Changing planes, so he can make it back before kickoff? :sarcasm:Exclusive: Sonny Bill is in Singapore. Whats he up to?
Changing planes, so he can make it back before kickoff? :sarcasm:
I had to rofl at Gallop's comments tonight. Sonny Bill wont ever be allowed back in the NRL. Mate, i dont think he gives a sh*t and if thats the best we can do in response the god help us.
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,24087221-5007146,00.html
Life is not all about greed, Money Bill
By Paul Kent
July 27, 2008 11:17pm
SONNY Bill Williams' famous quote, in March, goes like this: "I was offered double what I'm on at Canterbury to go somewhere else and I stayed because I wanted to stay loyal to the club and keep the boys around, but to see him leave like that ..."
He is talking about Willie Mason, and Willie's decision to break contract and walk out on the Bulldogs at the start of this season to join the Roosters.
Sonny Bill did not finish there.
"It's tough because he was a player that I really did look up to and for him to leave like that ... I had so much respect for him ... from telling me to stay loyal and what not ... and for him to just pack up and leave like that was very hard to take.
"So, yeah my respect for him has diminished."
And so, yeah, Sonny Bill is exposed as a myth.
Slain by his own words.
Today he rises somewhere in another part of the world as the new poster boy for the Where's Mine? gang.
It gets worse. Williams' walkout on the Bulldogs ranks among the lowest, most treacherous acts performed by a footballer on his team-mates. He snuck out of town without telling one team-mate he was going. Mid-season.
Forget the PR spin from the media lackeys that have embarrassed themselves by trying to sell the line that Sonny Bill confided in two close team-mates before he left.
The Bulldogs players met yesterday and not one of them said they knew.
Two days before he skipped town, Sonny Bill sat with chief executive Todd Greenberg, incoming coach Kevin Moore and captain Andrew Ryan to discuss plans for next year.
Not a word.
Last week the Bulldogs allowed every fan with a Kiwi, Samoan, Tongan or Fijian passport into the game for free at Sonny Bill's urging.
Not a word.
Apparently all Sonny Bill can say is: Where's mine?
And his greed creates the most important test case in the NRL's 11-year history.
Here is a man being induced to break a five-year contract to take up a deal with French rugby club Toulon.
The French rugby clubs have the money to outbid NRL clubs.
They are owned by rich businessmen whose rugby clubs are almost an indulgence, a rich man's toy. Toulon owner, Mourad Boudjellal, made his fortune in the comic strip business and lavishes money on his team.
If the NRL blinks now the damage could be irreparable.
No, the game won't die. But if a precedent is set the best players can be poached without ramification, the NRL will wither.
It will become nothing more than a step up from bush football, dying from the top down.
The NRL and the Bulldogs have been seeking legal advice and today will begin to force the International Rugby Board to get involved.
Yesterday NRL boss David Gallop challenged the IRB to acknowledge what had happened and to prevent Sonny Bill from being registered.
In terms of the game, it is high noon.
If the IRB fails to impose its jurisdiction on the French Rugby Federation (FFR) it could be all over. This is a greater chance of happening than most realise.
The owners of French rugby clubs wield tremendous power within their game and tremendous political power outside.
Such is the extent, they often dictate to the FFR itself.
The English Premier League and Italian Serie A are perhaps the only football leagues in the world where the clubs dictate so heavily to the governing body.
For such reasons the NRL's greatest concern -- and it is one the Australian Rugby Union shares -- is that the IRB will not be able to govern the FFR.
The French clubs won't allow it, meaning Sonny Bill could be in the black and red sooner rather than later.
The ARU knows that if the IRB cannot stop the FFR from poaching Sonny Bill and he can't be held to a contract then the same applies to Matt Giteau, Lote Tuqiri and the rest.
The NRL's problem is unique in it provides the best athletes, even by rugby union standards, yet it does not have the money to keep them if it comes to auction.
Already in the past year Craig Gower, Mark Gasnier and Luke Rooney have scored large pay rises to play rugby in France.
Unlike Sonny Bill, none broke their contract to make the deal.
Gower is the only one to have yet played, but it sounds like a beautiful set-up. Twice the money for half the football.
When he returned briefly this year he told one friend he made six tackles all season.
He told a coach that he believed he had one or, at best, two years left in the NRL but in this league he could play another four or five seasons.
So the appeal is legitimate. It is the means that concern.
The NRL must fight the Toulon deal as far as it needs to go.
No compensation. No deals.
Sonny Bill plays for the Bulldogs or he plays nowhere, even if it means going to the highest international court to enforce his contract.
As for Sonny Bill and his wonderful ethics, he had us fooled with Willie Mason.
Now he has ignored one of the first pieces of advice every man of substance learns.
Lie down with dogs and you get up with fleas.
All his unrest came after he signed with manager Khoder Nasser, the man that has managed Anthony Mundine's career with great aplomb.
Today he scratches.
http://www.leaguehq.com.au/articles/2008/07/27/1217097059629.html?feed=fairfaxdigitalxml
How drudgery is French kiss of death for players
ROY MASTERS
28/07/2008 12:05:34 AM
Professional football isn't fun any more. Sport is now work. Sonny Bill Williams, who walked out on the Bulldogs, has been sending messages to Canterbury for months that he was unhappy in his job.
NRL players win a match, exchange a few careful words with the media, plunge into an ice bath, are breathalysed, weighed and measured for body fat, push weights, sit through a video highlights session exposing every error and are then ushered onto the field to practise the same routine of running from dummy-half, executing a block play, then a double block before kicking to the corners.
"Don't let us take all the fun out of it," says Titans' chairman Paul Broughton, the NRL's longest-serving official.
If you're Williams, you have the additional burden of people with mobile phone cameras taking photos of trysts in pub toilets or Customs officials contacting radio stations to report you leaving the country.
So much for privacy.
Similarly, Penrith's Craig Gower loathed the media spotlight and fled to France, while St George Illawarra's Mark Gasnier's recent decision to play for Stade Francais followed 18 months of desperate pleading by his chief executive, Peter Doust, to stay.
When the pair met for the last time, along with Gasnier's agent, George Mimis, Doust looked Gasnier in the eyes and said, "I'm wasting my time, aren't I?" The immediate response was "Yes."
Multiple premiership coach Wayne Bennett, who will coach the Dragons next year, has long argued that if a player wants to go, nothing will stop him.
It's not known if Bennett spoke to Gasnier but it's likely he read the earlier reports about Gasnier's flirtation with the Wallabies and knew his departure was inevitable.
Gasnier blames the NRL, arguing it guaranteed his third-party deal and it was only when he was told the $300,000 he was owed would be assessable in the Dragons' salary cap that he decided he wanted out. This is contradicted by the get-out clause Mimis inserted in Gasnier's contract.
If Gasnier always believed the NRL would honour his third-party deal, why an annual escape clause?
"At the end of the day, the French have thrown up offers and arrangements which we can't compete with," Doust says of the €80,000 ($130,000) tax-free image rights deals and a 25 per cent tax rate.
Significantly, Gasnier did not use Mimis to negotiate his French contract, but the very bottom line is that rugby league had become a chore. His game wasn't improving.
He still rushes up in defence. Video sessions are a bore.
Dragons' coach Nathan Brown has enlisted the always optimistic Wendell Sailor to enthuse Gasnier for the match against the Bulldogs tonight.
Similarly, the Bulldogs have tried all types of therapy to massage Sonny Bill's ego, including a dinner date with his new management team where an entourage was fed but the star second-rower stayed home.
Unlike Gasnier, whose game had stagnated, Sonny Bill was still capable of winning games on his own.
When I last spoke face to face with him at the Fairfax awards at the SCG in December, he asked a series of questions about Melbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy and assistant Stephen Kearney.
His first choice would have been Bellamy and the anonymity of Melbourne, while his second was to play under Kearney at Canterbury.
Maybe he saw in Kevin Moore, the replacement next year for current coach Steve Folkes, more of the same.
Some will conclude that Sonny Bill's lunch on Thursday with Moore and captain Andrew Ryan was a final attempt to decide whether anything will be different at Canterbury in 2009.
More likely, it was a facade. Unlike Gasnier, who admitted to Doust it was futile to attempt to talk him into staying, Williams took the cowardly course.
Williams's management is the same team under which Anthony Mundine fled the Dragons for the USA before "The Man" took up boxing. Ditto Solomon Haumono fleeing the Bulldogs to London in search of the "Pleasure Machine."
Mimis was Gorden Tallis's manager when he wanted out of the Dragons to play for the Broncos in 1995. The Broncos offered $100,000 restitution, but Dragons' boss Danny Robinson refused and Tallis was forced to sit out a year.
But Sonny Bill's management knows the Bulldogs are trapped. Should he return from France, they can't take him back and if they accept a settlement, it's an invitation to disgruntled stars to break contracts.
Until players experience more joie de vivre with their football, it's the clubs who will learn the meaning of hard labour.
Williams in Toulon
The imbroglio Bill Williams is about to touch his end. As announced it Olympic Noon one month ago, William is going to join Toulon for a duration of two years. Williams makes a commitment for 2 years for a 3 million Australian dollar amount (a little less than 2 million euro....
Sonny Bill Williams, star of the Bulldogs, was seen on Saturday at the airport of Sydney direction France. The leaders of the club wanted to approach him but Williams did not address them.
According to sources close to the file, Sonny Bill Williams, age 22, complained about the management of the club. So by leaving, he breaks his contract while he stayed in him 4 years with Dogs.
I had to rofl at Gallop's comments tonight. Sonny Bill wont ever be allowed back in the NRL. Mate, i dont think he gives a sh*t and if thats the best we can do in response the god help us.