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Random Tigers articles from the media

Ron's_Mate

Bench
Messages
4,189
Who is Isaac Moses and why does he have so much influence on the NRL?
By Adrian Proszenko
April 15, 2025 — 11.36am

At a time when the influence of NRL player managers is again in the spotlight, there is none more powerful than Isaac Moses.

Upon graduating from Parramatta Marist High School, Moses worked at ANZ Stadium in membership under Todd Greenberg, the future chief executive of the NRL and then Cricket Australia. Moses then moved into player management, initially with other established agents, before branching out on his own.

Why does Moses wield so much influence?
Moses’ Cove Agency manages some of the NRL’s biggest names, from established stars Mitchell Moses and Luke Brooks to young guns Lachlan Galvin and Blaize Talagi. He also has a slew of head coaches – including Newcastle’s Adam O’Brien, St George Illawarra’s Shane Flanagan, Manly’s Anthony Seibold, New Zealand’s Andrew Webster and North Queensland’s Todd Payten – on his books.

Why is Moses a controversial figure?
Moses was one of the agents banned for six months for his role in the Melbourne Storm salary cap scandal. He was then deregistered for breaching his obligations as an agent in 2017, in relation to an investigation the NRL conducted into the Parramatta Eels. Banned for the latter incident in 2021, he was allowed to return to the game 18 months later.

In clubland, Moses is a controversial figure. Some clubs – such as the Roosters – refuse to deal with him whatsoever. At others, he is accused of manipulating rosters by funnelling clients to teams where he also manages the coach.

The NRL has previously indicated it may end the practice of allowing managers to have players and coaches on their books to avoid potential conflicts of interest, but no changes have been made.

Does he strike a good deal for his clients?
In a word, yes. A shrewd and ruthless negotiator, Moses has brokered some of the biggest deals across multiple codes. Think Israel Folau’s switches from league to AFL and then to rugby. And then there’s Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii’s cross-code journey from the Roosters to rugby, worth in excess of $5 million over three years.

Even when he was suspended, the majority of his clients remained loyal and didn’t jump ship.

Why are some clubs wary of Moses?
Wests Tigers are furious that Moses wouldn’t even entertain their offer to extend Lachlan Galvin, who has indicated he will leave the club when his contract expires at the end of 2026.

The Tigers have been here before; Moses previously managed the “Big Four” of James Tedesco, Luke Brooks, Aaron Woods and Mitchell Moses when they were at the club and off contract at the same time. Only Brooks re-signed.

Roosters chairman Nick Politis lobbied ARLC chair Peter V’landys to allow Moses to regain his accreditation. After Moses returned, Politis felt he was blindsided by Suaalii’s defection to rugby and has since refused to deal with the agent.

Famous feud
Isaac Moses famously fell out with associate Joe Wehbe, a property developer known in NRL circles as the “Football Whisperer”. While Wehbe is not an accredited agent, he is linked to a rival agency, Ignite Sports.

Some of the Moses clients who turned to Wehbe for advice, including James Tedesco and Nathan Brown, left Cove for Ignite. Others, like Eels halfback Mitchell Moses – who is Isaac Moses’ cousin – stayed loyal to Cove.

A Supreme Court battle between Moses and Wehbe was settled out of court in 2020.

Keeping their distance
Several clubs – including the Sea Eagles, Cowboys, Warriors and Knights – have been criticised for falling under Moses’ spell. Sensitive to the criticism, in mid-2023 the Sea Eagles took the extraordinary step of publicly releasing a list with managers who had players contracted to the club.

Manly had five Moses players at the time. Other clubs have been careful not to have more than a sprinkling of Moses clients at any one time, fearing it would give the agent too much influence over the club.

 

Tigerm

Coach
Messages
12,799
Who is Isaac Moses and why does he have so much influence on the NRL?
By Adrian Proszenko
April 15, 2025 — 11.36am

At a time when the influence of NRL player managers is again in the spotlight, there is none more powerful than Isaac Moses.

Upon graduating from Parramatta Marist High School, Moses worked at ANZ Stadium in membership under Todd Greenberg, the future chief executive of the NRL and then Cricket Australia. Moses then moved into player management, initially with other established agents, before branching out on his own.

Why does Moses wield so much influence?
Moses’ Cove Agency manages some of the NRL’s biggest names, from established stars Mitchell Moses and Luke Brooks to young guns Lachlan Galvin and Blaize Talagi. He also has a slew of head coaches – including Newcastle’s Adam O’Brien, St George Illawarra’s Shane Flanagan, Manly’s Anthony Seibold, New Zealand’s Andrew Webster and North Queensland’s Todd Payten – on his books.

Why is Moses a controversial figure?
Moses was one of the agents banned for six months for his role in the Melbourne Storm salary cap scandal. He was then deregistered for breaching his obligations as an agent in 2017, in relation to an investigation the NRL conducted into the Parramatta Eels. Banned for the latter incident in 2021, he was allowed to return to the game 18 months later.

In clubland, Moses is a controversial figure. Some clubs – such as the Roosters – refuse to deal with him whatsoever. At others, he is accused of manipulating rosters by funnelling clients to teams where he also manages the coach.

The NRL has previously indicated it may end the practice of allowing managers to have players and coaches on their books to avoid potential conflicts of interest, but no changes have been made.

Does he strike a good deal for his clients?
In a word, yes. A shrewd and ruthless negotiator, Moses has brokered some of the biggest deals across multiple codes. Think Israel Folau’s switches from league to AFL and then to rugby. And then there’s Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii’s cross-code journey from the Roosters to rugby, worth in excess of $5 million over three years.

Even when he was suspended, the majority of his clients remained loyal and didn’t jump ship.

Why are some clubs wary of Moses?
Wests Tigers are furious that Moses wouldn’t even entertain their offer to extend Lachlan Galvin, who has indicated he will leave the club when his contract expires at the end of 2026.

The Tigers have been here before; Moses previously managed the “Big Four” of James Tedesco, Luke Brooks, Aaron Woods and Mitchell Moses when they were at the club and off contract at the same time. Only Brooks re-signed.

Roosters chairman Nick Politis lobbied ARLC chair Peter V’landys to allow Moses to regain his accreditation. After Moses returned, Politis felt he was blindsided by Suaalii’s defection to rugby and has since refused to deal with the agent.

Famous feud
Isaac Moses famously fell out with associate Joe Wehbe, a property developer known in NRL circles as the “Football Whisperer”. While Wehbe is not an accredited agent, he is linked to a rival agency, Ignite Sports.

Some of the Moses clients who turned to Wehbe for advice, including James Tedesco and Nathan Brown, left Cove for Ignite. Others, like Eels halfback Mitchell Moses – who is Isaac Moses’ cousin – stayed loyal to Cove.

A Supreme Court battle between Moses and Wehbe was settled out of court in 2020.

Keeping their distance
Several clubs – including the Sea Eagles, Cowboys, Warriors and Knights – have been criticised for falling under Moses’ spell. Sensitive to the criticism, in mid-2023 the Sea Eagles took the extraordinary step of publicly releasing a list with managers who had players contracted to the club.

Manly had five Moses players at the time. Other clubs have been careful not to have more than a sprinkling of Moses clients at any one time, fearing it would give the agent too much influence over the club.

And the NRL still does nothing, just a shit show.
It's rigging team rosters.
 

chunk

Juniors
Messages
661

Tigerm

Coach
Messages
12,799
Was Balmain Leagues owned by Balmain 'football' people?

Because if so, imagine what could of come about from the sale now?

I still am confused by that whole saga.
It was owned by the club, not sure what you meant by "the football people"?
But they sold it to a developer recommended by Back Door, but couldn't make the development work through council.
He wanted 8 stories and council would only allow 5. It was a while ago, so all from memory.
 

chunk

Juniors
Messages
661
It was owned by the club, not sure what you meant by "the football people"?
But they sold it to a developer recommended by Back Door, but couldn't make the development work through council.
He wanted 8 stories and council would only allow 5. It was a while ago, so all from memory.

What did they do with the money from the developer?

If it was owned by the club 'football people' they must have had a truck load of money, so where did it go?
 

Tigerm

Coach
Messages
12,799
What did they do with the money from the developer?

If it was owned by the club 'football people' they must have had a truck load of money, so where did it go?
From memory, they got $8m, but had to pay their share of the JV, and it didn't last very long and of course without a club to finance them they basically went, belly up.
IMO, Wests Ashfield to their credit, pulled them out of trouble, they probably didn't have to, but Balmain lost a lot of power including voting rights.
I also understand, that WA is/was going to finance the new club at Rozelle when it gets built?
Again, this is from a while ago, so I am happy to stand corrected.
 

Ron's_Mate

Bench
Messages
4,189
Want to play Origin? Don’t play for the Wests Tigers
By Billie Eder
May 23, 2025 — 5.00am

Stefano Utoikamanu left the Wests Tigers due to a clause in his contract that was activated after he failed to make two appearances for NSW by the end of 2024.

Five months after exiting the club to join Craig Bellamy in Melbourne, however, Utoikamanu is back in blue, after NSW coach Laurie Daley named him among his reserves for game one in Brisbane next week.

“My decision to leave the Tigers was based on development,” Utoikamanu said. “I feel like I’m trying to take the next step to become a better player, and it’s been a bit of a long journey and a bit of a process to try and get back to this squad.

“To be honest, I didn’t really expect to get into this squad. When I got the phone call to say I was in the mix I was pretty excited. I’m very excited to be here and to be around this group of boys and the quality kind of players that are here. It’s pretty crazy.”

Utoikamanu’s return to the Origin arena after just six months under Bellamy’s guidance has vindicated his move to Melbourne – backed up by the fact Tigers trio Jarome Luai, Terrell May and Apisai Koroisau were all overlooked for spots in Daley’s team despite impressive form in 2025.

Tigers centre Adam Doueihi was invited to train with the Blues in the Blue Mountains on Wednesday and Thursday – along with Jacob Preston and Cody Ramsey – but is not part of the official NSW squad.

Since the Wests Tigers’ entry into the NRL in 2000, they have made the finals just three times – in 2005, 2010 and 2011.

In that time, only eight players have made their Origin debut while playing for the club – though one of those was Harry Grant, who was on a one-season loan from the Storm.

If you include any player who has played Origin during their time at the Tigers, that number increases to 12.

Players who have made their Origin debut while at the Tigers​



PLAYERYEARSTATE
Scott Prince2004Queensland
Robbie Farah2009New South Wales
Keith Galloway2011New South Wales
Aaron Woods2013New South Wales
James Tedesco2016New South Wales
Moses Mbye2019Queensland
Harry Grant2020Queensland
Stefano Utoikamanu2023New South Wales


Players who have played Origin while at the Tigers​


PLAYERYEARSTATE
Terry Hill2000New South Wales
Scott Prince2004Queensland
Brett Hodgson2006New South Wales
Robbie Farrah2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015New South Wales
Keith Galloway2011New South Wales
Aaron Woods2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017New South Wales
James Tedesco2016, 2017New South Wales
Moses Mbye2019Queensland
Harry Grant2020 (on loan)Queensland
Joe Ofahengaue2021Queensland
Apisai Koroisau2023New South Wales
Stefano Utoikamanu2023New South Wales


No other club has had fewer Origin representative players since 2000 except the Dolphins, who only entered the competition in 2023, and the Warriors, whose team has been dominated by domestic talent not eligible for the interstate series.

Even the Titans – who entered the NRL in 2007 – have had more representative players than the Tigers.

Utoikamanu’s presence in the NSW squad could prove crucial, too, with first-choice prop Payne Haas missing day one of training as he nurses a quad injury.

“Payno [Haas] might not play, and you don’t really know what’s going to happen, so I feel like everyone in this 20-man squad is a chance to play – even Campbell Graham and Haumole [Olakau’atu],” Utoikamanu said.

“They’re two guys that are out of the 17, and I think everyone’s just got to train like they’re ready to play.”

When asked what improvements he had made to his game in the past five months that helped put him on Daley’s radar, Utoikamanu said the standard of the Storm system was pushing him to his best.

“I think probably just little things in my game in defence and attack. Just being more aware of when to get in and out of tackles, and probably just working a bit more with my team, which is still a bit of a process now,” he said.

“I’m still not the best I can be, and I know I can develop more as a player, but I think coming into a squad like this when there are already a lot of quality players here ... just looking at how they prepare for the games and what they kind of see on the field is probably going to help me.”

Turning out alongside some of the best players in the competition – four of who will line up for Queensland next week – has forced Utoikamanu to raise the bar.

“In Melbourne, pretty much everyone’s a team player, puts the team first,” he said. “I’ve gone down there and that’s something that’s pretty big, team first. Craig’s pretty big on effort, all the effort areas.”

“That was something else that I probably needed to improve in my game – just when I’m tired, making that extra effort to get into a tackle or push up with someone that’s running the ball. I think small things like that add to my game.”

 
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