Did they really almost fluff it or was the NRL just not holding talks on expansion at the time?
Both sides almost fluffed it.
Anyone here notice that when the WA team is brought up PVL mentions the WA premier Roger Cook all the time and rarely mentions the WA consortium or NRLWA chairman?
From my understanding in the bits and pieces I’ve been told, there was an ultimatum.
Broadcasters (who pay for the game) had little faith in WA Consortium stand alone. The consortium has no IP, assets, big enough general public support (in their eyes). But they have location and a time slot of said location. There’s a pay off if it succeeds but no collateral to mitigate risk.
Bears have IP, assets, general public support but have no location. There is also risk and there is collateral but it’s useless without having somewhere to actually conceptualise it from.
If they didn’t unify then WA consortium would not have gotten the license and probably would be waiting another 10 years + until a more firm consortium came about. Bears alone would never get the license either.
So in the best interests of all the business men involved they were told get together and make it work or neither of them would be looked at with any real consideration in the immediate future.
Prior to all this WA Government had initiated talks with Bears long before the WA consortium was a genuine thing. There was always a contingency. That’s not to say WA Government would have pulled the strings and gone at it alone without consortium or bears or even with Bears but the money for that isn’t there. WA was always getting a team but the time line has increasingly shortened.
In short both were told to make it work or f**k off. That’s the offer.
Then after that came the deep negotiations between WA Consortium and Bears of the how’s, when’s, why’s, what’s etc etc.
Whatever was finalised was for the benefit of WA. ARLC were heavily involved in how it matured.