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Redcliffe put their hand up

toomuchsoup

Juniors
Messages
2,255
Go a darker red, but the lighter gold, looking for the 49ers type colors, so add in white too, maybe the roosters style cuffs
View attachment 52821
A slightly darker red does go better with that sand/bronze/gold. I just worry that the line between dark red and maroon might not be big enough. I’m just thinking of what the jersey will look like against the broncos, being that they’d be their main rivals. Id hate to see away jerseys having to used for what will be one of the biggest derby games in the comp. I think a ‘true’ red like what the dragons use would look good against the bronocs, whereas even a slightly darker red may require an away/clash.

I really liked Catalan Dragons 2016 kit. Simple but sleek. Only problem with having black in the palette is it then sort of shares the same colours as the Pirates. But who knows when they’ll come and if they’ll actually be the Pirates
A853E6F0-DAB7-4B68-902B-1175D4E1CE5C.jpeg
 
Messages
14,822
In semi-related news, the Warriors may be based out of Redcliffe next year...

With the NZ dollar being lower than the AU dollar, wouldn't it be a good idea to send Australia's 15 clubs to NZ for at least half a season to reward the Warriors for everything they've had to go through?

At the very least there should be a financial reward given to the club for allowing the competition to continue over the last two years.
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,008
With the NZ dollar being lower than the AU dollar, wouldn't it be a good idea to send Australia's 15 clubs to NZ for at least half a season to reward the Warriors for everything they've had to go through?

At the very least there should be a financial reward given to the club for allowing the competition to continue over the last two years.
Thats the first idea you've come up with all year that has merit
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,008
With the NZ dollar being lower than the AU dollar, wouldn't it be a good idea to send Australia's 15 clubs to NZ for at least half a season to reward the Warriors for everything they've had to go through?

At the very least there should be a financial reward given to the club for allowing the competition to continue over the last two years.
Maybe everyone forfeits their home match vs warriors game to a location in new zealand or mt smart, that to me is more than fair
 

flippikat

First Grade
Messages
5,215

[Copied from the NZ Warriors forum here]

A return home next season for the Warriors is looking increasingly unlikely with pre-season set to begin in November. But a new home base has emerged for the New Zealand club, reports Michael Burgess.



The Brisbane suburb of Redcliffe is firming as the Warriors' likely base in 2022.



A final decision is still a few weeks away, but the Herald understands that Redcliffe has been prominent in the discussions with the NRL.



It's believed to be one of the preferred options of the governing body.



The Warriors would prefer to return to New Zealand, but that is all but off the table, due to the ongoing uncertainty around the border and transtasman bubble.



With pre-season set to begin in November, it is impossible to see how Auckland could be in the equation, at least for the first half of next season.



Of the possible Australian alternatives, Brisbane, and especially Redcliffe, shines like a beacon.



The Warriors already have a relationship with the Queensland Cup team, with their reserve grade players turning out for the Dolphins over the past two seasons.




Their NRL game against the Bulldogs there two weeks ago, was a big success and illustrated the potential.



The stadium is an ideal size (11,500 capacity), complete with a thriving leagues club. It would offer a permanent structure, after the Warriors have utilised temporary facilities and council grounds over the last two seasons.




And Brisbane would be ideal. The NRL are close to confirming an expansion team in the Queensland capital for 2023 (the Dolphins, Jets or Firehawks) and it would suit them to stage as many games as possible there next season.



From a Warriors perspective, there is a sizeable expatriate Kiwi population and promising commercial opportunities, as well as an international airport.



The club made the most of their Central Coast base over the last two seasons and received great community support.



But the relatively small population meant commercial options were limited, along with the potential crowd. The area also has entrenched support for the Rabbitohs, Sea Eagles and Knights.



There aren't many other options.



Sydney is a saturated market with nine NRL clubs and has ongoing Covid issues. Newcastle is a parochial one-club city and the likes of Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie are too small.





In Queensland, Townsville is remote (and Cowboys country) while the Sunshine Coast has, like Gosford, a modest population. The Gold Coast has some advantages, but the Titans are unlikely to countenance that.



Warriors coach Nathan Brown indicated on Wednesday that a decision wasn't too far away.



"There are a number of possibilities at the moment [but] everything is speculation," said Brown. "We would like to know sooner rather than later, because there is a lot of people's lives at stake, with where they are going to be living, with families and kids. Hopefully they will have a decision in a week or two weeks."



Brown said stability is a key factor, after two relocations this season and the squad split across Auckland and New South Wales for pre-season.



"There are number of things on the table," said Brown. "Our preferred option would be Auckland but obviously [it depends on how] things go with the borders; at the moment we can't even go home.



"There are many things to take into account, and what is safest for the guys and their families so we can have some stability. [The] last thing we want is families moving around. That is certainly not ideal."



Ahead of Friday's game with Canberra, Brown said the team had recovered well from Sunday's physical clash with the Broncos.



Chanel Harris-Tavita is being rested after a knock to his foot, while Josh Curran has to pass concussion protocols. Kodi Nikorima, who missed the Brisbane game for personal reasons, will be used at dummy half.



Brown is confident the Warriors can lift – despite the short turnaround – but wary of the rising Raiders.



"Their past six weeks of footy have been very strong," said Brown. "They have got themselves somewhere back to where they were in previous seasons."
 

MugaB

Coach
Messages
15,008
[Copied from the NZ Warriors forum here]

A return home next season for the Warriors is looking increasingly unlikely with pre-season set to begin in November. But a new home base has emerged for the New Zealand club, reports Michael Burgess.



The Brisbane suburb of Redcliffe is firming as the Warriors' likely base in 2022.



A final decision is still a few weeks away, but the Herald understands that Redcliffe has been prominent in the discussions with the NRL.



It's believed to be one of the preferred options of the governing body.



The Warriors would prefer to return to New Zealand, but that is all but off the table, due to the ongoing uncertainty around the border and transtasman bubble.



With pre-season set to begin in November, it is impossible to see how Auckland could be in the equation, at least for the first half of next season.



Of the possible Australian alternatives, Brisbane, and especially Redcliffe, shines like a beacon.



The Warriors already have a relationship with the Queensland Cup team, with their reserve grade players turning out for the Dolphins over the past two seasons.




Their NRL game against the Bulldogs there two weeks ago, was a big success and illustrated the potential.



The stadium is an ideal size (11,500 capacity), complete with a thriving leagues club. It would offer a permanent structure, after the Warriors have utilised temporary facilities and council grounds over the last two seasons.




And Brisbane would be ideal. The NRL are close to confirming an expansion team in the Queensland capital for 2023 (the Dolphins, Jets or Firehawks) and it would suit them to stage as many games as possible there next season.



From a Warriors perspective, there is a sizeable expatriate Kiwi population and promising commercial opportunities, as well as an international airport.



The club made the most of their Central Coast base over the last two seasons and received great community support.



But the relatively small population meant commercial options were limited, along with the potential crowd. The area also has entrenched support for the Rabbitohs, Sea Eagles and Knights.



There aren't many other options.



Sydney is a saturated market with nine NRL clubs and has ongoing Covid issues. Newcastle is a parochial one-club city and the likes of Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie are too small.





In Queensland, Townsville is remote (and Cowboys country) while the Sunshine Coast has, like Gosford, a modest population. The Gold Coast has some advantages, but the Titans are unlikely to countenance that.



Warriors coach Nathan Brown indicated on Wednesday that a decision wasn't too far away.



"There are a number of possibilities at the moment [but] everything is speculation," said Brown. "We would like to know sooner rather than later, because there is a lot of people's lives at stake, with where they are going to be living, with families and kids. Hopefully they will have a decision in a week or two weeks."



Brown said stability is a key factor, after two relocations this season and the squad split across Auckland and New South Wales for pre-season.



"There are number of things on the table," said Brown. "Our preferred option would be Auckland but obviously [it depends on how] things go with the borders; at the moment we can't even go home.



"There are many things to take into account, and what is safest for the guys and their families so we can have some stability. [The] last thing we want is families moving around. That is certainly not ideal."



Ahead of Friday's game with Canberra, Brown said the team had recovered well from Sunday's physical clash with the Broncos.



Chanel Harris-Tavita is being rested after a knock to his foot, while Josh Curran has to pass concussion protocols. Kodi Nikorima, who missed the Brisbane game for personal reasons, will be used at dummy half.



Brown is confident the Warriors can lift – despite the short turnaround – but wary of the rising Raiders.



"Their past six weeks of footy have been very strong," said Brown. "They have got themselves somewhere back to where they were in previous seasons."
After watching tge warriors plummet last night after a 16-0 lead, maybe resting harris tevita was a shit idea, that and removing both lodge and AFB after 25min, they need to offset those two, maybe start Big bad bunty with AFB, then bring in lodge to cover AFB, their middes fall asleep mid game, when they are both off
 

siv

First Grade
Messages
6,748
[Copied from the NZ Warriors forum here]

A return home next season for the Warriors is looking increasingly unlikely with pre-season set to begin in November. But a new home base has emerged for the New Zealand club, reports Michael Burgess.



The Brisbane suburb of Redcliffe is firming as the Warriors' likely base in 2022.



A final decision is still a few weeks away, but the Herald understands that Redcliffe has been prominent in the discussions with the NRL.



It's believed to be one of the preferred options of the governing body.



The Warriors would prefer to return to New Zealand, but that is all but off the table, due to the ongoing uncertainty around the border and transtasman bubble.



With pre-season set to begin in November, it is impossible to see how Auckland could be in the equation, at least for the first half of next season.



Of the possible Australian alternatives, Brisbane, and especially Redcliffe, shines like a beacon.



The Warriors already have a relationship with the Queensland Cup team, with their reserve grade players turning out for the Dolphins over the past two seasons.




Their NRL game against the Bulldogs there two weeks ago, was a big success and illustrated the potential.



The stadium is an ideal size (11,500 capacity), complete with a thriving leagues club. It would offer a permanent structure, after the Warriors have utilised temporary facilities and council grounds over the last two seasons.




And Brisbane would be ideal. The NRL are close to confirming an expansion team in the Queensland capital for 2023 (the Dolphins, Jets or Firehawks) and it would suit them to stage as many games as possible there next season.



From a Warriors perspective, there is a sizeable expatriate Kiwi population and promising commercial opportunities, as well as an international airport.



The club made the most of their Central Coast base over the last two seasons and received great community support.



But the relatively small population meant commercial options were limited, along with the potential crowd. The area also has entrenched support for the Rabbitohs, Sea Eagles and Knights.



There aren't many other options.



Sydney is a saturated market with nine NRL clubs and has ongoing Covid issues. Newcastle is a parochial one-club city and the likes of Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie are too small.





In Queensland, Townsville is remote (and Cowboys country) while the Sunshine Coast has, like Gosford, a modest population. The Gold Coast has some advantages, but the Titans are unlikely to countenance that.



Warriors coach Nathan Brown indicated on Wednesday that a decision wasn't too far away.



"There are a number of possibilities at the moment [but] everything is speculation," said Brown. "We would like to know sooner rather than later, because there is a lot of people's lives at stake, with where they are going to be living, with families and kids. Hopefully they will have a decision in a week or two weeks."



Brown said stability is a key factor, after two relocations this season and the squad split across Auckland and New South Wales for pre-season.



"There are number of things on the table," said Brown. "Our preferred option would be Auckland but obviously [it depends on how] things go with the borders; at the moment we can't even go home.



"There are many things to take into account, and what is safest for the guys and their families so we can have some stability. [The] last thing we want is families moving around. That is certainly not ideal."



Ahead of Friday's game with Canberra, Brown said the team had recovered well from Sunday's physical clash with the Broncos.



Chanel Harris-Tavita is being rested after a knock to his foot, while Josh Curran has to pass concussion protocols. Kodi Nikorima, who missed the Brisbane game for personal reasons, will be used at dummy half.



Brown is confident the Warriors can lift – despite the short turnaround – but wary of the rising Raiders.



"Their past six weeks of footy have been very strong," said Brown. "They have got themselves somewhere back to where they were in previous seasons."

Looks like they are getting ready to takeover the NZ franchise
 
Messages
14,822
[Copied from the NZ Warriors forum here]

A return home next season for the Warriors is looking increasingly unlikely with pre-season set to begin in November. But a new home base has emerged for the New Zealand club, reports Michael Burgess.



The Brisbane suburb of Redcliffe is firming as the Warriors' likely base in 2022.



A final decision is still a few weeks away, but the Herald understands that Redcliffe has been prominent in the discussions with the NRL.



It's believed to be one of the preferred options of the governing body.



The Warriors would prefer to return to New Zealand, but that is all but off the table, due to the ongoing uncertainty around the border and transtasman bubble.



With pre-season set to begin in November, it is impossible to see how Auckland could be in the equation, at least for the first half of next season.



Of the possible Australian alternatives, Brisbane, and especially Redcliffe, shines like a beacon.



The Warriors already have a relationship with the Queensland Cup team, with their reserve grade players turning out for the Dolphins over the past two seasons.




Their NRL game against the Bulldogs there two weeks ago, was a big success and illustrated the potential.



The stadium is an ideal size (11,500 capacity), complete with a thriving leagues club. It would offer a permanent structure, after the Warriors have utilised temporary facilities and council grounds over the last two seasons.




And Brisbane would be ideal. The NRL are close to confirming an expansion team in the Queensland capital for 2023 (the Dolphins, Jets or Firehawks) and it would suit them to stage as many games as possible there next season.



From a Warriors perspective, there is a sizeable expatriate Kiwi population and promising commercial opportunities, as well as an international airport.



The club made the most of their Central Coast base over the last two seasons and received great community support.



But the relatively small population meant commercial options were limited, along with the potential crowd. The area also has entrenched support for the Rabbitohs, Sea Eagles and Knights.



There aren't many other options.



Sydney is a saturated market with nine NRL clubs and has ongoing Covid issues. Newcastle is a parochial one-club city and the likes of Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie are too small.





In Queensland, Townsville is remote (and Cowboys country) while the Sunshine Coast has, like Gosford, a modest population. The Gold Coast has some advantages, but the Titans are unlikely to countenance that.



Warriors coach Nathan Brown indicated on Wednesday that a decision wasn't too far away.



"There are a number of possibilities at the moment [but] everything is speculation," said Brown. "We would like to know sooner rather than later, because there is a lot of people's lives at stake, with where they are going to be living, with families and kids. Hopefully they will have a decision in a week or two weeks."



Brown said stability is a key factor, after two relocations this season and the squad split across Auckland and New South Wales for pre-season.



"There are number of things on the table," said Brown. "Our preferred option would be Auckland but obviously [it depends on how] things go with the borders; at the moment we can't even go home.



"There are many things to take into account, and what is safest for the guys and their families so we can have some stability. [The] last thing we want is families moving around. That is certainly not ideal."



Ahead of Friday's game with Canberra, Brown said the team had recovered well from Sunday's physical clash with the Broncos.



Chanel Harris-Tavita is being rested after a knock to his foot, while Josh Curran has to pass concussion protocols. Kodi Nikorima, who missed the Brisbane game for personal reasons, will be used at dummy half.



Brown is confident the Warriors can lift – despite the short turnaround – but wary of the rising Raiders.



"Their past six weeks of footy have been very strong," said Brown. "They have got themselves somewhere back to where they were in previous seasons."
The NRL would have made more money basing the Warriors at Dolphin Oval or Robina Stadium last year. Massive South Pacific Islander population in Logan and around Brisbane. Would have drawn bigger crowds than playing out of Central Coast Stadium.
 
Messages
14,822
Not sure if the NRL would allow that, given how much a NZ team brings to the table, financially. I mean, for a start would they get the same kinda deals from Sky TV?
There's no way the ARLC would risk SKY TV ripping up their broadcast deal, which is exactly what will happen if they relocate the Warriors permanently to Australia.
 

Jim Rockford

Bench
Messages
3,082
I think what covid period has shown is that heartland rl fans won’t turn out to see other teams play!
Or perhaps that they are smart enough to respect their (and other peoples) safety. I'm guessing that along with all your other moronic beliefs you're one of those mental midgets who think Covid isn't a big deal.
 
Messages
14,723
I think what covid period has shown is that heartland rl fans won’t turn out to see other teams play!
CC crying out for a team in the NRL.
Got an opportunity with Warriors and bugger all attended.
At least the Qld venues are filling nicely for games (albeit small venues).

NRL needs to rethink. Availability of product esp in Sydney is way too much. And most watch on TV anyway so will support a Sydney team if they relocate.
 

flippikat

First Grade
Messages
5,215
The NRL would have made more money basing the Warriors at Dolphin Oval or Robina Stadium last year. Massive South Pacific Islander population in Logan and around Brisbane. Would have drawn bigger crowds than playing out of Central Coast Stadium.
Yeah, to be honest the Central Coast struck me as an odd "home away from home" too.

The ex-pat Kiwi population in SE Qld is huge - heck, a lot of my wife's extended family moved there around 20ish years ago.
 
Messages
14,822
CC crying out for a team in the NRL.
Got an opportunity with Warriors and bugger all attended.
At least the Qld venues are filling nicely for games (albeit small venues).

NRL needs to rethink. Availability of product esp in Sydney is way too much. And most watch on TV anyway so will support a Sydney team if they relocate.
Great post. I'd say there's been too many games at Robina Stadium and Lang Park. More people would have attended those games in regional Queensland, and it would have been a real shot in the arm for the game out there. It's a real pity we didn't work out some arrangement with Northern Territory to play a few games out of Darwin and Alice Springs.

Yeah, to be honest the Central Coast struck me as an odd "home away from home" too.

The ex-pat Kiwi population in SE Qld is huge - heck, a lot of my wife's extended family moved there around 20ish years ago.
PVL and the rest of the ARLC only care about Sydney. Whenever there's a Test between Samoa and Tonga or PNG and Fiji it's usually plonked in Western Sydney. It's like they don't know there's a world outside of NSW.
 
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