What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

PNG's back.

Bukowski

Bench
Messages
2,649
The loss of tax revenue would be to the PNG government.
Aus government would indirectly underwrite alot of this though.
I might be the minority but there is merit. For example, if I was asked to relocate to Port Moresby away from the lifestyle of Australia, I would want at least 10x my current salary. NRL players getting 2x post tax cash would not be enough to see any significant players move there
It's a good idea to entice players to go there but would the 17 current clubs allow this? PNG would essentially be getting a bigger salary cap.
This is turning into an AFL type expansion club.
 
Messages
529
It's a good idea to entice players to go there but would the 17 current clubs allow this? PNG would essentially be getting a bigger salary cap.
This is turning into an AFL type expansion club.
Players going to NZ pay less tax than in Australia. When they buy and sell a house there, theres no tax nor stamp duty. Same with shares etc. Other clubs don't have a choice in it, it's a government tax issues.
Hypothetically if PVL said it's either tax free salary or we'll give team PNG double salary cap and funding, then of course other clubs would be up in arms.
 
Messages
529
I know you would, who wouldn't?

But why the f**k should you?

You should punch yourself in the dick for thinking it's a good idea.
On a serious note, Raiders have issues getting NRL players to move to Canberra. Who t f is moving to PNG? If no players move there, then either don't give them a licence or get used to their QLD cup side being lapped by 70 points each week
 

Canard

Immortal
Messages
35,600
Players going to NZ pay less tax than in Australia. When they buy and sell a house there, theres no tax nor stamp duty. Same with shares etc. Other clubs don't have a choice in it, it's a government tax issues.
Hypothetically if PVL said it's either tax free salary or we'll give team PNG double salary cap and funding, then of course other clubs would be up in arms.
NZ still has income tax
 

Canard

Immortal
Messages
35,600
On a serious note, Raiders have issues getting NRL players to move to Canberra. Who t f is moving to PNG? If no players move there, then either don't give them a licence or get used to their QLD cup side being lapped by 70 points each week
Exactly, PNG is a f**king stupid idea and you should feel stupid for supporting it.
 
Messages
14,822
On a serious note, Raiders have issues getting NRL players to move to Canberra. Who t f is moving to PNG? If no players move there, then either don't give them a licence or get used to their QLD cup side being lapped by 70 points each week
I often wonder how serious V'landys is about PNG?

I get the impression he's trolling all of the other bids.
 

Maximus

Coach
Messages
13,668
The loss of tax revenue would be to the PNG government.
Aus government would indirectly underwrite alot of this though.
I might be the minority but there is merit. For example, if I was asked to relocate to Port Moresby away from the lifestyle of Australia, I would want at least 10x my current salary. NRL players getting 2x post tax cash would not be enough to see any significant players move there

Given the riots and murders when people were missing $20 and thought they were getting a tax increase, I'm not sure anyone wants to see what happens when the PNG govt legislate that a group of rich foreigners don't have to pay tax.
 

Canard

Immortal
Messages
35,600
To be clear, I don't support PNG. At all. However, if it going to happen irrespective, then it needs to be viable.
Yes that's been my argument all along.

Everyone here, well everyone with at least half a brain, knows that it's completely unviable.

Making it a millionaires tax free haven, doesn't solve the funding problem, the logistics, the sponsors, the financial viability or the poor infrastructure issues.
 

carinashark

First Grade
Messages
5,573
Take a few games to Beijing. Big population, big stadiums, might even lead to a Chinese Team in the NRL. I’m on a roll now ! Stage a tournament Pacifka,NZ, PNG, China , StGeorge and Manly. Could be the Bing Lee trophy.
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,002
Take a few games to Beijing. Big population, big stadiums, might even lead to a Chinese Team in the NRL. I’m on a roll now ! Stage a tournament Pacifka,NZ, PNG, China , StGeorge and Manly. Could be the Bing Lee trophy.
Might still need to find the missing AFL bus in china first, god knows what happened to those people, might have all been decapitated
 
Last edited:

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,002
Biden backs ‘secret weapon’ NRL expansion into Pacific

Matthew CranstonUnited States correspondent
Mar 3, 2024 – 12.42pm

Las Vegas, Nevada | The White House is backing an expansion of the National Rugby League into the Pacific as a diplomatic counter to China’s growing influence in the region.

As the NRL launches its showcase double header in Las Vegas on Saturday (Sunday AEDT), the Biden administration confirmed it is supporting the Albanese government’s plans to invest in a new league team as a diplomatic strategy.


Peter V’landys at a White House dinner in October. Alex Ellinghausen

“The United States and Australia share a unique bond of friendship, this includes our shared passion for sports,” a senior Biden administration official told The Australian Financial Review.

“We both understand the important ways that sports can bring people of different cultures together and deepen trust between nations.”

Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V’landys has reportedly commenced preparations to welcome a Papua New Guinea team into the NRL as soon as 2027.

Mr V’landys met with US President Joe Biden at a state dinner for Anthony Albanese last year at which the three discussed the merits of the plan involving $600 million from the Australian government over the next 10 years.

“The prime minister said that this was our secret weapon for the Pacific. And the president was all ears,” Mr V’landys said.

He said he expected the US would contribute financial support, especially given America’s ambition to strengthen ties in the Pacific as China increased its assertiveness in the region.

“We are doing this for the Australian government because of the importance of Papua New Guinea for the security of Australia and I would expect the US to certainly be part of it. I don’t have any doubt about that,” Mr V’landys said.


Minister for International Development and the Pacific Pat Conroy presents a rugby league jersey to Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape. Alex Ellinghausen

Beijing has poured money into infrastructure projects in the Pacific, along with securing security agreements, to win influence. China constructed the stadium in the Solomon Islands at which the Pacific Games were held in December, and trained 80 Solomon Islands athletes in China.

“The Chinese or any country can go and build things, but what the Chinese haven’t got is rugby league. Our greatest advantage is we have sport,” Mr V’landys said.

State Department’s sports diplomacy
US deputy assistant secretary of East Asian and Pacific Affairs Camille Dawson told the Financial Review that Australia’s attempts to build up the league in the Pacific was a special opportunity for regional diplomacy.

“We have seen sports diplomacy programs open doors around the world, enabling us to speak with audiences we might not otherwise be able to reach and to build relationships that are not necessarily the ones that would be part of a sort of standard diplomatic outreach,” Ms Dawson said.

Ms Dawson, who was based in China for almost a decade and describes herself as a sports enthusiast, said the State Department had a well-established sports diplomacy office where rugby league would be a good fit.

“I am not a rugby player myself, but I have attended rugby [union] sevens in both Hong Kong and Singapore,” she said.

“We do believe that sports diplomacy is an important element of broader diplomacy,” she said. “It is a means to connect people on an emotional level to find ways to connect friends and colleagues in a space that you care deeply about.”

Former Australian ambassador to the US, Joe Hockey, said it was a “no-brainer” to expand rugby league into the Pacific.

“Soft diplomacy is as important if not more important than formal diplomacy in the Pacific,” Mr Hockey said.

“I walked the Kokoda trail and all the way up the trail into the highlands of Papua New Guinea there are kids wearing rugby league jerseys, and yet they’ve never watched a game in their lives. And the one thing you can be sure of is that China hasn’t got a rugby league team.”

While a previous NRL bid from PNG stalled last decade, the country was successful in entering a team in the state-based Queensland Cup in 2014, and has competed in an annual test with Australia called the Prime Minister’s 13 since 2005.

Mr V’landys said the strategy could have social impacts for local people, including preventing truancy.

“If we do it right we will put former rugby league players in schools, and as part of the syllabus, and what that does is make the kids turn up to school. And then that breaks that cycle of poverty because you want them to get an education and education is crucial to the success of any country.”

While the diplomatic and financial benefits of the government’s $600 million commitment could be enormous, there are logistical concerns.

Sydney City Roosters boss Rich Lister Nick Politis has said he wanted the game’s powerbrokers to ignore the government’s push for a team in PNG in the immediate future, and focus instead on spending money on developing players in the Pacific
 

Latest posts

Top