The Great Dane
First Grade
- Messages
- 7,960
We are stuck with our history which is a strength but also an anchor that weighs us down and stops us moving forward. I do wonder if the ARL had accepted News Ltd's offer in 1995 and we had gone with 4 super Sydney clubs being fed and part owned by the then 12 clubs what we might look like now?
But are we truly stuck with our history and is it really a strength?!
It seems to me that RL's history in this country is pretty much exclusively as a regional sport that is stuck to the eastern seaboard of the country, and with the sole exception of Melbourne, it's stayed that way for a century now.
I mean think about it, apart from the aforementioned Melbourne all of the teams in the NRL are from places where RL was more or less established 100 years ago, and there's effectively been no significant growth outside of those boarders since that time.
Do we really want that to be our legacy, and is that regional strength really a strength to be treasured, because it seems to me that if we want to treat that as a strength then we should all just give up on growing the sport at all.
And why do we allow ourselves to be stuck with this history when every other major competition and sport that I can think of has at least some form of mechanism built into their culture to cut away the dead weight over time. Whether it be pro® or having a culture of relocating and/or replacing clubs that are failing, or whatever, every sport has some mechanism built into their culture to get rid of clubs that simply aren't working anymore, except RL. In RL we won't even let them just go broke if we can avoid it. We'll throw more and more money down the drain trying to keep them alive instead of letting history take it's course and moving onward and upward, it's madness.
I mean RL is the only sport that loses it's shit when the Swinton frigging Lions, a club that literally only has a few hundred supporters left, goes to relocate into Manchester proper.
It's obvious to everybody that the club can't support it's self on a few hundred old men and it's literally moving only 20 minutes up the road to try and engage with a larger market, but people were more worried about those few hundred supporters feelings then they are about the future of the club and the sport in the region it's self. They were so upset by the prospect of a club that's literally on it's deathbed attempting to save it's self by relocating 20min up the road, that they threatened the board, chairmen, and their families until they all gave up on trying to save the club and resigned instead.
That's f**king madness on a level that has to be seen to be believed, and yet not only is it commonplace in RL, but it's a celebrated strength!
If the sport thinks that madness as a "strength", then the sport desperately needs to reevaluate what it's strengths and weaknesses are, because it's "strengths" are going to it lead to it slowly committing suicide.