Australian Rugby League Commission must launch investigation into Gold Coast Titans says Peter Badel
Peter Badel
The Courier-Mail
March 15, 2012 12:00AM
AUSTRALIAN Rugby League Commission chairman John Grant must launch an immediate inquiry into the Gold Coast Titans and the administration of the club under managing director Michael Searle.
Revelations that the Australian Tax Office lodged an application last month to have the Titans' property arm wound up, a matter which was heard in the Federal Court yesterday, must spark concern at NRL headquarters.
The ATO subsequently withdrew their application, but the fact the tax office had made legal moves against the Titans and that Reed Constructions, which completed the Centre of Excellence, may yet push on with wind-up proceedings, paints a worrying picture for the club.
Gold Coast were hailed as a valuable jewel in rugby league's crown when they were issued an NRL licence in May 2005, but the club's series of off-field sagas cannot be helping the code, whose chiefs are attempting to broker a record TV rights deal.
At a time when AFL is making serious inroads into the Gold Coast consumer market with the Suns, the NRL requires a Titans team to be successful, financially robust, administratively sound and, perhaps above all, squeaky clean.
Instead, alarm bells are ringing.
The Titans currently hold the wooden spoon, crowd figures have dropped and Searle has been forced to weather repeated queries about the Titans' fiscal health following a slew of legal battles that have cost the club an estimated $3-4 million.
The Titans last year faced a painful legal battle with former builders Simcorp over money owing on the Centre of Excellence.
Amid the wrangle, the Queensland Office of State Revenue also launched court action against the Titans, suing the club for $226,278 in unpaid payroll tax.
Yesterday, the Titans found themselves back in court against a lawyer representing Reed Constructions, which is understood to be seeking $1.5 million after taking over the Centre of Excellence project from now-defunct Simcorp.
There are two sides to the story but none of this can be good for Titans players or their fans, or the game as a whole.
That is why it is time for the newly-institued ARLC and NRL boss David Gallop to act.
At the heart of the problem is the Titans' governance structure, which would raise eyebrows in the business world.
Searle, who owns an estimated 80 per cent of the Titans, is ostensibly a one-man show. The Titans have no club board, which means Searle can make business decisions and run the club as he sees fit.
No other NRL club is run in such a manner, not even privately-owned Souths, whose Hollywood owner Russell Crowe answers to a board of directors.
Rugby league desperately needs a thriving Gold Coast team to stave off the AFL, but in their current state the Titans could join the surfeit of sporting carcasses that line the holiday strip.
The global financial crisis has done little to help Searle build the Titans brand. It is time for the Commission to help clear the dark clouds.