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Rumours and Stuff

84 Baby

Referee
Messages
29,746
But to have a legally binding contract the NRL don't need to be involved do they? Otherwise teams would (probably) never end up over the cap.
If I'm not mistaken, I believe that there is a standard clause in NRL contracts that does stipulate it has to be ratified by NRL. See us and Foran over the $1m payout clause.
Most teams going over the cap either do it by covert and intentional means (us, Scum, Dogs) or minorly through activation/miscalculation of bonuses, match payments & non-monetary items (probably every club at least once) & clearly the NRL couldn't be f**ked putting in the work to ensure teams aren't going over unless it's completely obvious
 

Oscarman

Juniors
Messages
1,907
I'm told Eastwood is prepared to play reserve grade next year.. he's standing his ground and who can blame him.

the dogs are in a real pickle.
Yep this is true. Not sure he would get a game at more than 2 or 3 other clubs - on a good day, so he stays for the $$$$$$$$.
 

T.S Quint

Coach
Messages
14,595
I reckon Eastwood will go Uk and all will be forgotten about.

Unless he is going to get $800k (or whatever he is actually on) in England, then why wouldn't he just stay and see out his contract? I can't see him earning that much over there, and he certainly won't be getting anywhere near that at another NRL club.

If I was him I'd be quite happy to stay and earn the money I was promised, whether it be in FG or Reserve Grade, or whatever.
 

Incorrect

Coach
Messages
12,706
Unless he is going to get $800k (or whatever he is actually on) in England, then why wouldn't he just stay and see out his contract? I can't see him earning that much over there, and he certainly won't be getting anywhere near that at another NRL club.

If I was him I'd be quite happy to stay and earn the money I was promised, whether it be in FG or Reserve Grade, or whatever.

Dogs will just get some mad merkin from reserve grade to do a cannon ball tackle on him during a pre-season ball work session, rupture both his ACL's and then have him "medically retired".... Simples!
 

Bazal

Post Whore
Messages
103,042
Unless he is going to get $800k (or whatever he is actually on) in England, then why wouldn't he just stay and see out his contract? I can't see him earning that much over there, and he certainly won't be getting anywhere near that at another NRL club.

If I was him I'd be quite happy to stay and earn the money I was promised, whether it be in FG or Reserve Grade, or whatever.

Damn right....he'd likely be in reggies at most clubs earning, what, 200k max? Even in England he might earn 400k tops. Surely he digs the heels in and collects the cash.

I'd clean the fking dunnies at Belmore for 800k a year
 

TheRam

Coach
Messages
13,906
Well finally one club that seems to be doing the right thing for the sport in a wider sense. Lets hope Parra take the initiative and pick a region now before all the best parts are carved up. On that does anyone know which region would be best for Parra and why???

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...nt-for-saving-bush-footy-20170809-gxsqkz.html

Penrith Panthers provide NRL with blueprint for saving bush footy

Penrith are expanding their footprint further into the western corridor in what they and the Country Rugby League believe will serve as the blueprint for saving bush football.

The Panthers, the CRL and the NSWRL have rubber-stamped a landmark initiative that will allow the club to field teams in the Western Region championships in what could be the first step towards fielding a Panthers-branded Intrust Super Premiership side in the region by 2022.

The commitment builds on the work Penrith already does in the region, which includes taking NRL games to Bathurst at least until 2028. They will expand their reach further with the establishment of academies in Bathurst, Dubbo and Forbes to provide youngsters with a genuine rugby league pathway, at a time when there will be limited scope for clubs to sign or relocate players under a new contracting system that is being finalised by the NRL and the players' union.

"Philosophically, we've decided that if the kids can't come to us, we'll go out to where the kids are," Penrith's high-performance manager Matt Cameron said. "It's a win for us because the kids are playing a good standard of football and it's a win for the CRL because it enhances their competition.

"We feel we've put together a blueprint that the CRL could potentially take to other NRL clubs. If they have the resources to do it, they could partner with one of the existing zones in the country to enhance their development."

The Panthers will continue to field under-16s and under-18s teams in Sydney's Harold Matthews and SG Ball competitions, but will now also field "Penrith Panthers"-branded teams in those age groups in the Western Region Championships. At a time when the NRL has set aside $100 million to invest in grassroots rugby league, the Panthers have proven you don't need to spend big to get results in the bush. Penrith spend just under $2.5 million to run all of their junior programs, an investment that begins with its under-20s side and covers every tier down to the youngest registered player. The total cost of running programs at the three academies – St Johns College in Dubbo, Red Bend Catholic College in Forbes and Charles Sturt University in Bathurst – is just $20,000. The club recently ran an under-15s camp for just $7500.

The CRL has no doubt that if the NRL wants bang for its buck, it could do worse than fund clubs that are willing to partner with regional zones.

"The model they've got will be the blueprint for all regions," CRL official Bert Lowrie said of Penrith's initiative. "They're setting up academies, but not in the bricks-and-mortar sense. They will put their expertise into those academies but what they won't be doing – and they have made this very clear – is coming out to take over.

"In the Penrith model, they're coaching our coaches, they're working with our sports trainers, they're helping prepare our 16s and 18s for our championships and, underneath that, they work with our 14s and 15s as well. It all just flows.

"They will put a Penrith development team wearing the Penrith colours into the Southern region championships, which is huge, a massive step. We don't want clubs to be given an area and then just come in and cherry-pick the best kids. We want clubs to come in and do what Penrith is doing, to come in and actually invest in the region."

spt_web_countryleague.jpg


Some NRL clubs are already making significant investments in regional areas. The Roosters are developing talent on the Central Coast, while Newcastle and Canberra provide appropriate resources for their surrounding areas. However, the CRL believes every NRL franchise should be responsible for developing a region.

Penrith are already making a difference in the greater west. Dubbo's Western Rams are more than 400 kilometres away from Sydney, but their academy gives them access to facilities and coaching that is on par with what the best young juniors receive in the city. When Panthers CEO Bryan Fletcher, a Coonamble product, recently addressed the region's players, his message was clear: "We don't see you as a cost, we see you as an investment."

"I've had dealings with other clubs and they are all very good, but these guys have taken it to another level in their plan for the future," said the rugby league co-ordinator for St Johns College, Andy Haycock.

"Grassroots footy, especially out in this part, is crying out for help. For them to come on board gives us a feeling that we're not at the end of the world with it, that there are people who care for us in that multimillion-dollar business."

Panthers forward Isaah Yeo, a Dubbo product, wishes the academy system was available when he was coming through the ranks.

"I think it's great Panthers is getting on the front foot with building development pathways for country kids to make it to the NRL," Yeo said. "Having grown up in Dubbo, I know the rugby league community out there will embrace everything Panthers is doing.

"To get access to elite-level coaching at an early age will benefit not just the players, but the game as a whole. There is so much young talent in country rugby league and what Panthers is doing will help take it to another level."
 

hindy111

Post Whore
Messages
62,867
Well finally one club that seems to be doing the right thing for the sport in a wider sense. Lets hope Parra take the initiative and pick a region now before all the best parts are carved up. On that does anyone know which region would be best for Parra and why???

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...nt-for-saving-bush-footy-20170809-gxsqkz.html

Penrith Panthers provide NRL with blueprint for saving bush footy

Penrith are expanding their footprint further into the western corridor in what they and the Country Rugby League believe will serve as the blueprint for saving bush football.

The Panthers, the CRL and the NSWRL have rubber-stamped a landmark initiative that will allow the club to field teams in the Western Region championships in what could be the first step towards fielding a Panthers-branded Intrust Super Premiership side in the region by 2022.

The commitment builds on the work Penrith already does in the region, which includes taking NRL games to Bathurst at least until 2028. They will expand their reach further with the establishment of academies in Bathurst, Dubbo and Forbes to provide youngsters with a genuine rugby league pathway, at a time when there will be limited scope for clubs to sign or relocate players under a new contracting system that is being finalised by the NRL and the players' union.

"Philosophically, we've decided that if the kids can't come to us, we'll go out to where the kids are," Penrith's high-performance manager Matt Cameron said. "It's a win for us because the kids are playing a good standard of football and it's a win for the CRL because it enhances their competition.

"We feel we've put together a blueprint that the CRL could potentially take to other NRL clubs. If they have the resources to do it, they could partner with one of the existing zones in the country to enhance their development."

The Panthers will continue to field under-16s and under-18s teams in Sydney's Harold Matthews and SG Ball competitions, but will now also field "Penrith Panthers"-branded teams in those age groups in the Western Region Championships. At a time when the NRL has set aside $100 million to invest in grassroots rugby league, the Panthers have proven you don't need to spend big to get results in the bush. Penrith spend just under $2.5 million to run all of their junior programs, an investment that begins with its under-20s side and covers every tier down to the youngest registered player. The total cost of running programs at the three academies – St Johns College in Dubbo, Red Bend Catholic College in Forbes and Charles Sturt University in Bathurst – is just $20,000. The club recently ran an under-15s camp for just $7500.

The CRL has no doubt that if the NRL wants bang for its buck, it could do worse than fund clubs that are willing to partner with regional zones.

"The model they've got will be the blueprint for all regions," CRL official Bert Lowrie said of Penrith's initiative. "They're setting up academies, but not in the bricks-and-mortar sense. They will put their expertise into those academies but what they won't be doing – and they have made this very clear – is coming out to take over.

"In the Penrith model, they're coaching our coaches, they're working with our sports trainers, they're helping prepare our 16s and 18s for our championships and, underneath that, they work with our 14s and 15s as well. It all just flows.

"They will put a Penrith development team wearing the Penrith colours into the Southern region championships, which is huge, a massive step. We don't want clubs to be given an area and then just come in and cherry-pick the best kids. We want clubs to come in and do what Penrith is doing, to come in and actually invest in the region."

spt_web_countryleague.jpg


Some NRL clubs are already making significant investments in regional areas. The Roosters are developing talent on the Central Coast, while Newcastle and Canberra provide appropriate resources for their surrounding areas. However, the CRL believes every NRL franchise should be responsible for developing a region.

Penrith are already making a difference in the greater west. Dubbo's Western Rams are more than 400 kilometres away from Sydney, but their academy gives them access to facilities and coaching that is on par with what the best young juniors receive in the city. When Panthers CEO Bryan Fletcher, a Coonamble product, recently addressed the region's players, his message was clear: "We don't see you as a cost, we see you as an investment."

"I've had dealings with other clubs and they are all very good, but these guys have taken it to another level in their plan for the future," said the rugby league co-ordinator for St Johns College, Andy Haycock.

"Grassroots footy, especially out in this part, is crying out for help. For them to come on board gives us a feeling that we're not at the end of the world with it, that there are people who care for us in that multimillion-dollar business."

Panthers forward Isaah Yeo, a Dubbo product, wishes the academy system was available when he was coming through the ranks.

"I think it's great Panthers is getting on the front foot with building development pathways for country kids to make it to the NRL," Yeo said. "Having grown up in Dubbo, I know the rugby league community out there will embrace everything Panthers is doing.

"To get access to elite-level coaching at an early age will benefit not just the players, but the game as a whole. There is so much young talent in country rugby league and what Panthers is doing will help take it to another level."

Where is the tripple like button?
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/spo...l/news-story/a7f6dd14236988094fb3d75c96420fbc

How Phillip Hughes handed Nathan Brown the new ball

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM August 11, 2017
  • Ray Gatt
Locked away safely in a room at Nathan Brown’s home is a non-descript bag of cricket gear: gloves, pads and an assortment of Kookaburra and County bats.

They’re all from a time not all that long ago when the rampaging Parramatta Eels lock thought cricket would lead him to a successful professional sporting career.

While Brown has no regrets about his decision to swap cricket whites for the rough and tumble of the NRL, the gear still holds huge significance for him because at one time it all belonged to one of his sporting heroes — the late Phillip Hughes.

Brown never followed a team in the NRL, instead opting for Hughes and former Australia cricket captain Michael Clarke as his idols. As a teenager going through the ranks of Sydney grade cricket at Wests, he could barely believe his luck when seeing them play at close hand.

He was a very promising batsman, under maestro Neil D’Costa, who was head coach at Wests at the time. Brown made it to second grade, often training alongside first-team players such as Hughes.

“I learned a lot from them, especially Hughesy,” Brown recalled. “He had a big impact on me as a mentor. Sometimes I’d be batting in the net next to his net and I’d just stop and watch him. He was perfect in everything he did. I was in awe.

“He always had time to chat and ended up giving me a whole kit full of his hand-down bats, gloves and pads.”

That, however, is as close to cricket as he gets these days. The talented left-hand batsman gave up rugby league for a season to chase his cricket dream but was eventually drawn back to his first love — league.

“Could I have made it (in cricket)? Nah … well, I guess you never know. But that is long gone now and I don’t look back, I look forward,” he said.

Still, the lessons learnt from those cricket days at Wests have helped him build a career in the NRL, although Hughes was not the only person who had an impact in moulding the 24-year-old into the player and, more importantly, the person he is today.

The man Brown mentions most is Joe Wehbe, who has built a reputation as the “football whisperer”.

Wehbe, who has also worked with Aaron Woods, Luke Brooks and Mitchell Moses, shuns the limelight but Brown was more than happy to credit him with turning around his career and make this his breakout NRL year. “He gets inside my head,” the Eels star said. “On and off the field he has helped me so much. I have a clear head when I get on the field and I now try and have fun and enjoy my footy. I have been with him for three years and is he has been so crucial for me.

“I’ve been very lucky to have had Phil Hughes, Joe and (Parramatta coach) Brad Arthur help me so much to develop as a player and a person.

“All of that has taught me that I can have an impact on younger players as well and that I can be a role model.”

It has certainly shown this season, with Brown among a host of standouts as the Eels have surged into premiership contention off the back of a six-game winning streak that has put them within sight of a top-four spot.

Brown’s impact has been stunning, as the statistics show. He is 20th overall in metres gained (2539), sixth in offloads (36) and 22nd in tackles made (584).

It is clear why he is now regarded as the leader of the Parramatta pack. He can do it at both ends, in attack and defence.

“Brad showed a lot of faith in me. He has been wonderful. He gave me that role (leader of the pack). He thinks I’m a leader. I think the way I play and go about my footy, I am happy to take that role,” Brown said.

Mind you, all this would not have been possible if he had succumbed to his preference of “better the devil you know than the devil you don’t”.

Having spent two seasons with South Sydney (2015 and 2016) and with the Rabbitohs having given him his big break, he was inclined to stay “in my comfort zone” when the opportunity first came up to join the Eels.

“I am not a person who likes change ... but I guess everything happens for a reason and joining the Eels is the best decision I have ever made. I’m signed up until the end of next season but I want to stay at the Eels forever.”
 

Glenneel

Bench
Messages
3,781
Unless he is going to get $800k (or whatever he is actually on) in England, then why wouldn't he just stay and see out his contract? I can't see him earning that much over there, and he certainly won't be getting anywhere near that at another NRL club.

If I was him I'd be quite happy to stay and earn the money I was promised, whether it be in FG or Reserve Grade, or whatever.
Irrespective of whether he stays or goes he has a legally binding contract for say $800k so that's what he'd get - Dogs would have to pay the difference.
 

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