"Yeah, we've got about three or four that are ready to sign mate, big names too, big names -- I can't tell you now [who they are] " Jones told The Breakdown with a grin.
"I think it adds to the competitive tension. If you open the Daily Telegraph in Sydney, you've got to go to the last page, and even the last page now has probably got lawn bowls on it now instead of rugby.
"So we need to get rugby back competing as a winter sport. And by signing a guy like Suaali'i, it helps that. If we sign two or three others, it'll help that and it'll also show kids [what's available].
"A lot of the kids now go to a big private school and by the time they're 15, if they're good, if they're good readers of the game, they catch and pass - they've got a Rabbitohs contract or a Roosters contract in front of them.
"And the inevitability of that is hard to stop because we're competing against 17 clubs that all have the recruitment budget of Rugby Australia. So we've got to get some of those players back and ideally we keep more of them at a young age, which we have to do, but then to get a few of them back after they've done an apprenticeship in rugby league is fantastic."
He may be deep into preparations for Australia's Rugby Championship campaign, but that hasn't stopped Wallabies coach Eddie Jones hinting that his rugby league recruitment drive has ended with Joseph Suaali'i.
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