miguel de cervantes
First Grade
- Messages
- 7,473
In another thread Springs has alluded to the fact that player payments for internationals from national bodies play a large role in luring players to Australia and New Zealand. Governing bodies for developing nations will never be able to compete on this field.
IMO this needs to be looked at, regulated somehow by the RLIF and taken out of the equation. Is this even possible?
In a perfect world players would turn out for their country out of pride...and this is already definitely the case for lesser nations. If you told the current Australian squad that they were to play tomorrow night for free, how many would pull out with mysterious injuries?
Is there a solution to this obvious inequality? Can a cap be implemented? Would a zero cap mean a mass pull-out of players or would quality players still step up to play?
Ideally the RLIF would somehow determine player payments and stump up the cash, but it is not clear where the money would come from and how it would be distributed. Inequalities woulds still exist...players being forced to play for free seems like the ideal but unattainable solution.
IMO this needs to be looked at, regulated somehow by the RLIF and taken out of the equation. Is this even possible?
In a perfect world players would turn out for their country out of pride...and this is already definitely the case for lesser nations. If you told the current Australian squad that they were to play tomorrow night for free, how many would pull out with mysterious injuries?
Is there a solution to this obvious inequality? Can a cap be implemented? Would a zero cap mean a mass pull-out of players or would quality players still step up to play?
Ideally the RLIF would somehow determine player payments and stump up the cash, but it is not clear where the money would come from and how it would be distributed. Inequalities woulds still exist...players being forced to play for free seems like the ideal but unattainable solution.
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