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Peter V'landys - New NRL/ARLC Chairman

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11,925
The NRL is a step closer to buying an American-sports style private aircraft for its players to use for travel between games after confirming it has started putting together a business proposal for the ambitious investment.

ARL Commission chairman Peter V’landys and NRL management, headed by chief executive Andrew Abdo, gave the green light on Wednesday for a feasibility study into whether an aircraft could be added to its assets.

The proposal has the support of out-of-Sydney clubs, including the Cowboys, Warriors and Storm, after the NRL, for the second week in a row, was forced to charter a flight for a finals team.
North Queensland and the NRL will split the costs of a trip to Sydney for the Cowboys’ sudden-death showdown with the Sharks at Allianz Stadium on Friday night.

The only two direct Townsville to Sydney flights on Thursday were booked out, primarily by travelling Cowboys fans, leaving the NRL and club to scramble for alternate arrangements.
The Knights also chartered a private flight to Townsville for last week’s elimination final loss after being scheduled to play on a short turnaround from their round-27 fixture against the Dolphins.

On Wednesday, V’landys confirmed the NRL will begin formal research into whether to add a plane to its other investments, including hotels in Brisbane, the Sunshine Coast and Woolooware in Sydney’s south.

“It’s a very good suggestion, and it’s got enormous benefit,” V’landys said. “We discussed it [on Wednesday] and we’re definitely going to do an analysis.

“You can do promotions where you can take fans to different venues, and especially if we expand to Perth, Papua New Guinea, the south island of New Zealand or wherever, it becomes a more realistic option.
“If it’s only slightly more money than what we’re paying now, it doesn’t matter because of the comfort and convenience which would be given to the players for their welfare far outweighs any additional costs.
“The cost-benefit analysis can stack up because of the revenue you make when you’re not using it.”
Sydney’s Bankstown Airport operates around the clock and was used extensively by the NRL during its COVID-impacted seasons, but has restrictions on the size of aircraft allowed to land.
The new western Sydney airport is also expected to be in use 24 hours a day, and the NRL’s research will determine how much it costs for slots to be secured and whether it will be viable to enter into a partnership with a charter company.

Cowboys chief executive Jeff Reibel and Warriors counterpart Cameron George have already urged the NRL to explore the idea before the anticipated introduction of the Perth-based Western Bears and Papua New Guinea from 2027, taking the NRL competition to 20 teams, which will also increase the travel load on the game’s stars.

“We would be very supportive of such a plan,” Storm general manager Frank Ponissi said. “Not only would it help with our travel and the preparation of athletes, but one benefit would also be enabling players and staff to spend more time with their family.”

 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
You do know the APRL Federation website is now offline
You do know the acronym I suggested was just that. A suggestion. The strategy outlined? I was and am serious about that. We need to promote ourselves as the code of preference across the South Pacific and work with government to promote the the game as a leader in diversity and social growth. I hope that’s not too complicated for you.
 
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15,166

OPINION​

Four Corners sets sights on V’landys as inquiry fallout continues​


“You can always judge a man by the quality of his enemies,” Oscar Wilde said.
Racing NSW chief executive Peter V’landys has various enemies of various character. Some of them are out in the open while others hide in the shadows, loading the bullets.

Most seem hellbent on bringing the man his allies call “Australia’s most powerful sporting administrator” to heel.
Hearings at an explosive NSW parliamentary inquiry last month into the proposed development of Rosehill Racecourse might have ended — with findings to be tabled in November — but the fallout continues.

The inquiry’s terms of reference were about the controversial plan to level the racecourse to make way for affordable housing for 25,000 residents with a station on the Metro West line.
But it quickly developed into a popcorn-passing war of words between V’landys and independent MP Mark Latham, who has been gunning for the racing boss under the cloak of parliamentary privilege for much of the year.

In calling for V’landys to resign, Latham has accused him of “nepotism, regulatory abuse, and a lack of financial accountability” while also claiming Racing NSW is a “toxic workplace plagued by intimidation, favouritism, electronic surveillance, and constant decision-making and interference by the CEO.”
Questions have been asked many times before about V’landys’ leadership style, whether it’s in racing or rugby league, of which he is ARL Commission chairman, but Latham’s missives are the heaviest blows he’s had to absorb in many a moon.

For his part, V’landys reckons the whole thing is an unedifying hatchet job because he’s sided with Premier Chris Minns over the Rosehill proposal, which could earn the Australian Turf Club an estimated $5 billion from its sale along with a new racetrack, possibly within the Sydney Olympic Park precinct.
“There is no doubt Mr Latham is running an agenda for some very wealthy breeders who don’t wish to be held to account for animal welfare,” he told this masthead last month. “They have at all times resisted having their horses traced from birth to retirement. They are attempting a smear campaign on steroids.”

While it’s a very Sydney story, I can tell you Four Corners has V’landys in its sights. Their interest has been the talk of the racing industry in recent weeks after reporter Angus Grigg reached out to several of his, er, enemies.
As the NRL and AFL can attest, Four Corners isn’t the program you want sniffing your jockstrap. It rarely ends well.

You’ll recall ABC stablemate 7.30 aired a damning report in October 2019 about racing’s track record with animal cruelty and wastage.
V’landys insisted in an interview with reporter Caro Meldrum-Hanna that no horse had been sent to a knackery or abattoir “because it’s against the rules of racing.”

The report then detailed how, according to experts, more than 4000 racehorses were being slaughtered in Australia each year. Graphic video footage underlined a grizzly point.
As Crikey’s Michael Bradley wrote at the time, it was “a classic of the gotcha journalism genre”. V’landys unsuccessfully sued the ABC for defamation in 2021 and lost an appeal in the federal court last year.

V’landys usually welcomes a fight but his decision to support the demolition of the much-loved Rosehill course — the home of the Golden Slipper — has put him offside with many powerful figures, including leading trainer Gai Waterhouse, who has clashed with him many times in the past.
Some of the combatants are once-trusted supporters, including Chris Waller, who has built a racing empire at Rosehill after getting his first boxes there 25 years ago.

When mighty mare Winx was drawing thousands of new fans to the racetrack, V’landys did everything in his power to support Waller, who was under pressure to ensure she kept winning.
Breeding giant John Messara, who races horses in partnership with veteran broadcaster Alan Jones, is also against the Rosehill proposal.

During his time as Racing NSW chairman from 2011 to 2016, he and V’landys were a formidable combination with strong links to government at every level. They did so much for racing, including the redevelopment of Randwick and the birth of The Championships.
So it’s interesting to see them pitted against each other now. Enemies, if you will.
Whether Four Corners cranks up a story in the New Year remains unclear. Grigg had no comment and V’landys wasn’t giving away much when I approached him. He’s aware the program was sniffing around the Rosehill story but nothing more than that.
If I know the pugnacious administrator at all, he’ll want to defend himself against attacks from enemies he can see and those he cannot.
Another Oscar Wilde quote: “True friends stab you in the front.”

Four Corners sets sights on V’landys as inquiry fallout continues
 
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Trifili13

Juniors
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1,125
We’ve had NSWRL, ARL, Super League and NRL. NRL is a strong brand, no need to change it again
Agree, it's a more catchy name than saying rugby league. Like other global leagues of various sports, most people say they are watching the NBA or NFL, not basketball or gridiron, or the Premier League or EPL and not soccer/football. The issue is however who we are trying to sell our game to as those sports are global and everyone knows who they are by their acronyms.
 

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