Coming to America: NRL in secret talks for $23m US Super League
The NRL has held secret talks to capitalise on the historic Las Vegas premiership kick-off, which would give rugby league a permanent foothold in one of the world’s biggest sporting markets.
Secret talks are under way for a $23m, 10-team US super league competition that could give the
NRL a permanent foothold in one of the world’s biggest sporting markets.
This masthead can reveal a consortium has met ARL Commission boss Peter V’landys to table a proposal for ‘NRL America’ – an elite US rugby league competition to capitalise on the
code’s historic premiership kick-off this week in Las Vegas.
V’landys has held talks with Rugby League America (RLA) boss Steve Scanlan. The Brisbane-based businessman, a former sponsor of Australian boxing world champions Tim Tszyu and Jeff Horn, will formally present to the ARL Commission in Vegas next Sunday.
The league, to be operational by 2025, would be owned and governed by private investors. While the ARL Commission would not be expected to run the competition, the consortium is prepared to offer an ownership stake, and official branding rights, to give the NRL a bona fide, long-term presence in North America.
Peter V’landys has been approached about NRL America.
Three franchises – New York, Dallas and Las Vegas – have already been sold for a start-up franchise fee of $US1.5m ($2.3m).
Scanlan, who helped sponsor Tszyu and the now-retired Horn to boxing stardom, confirmed meeting V’landys with a view to the NRL joining forces in rugby league’s most serious incursion into an American market of 331 million people. “This will easily be the most professional proposal that has been seen in the history of American rugby league,” said Scanlan, a two-time young Queensland entrepreneur of the year.
“I’ve held preliminary talks with Peter V’landys on behalf of our consortium.
“The discussions were positive and it’s a great launch pad into the North American rugby league market.
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“The timing is uncanny. The NRL is going to Vegas and if they could generate $200m over the next four to five years, this will be a springboard to a fully fledged American Rugby League competition, allowing us to leverage the momentum on what will take place in Las Vegas.
“Our proposal has substance. We know we have a lot of hard work ahead. The first five years are crucial.
“We could certainly do this without the NRL, but if the NRL was to come on-board, the synergies and partnership opportunities would be enormous for the game in America and lend an amount of legitimacy to what we are doing, giving everyone that much more confidence.
“We are absolutely open to the competition being called NRL America if the NRL wanted to be a part of it.”
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The hope is that the NRL’s Vegas venture can help rugby league take off in the US – as occurred with soccer in the afterglow of the World Cup in 1994.
At the time, FIFA had a deliberate strategy to grow the sport in the US and the ’94 World Cup, won by Brazil, was such a success it sparked the creation of Major League Soccer.
Former Manchester United icon David Beckham famously joined the MLS in 2007, signing a five-year, $250m deal with LA Galaxy that turned the competition into a global brand.
Beckham is now a part-owner of MLS side Inter Miami, which lured Argentine superstar Lionel Messi last July for $150m.
Following the Messi coup, the Herons’ estimated value has gone from $583m to $1.02bn. While rugby league will never reach such heights in the US, a successful, robust US competition, with NRL backing, could help the sport with the gaming and broadcast benefits it hopes to derive from its five-year Vegas deal.
V’landys said the NRL’s Vegas experiment could be the financial tip of the iceberg in the US. He said talks with the American consortium are only preliminary but is open to NRL support to take rugby league to an unprecedented stratosphere in the States.
“There have been some rugby league competitions, so a major competition would certainly help grow the game in America,” said V’landys, who arrives in Vegas on Tuesday.
“I wouldn’t rule it out (NRL backing of an American league) absolutely, but we need competent people who want to drive it.