramatta at home in front of a crowd of 22,300.

They won 40-22 and Gower had a blinder, picking up the Channel 9 man-of-the-match award.

His statistics from that game were outstanding – he scored a try, had eight runs for 74 metres and made three tackle busts.

Those numbers are better than what this year’s Dally M favourite, Nathan Cleary, averages this year.


Fittler’s Sydney Roosters team beat Shifcoske’s Raiders 23-16 on the same weekend.

The superstar five-eighth, who carried a shoulder injury into the game, kicked a field goal towards the end but got no other mention in the match report by journalist James Hooper.

Canberra coach Matthew Elliott said the Roosters’ kicking game made it difficult for Schifcofske to have an impact on the game.

Fittler was asked about the medal boycott after the game.

“It’s a shame for Craig, who no doubt would’ve won it, which is a big thing,” Fittler said, “but there’s bigger issues I think.”

Results
Should the NRL award Craig Gower the 2003 Dally M Medal?
Yes - he was robbed of award
68%
No - it's a part of history now
32%
1,081 Voters
Fittler said the players’ action over CBA was something which should have happened much earlier.

“The ex-players (are) bitching about it — (but) if they got off their arses 10 years ago we wouldn’t have had a Super League war and we wouldn’t have had a lot of dramas that we’ve had.”

THE DISPUTE
Gower was renowned for his tenacity on and off the field.

He was one of the more militant players when it came to RLPA issues and getting a fair go for players.

The boycott threat came as heated talks broke down between NRL chief executive David Gallop and RLPA boss Tony Butterfield. The anger and tension in negotiations had gone on for weeks.

4c7c6a2ddc9bd247c3e4230092981f1b

The Sunday telegraph’s back page in 2003.
78088a0d062620f1d0daf3db3284f7e3

How The Daily Telegraph covered the boycott.
Neither side would budge.

At the time Gower said the boycott was the right thing to happen.

He has since expressed disappointment.

“It would be great to have that accolade in the back pocket,” Gower said.

“I thought I was doing the right thing to make a stance. Did it have the right outcome it desired? Unfortunately not. That’s the way it is in life.”

THE NRL
Commission chairman Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate the Gower case.

“If someone’s been robbed of a proper entitlement you have to investigate it,” V’landys said. “You’d want to correct that travesty of justice.

“If we can prove he won it, why should we rob him of such a prestigious award?

“How could anyone argue against it if we have sufficient evidence that he did win.

“From what I’ve heard it was such a selfless act at the time.

“It would be horrible not to give him the medal. I would be prepared to take it to the NRL management.”


Peter V’landys has vowed to investigate Gower’s case. Picture: Jonathan Ng
THE UNION
RLPA boss Clint Newton has previously taken the case to the NRL.

Newton revealed he spoke to former Todd Greenberg and NRL awards manager Frank Puletua about Gower’s case last year and again at the beginning of this season.

Typically it was put in the too-hard basket.

“They just ummed and ahhed about it,” Newton said. “They were non-committal but said they’d explore it.

“Any move to give Craig the medal has my full support. It was a huge sacrifice he made and it would be a great thing for the game.”

eeb38d2e75ab2a1434aa9f1350c491b3

The campaign.
THE LEGEND
Fox Sports commentator Greg Alexander knows all about Dally M medals. He won it himself in his second NRL season at Penrith in 1985 and still cherishes it.

“Gowie was clearly the best player in the competition in 2003,” Alexander said.

“The captain of Penrith, minor premiership, grand final win and he played great football for the entire season. He was so dominant.

“To have it taken away by industrial action at the time is wrong.

“He needs to be recognised for it. It’s the highest individual honour in the game.”

THE PRECEDENTS
After a 40 year wait, former St George Dragons halfback Steve ‘Slippery’ Morris was presented with his 1979 Dally M medal at the 2018 awards ceremony.

Until then, the award was officially documented to have started in 1980. Sydney’s Daily Mirror newspaper had in fact conducted a player of the year competition in 1979 which they named the Dally M Medal. Morris won but didn’t receive a medal.

Aussie Rules has similar stories. The VFL righted a wrong in 1989 when it awarded retrospective Brownlow Medals to players who had tied with previous winners but lost on a countback.

Seven players were awarded backdated medals.



WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
The old NRL management before V’landys arrived was notoriously slow to deal with important issues like this one. The facts are clear. No one disputes Gower was best and fairest in 2003.

The skilful little halfback had the same impact in the premiership 17 years ago that Cleary has had this year.

The medal should be on his mantelpiece.

This could be the feel good story of the grand final week.

Plus an opportunity for every player in rugby league to salute a little bloke who so generously put the game ahead of his own personal glory.

He deserves it.



To quote David Middleton's yearbook of the 2003 season.

" The cancellation of the Dally M awards in September denied Gower almost certain acclamation as the games official player of the year.
The Sunday Telegraph published the leader board going into the final round of the competition, showing Gower's name as the head of the field.
He turned in a five-star performance against Parramatta in the final round and almost certainly would have won the prestigious title.
 

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