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WA BEARS

Red&BlackBear

First Grade
Messages
5,391
Check out the dunnies at the northern end of Leichhardt when you go there, you gotta experience that.
Keen to hear where you’ve landing on Western Bears. You weren’t very receptive a few months ago. Has that changed now knowing how the model is structured with it being 100% WA owned and run?

Will they surpass the Tigers are your club or will they settle for your second fav club? Either way a WA club is coming, plenty to be happy about.
 

Bukowski

Bench
Messages
2,623
Keen to hear where you’ve landing on Western Bears. You weren’t very receptive a few months ago. Has that changed now knowing how the model is structured with it being 100% WA owned and run?

Will they surpass the Tigers are your club or will they settle for your second fav club? Either way a WA club is coming, plenty to be happy about.
I'll be sticking with the tigers, or possibly the magpies by then lol.
The model seems a lot better than other partnerships so there's optimism that it will work. Hopefully they nail it and become a great club, I'm super keen just to be able to go watch regular games.
 

Centy Coast

Juniors
Messages
1,695
The Bears made a welcome return to the winners circle tonight with a 30-24 win over the Newcastle Knights to wrap up the regular season.
Congrats to the two young wingers who made their NSW Cup debuts 2nite, Matthew Hill and Ben Stringer, Stringer was playing Harold Matthews earlier this season, both played well.
The Bears now need the Roosters to defeat or draw with the Raiders 2morro and they will be Minor Premiers, if Canberra win 2morro they will be the Minor Premiers because of their superior points differential and the Bears will play the Newtown Jets next weekend.
The Bears had no contracted Storm players 2nite as they all played on Thursday nite against the Cowboys.

IMG_5637.jpeg
 
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Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,070
When the bears come in my goal will be to see them at every away stadium before I peg it! When the reds where in bundy cup I travelled to sydney to see them play belmore, I’m a tragic lol
lol I haven’t been to belmore and I live five minutes away
 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
How is it personal attacks? Your club cheated with drug abuse. Your club tried to screw another club that helped yours out financially. All items that reek of a true parasitic entity. You completely ignore that because god knows what reason.

Maybe you have selected memory or maybe you’re just a complete clown with a rainbow coloured mouth right about now but either way, you’re not a very intelligent person Vlad.

So again before you go calling a club a parasite, use that 65 year old peanut shell you call a head to try remember what your club has actually done. Which again is the whole point of this back and forwards.
Oh dear. There you go again. Typical behaviour of a follower of a parasite club that leaches on to a new entity in a desperate search for relevance. And more personal abuse. Deary me. Triggered much?
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,370
NRL 2024: Western Bears draft in Anthony Griffin, Paul White for expansion bid

The Western Bears stepped up their push to join an expanded NRL competition by enlisting the help of two former Broncos heavyweights.
MICHAEL CARAYANNI,
BRENT READ
and
PETER BADEL

September 1, 2024 - 7:55AM

The Western Bears turned to former Broncos heavyweights Anthony Griffin and Paul White to assist with their likely entry into the competition.

It is understood that former St George Illawarra, Penrith and Broncos coach Griffin, ex-Broncos chief executive White and former NRL executive Jonathon Stewart helped the Bears with their bid proposal which is being examined by the NRL.

White and Stewart run a sports management advisory company and drafted in Griffin to assist the Bears. The company also looks after Melbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy.

Griffin, who coached the Dragons last season, has large expertise in helping establish pathway systems having overseen Brisbane’s development and had a key role in initiating Penrith’s academy programs.

He was also part of the Melbourne Storm when they first entered the competition in 1998.

It is understood the group assisted with the football aspects of the Bears’ intense bid process which included the functionality of a high performance centre, what staff are needed to run a football program, the football department salary cap, the player salary cap and the systems and pathways needed to establish sustained success.

The Bears re-entry into top flight rugby league is all but certain, with a formal announcement expected by October with a 2027 launch date.

North Sydney and the West Australian bid team formed an alliance earlier in August to establish the Western Bears.

While the Perth Bears name was floated, the parties agreed to the Western Bears which is a nod to Western Australia’s first team – the Western Reds.

Anthony Griffin most recently coached the Dragons in 2023.

They finalised their proposal ahead of the NRL imposed August 14 deadline after the hopeful clubs were given a two-week extension.

The Bears are expected to become the NRL’s 18th side and will be based in Perth except for one regular season game and a pre-season fixture in NSW.

PNG will become the NRL’s 19th team in 2028 while the 20th team remains wide open.

Newtown and Ipswich have formed a joint-bid to bring back the Jets while the David Moffett-led South Island Kea also has support.

 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,070
Griffen and white yeh talk about duds

white forced Bennett out of the dragons

Griffen refused to use juniors at the dragons and Penrith
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,370
Proposed Bears blueprint outlined

By Justin Fris
Thursday, 29 August, 2024 - 08:53
Category:
Sport
Business stakeholders and Western Australian Rugby League diehards were given greater insight into how the Western Bears could operate within an expanded national competition.

Speaking at the 2024 Ken Allen Medal awards night at the Westin Hotel, Western Bears and WA NRL bid chair Peter Cumins candidly outlined the hard work behind the bid, which was officially submitted to the Australian Rugby League Commission on August 14.

Business News understands the final bid document was approximately 480-483 pages, with a team of dedicated people working round the clock, seven days a week, to ensure all criteria were thoroughly addressed.

Prospective WA players on the cusp of first grade with the Bears from 2027 and beyond will be given an opportunity to represent the North Sydney Bears at NSW Cup level, a second-tier competition, with Mr Cumins confirming WA would likely return to elite junior representative level.

“We will be entering teams in the Harold Matthews (under 16s) and SG Ball (under 18s) Cup competitions,” he said.

“It will give our kids in WA those pathways to improve themselves and test themselves.

“As well as being able to access players from the east coast, to be able to make sure that we’ve got a competitive squad going forward.”

The last WA-based side to compete in the SG Ball competition was the West Coast Pirates in 2020, which was operated by NRL WA, the state governing body. The Pirates didn't compete in 2021 due to COVID-19 health and safety protocols and haven't returned since.

In a letter to WA’s Rugby League community on July 2, Mr Cumins said the WA bid needed to raise $30 million in order to support its push in providing a comprehensive plan to the NRL.

“We’ve been able to raise thirty million dollars to make sure the club is capitalised,” he said on Wednesday night.

“You can imagine, we don’t kick a football until 2027, so we’ve got engage coaches, players, football managers, office staff ... all those people need to be in place when we begin pre-season training in 2026.”

Long-term, the Bears – in collaboration with the state government – would ideally move to a purpose-built centre of excellence, which would become a hub for the code in WA.

Presently, NRL WA’s office is located on King Edward Road in Osborne Park. Over the past decade, its office has also been situated in Canning Vale and at HBF Park.

Bears home matches would primarily be played at HBF Park in East Perth, with one game to be played at North Sydney Oval.

“That home will be an opportunity and place where all of our elite players here in WA can go and train, be coached and participate in all of these elite programs," Mr Cumins said.

“But it’s not just the Western Bears team. This team and club will be set up to promote Rugby League, participation levels and school programs.”

By 2029, WA is expected to have the third highest number of club-based player registrations behind NSW and Queensland.

As it stands, WA has around 4,335 registered players. However, Willagee MLA Peter Tinley, who alongside Premier Roger Cook has been a passionate advocate for WA Rugby League, told the room he believed WA could one day become a hotbed for junior talent.

“We want to have a position in the game where the Western Bears are running out there with at least five – probably more likely ten – run-on players who are homegrown,” he said.

“There’s no reason why this state can’t have 10,000 juniors and be an absolute player factory.”

 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
Proposed Bears blueprint outlined

By Justin Fris
Thursday, 29 August, 2024 - 08:53
Category:
Sport
Business stakeholders and Western Australian Rugby League diehards were given greater insight into how the Western Bears could operate within an expanded national competition.

Speaking at the 2024 Ken Allen Medal awards night at the Westin Hotel, Western Bears and WA NRL bid chair Peter Cumins candidly outlined the hard work behind the bid, which was officially submitted to the Australian Rugby League Commission on August 14.

Business News understands the final bid document was approximately 480-483 pages, with a team of dedicated people working round the clock, seven days a week, to ensure all criteria were thoroughly addressed.

Prospective WA players on the cusp of first grade with the Bears from 2027 and beyond will be given an opportunity to represent the North Sydney Bears at NSW Cup level, a second-tier competition, with Mr Cumins confirming WA would likely return to elite junior representative level.

“We will be entering teams in the Harold Matthews (under 16s) and SG Ball (under 18s) Cup competitions,” he said.

“It will give our kids in WA those pathways to improve themselves and test themselves.

“As well as being able to access players from the east coast, to be able to make sure that we’ve got a competitive squad going forward.”

The last WA-based side to compete in the SG Ball competition was the West Coast Pirates in 2020, which was operated by NRL WA, the state governing body. The Pirates didn't compete in 2021 due to COVID-19 health and safety protocols and haven't returned since.

In a letter to WA’s Rugby League community on July 2, Mr Cumins said the WA bid needed to raise $30 million in order to support its push in providing a comprehensive plan to the NRL.

“We’ve been able to raise thirty million dollars to make sure the club is capitalised,” he said on Wednesday night.

“You can imagine, we don’t kick a football until 2027, so we’ve got engage coaches, players, football managers, office staff ... all those people need to be in place when we begin pre-season training in 2026.”

Long-term, the Bears – in collaboration with the state government – would ideally move to a purpose-built centre of excellence, which would become a hub for the code in WA.

Presently, NRL WA’s office is located on King Edward Road in Osborne Park. Over the past decade, its office has also been situated in Canning Vale and at HBF Park.

Bears home matches would primarily be played at HBF Park in East Perth, with one game to be played at North Sydney Oval.

“That home will be an opportunity and place where all of our elite players here in WA can go and train, be coached and participate in all of these elite programs," Mr Cumins said.

“But it’s not just the Western Bears team. This team and club will be set up to promote Rugby League, participation levels and school programs.”

By 2029, WA is expected to have the third highest number of club-based player registrations behind NSW and Queensland.

As it stands, WA has around 4,335 registered players. However, Willagee MLA Peter Tinley, who alongside Premier Roger Cook has been a passionate advocate for WA Rugby League, told the room he believed WA could one day become a hotbed for junior talent.

“We want to have a position in the game where the Western Bears are running out there with at least five – probably more likely ten – run-on players who are homegrown,” he said.

“There’s no reason why this state can’t have 10,000 juniors and be an absolute player factory.”

I love the last paragraph in particular. Both Victoria and WA should exceed 10000 participants in the next 5 years. The potential for growth is huge in the metro and regional areas.
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,070
Saying you will rank third in juniors is hardly a flex

and they won’t they will lag Canberra and Auckland
 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
Saying you will rank third in juniors is hardly a flex

and they won’t they will lag Canberra and Auckland
Canberra is counted in the NSWRL numbers. And, in any case, their participation is very good but easily achievable in WA with a team located there.
 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
How many nrl players come from those areas and how many will ever come from wa

let’s be real here
Shifting ground mate? Are you seriously suggesting WA won’t ever produce strong local player numbers for the NRL? I suggest you look at the ever increasing number of Victorian born players in their pathway and rep teams. the model is in place for WA to follow.
 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048

Good luck working out participant numbers but it would have to exceed 10000
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,370
How many nrl players come from those areas and how many will ever come from wa

let’s be real here
Hang on you can’t say WA will never overtake those areas if you dont even know how many registered players they have lol. So come on tell us what the targets are.

so Wb, Stop moving the goal posts, we aren’t talking About nrl first graders at this time, we are talking registered players.
 

Vlad59

Bench
Messages
4,048
Hang on you can’t say WA will never overtake those areas if you dont even know how many registered players they have lol. So come on tell us what the targets are.

so Wb, Stop moving the goal posts, we aren’t talking About nrl first graders at this time, we are talking registered players.
See my worthy contribution above lol
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,070
Hang on you can’t say WA will never overtake those areas if you dont even know how many registered players they have lol. So come on tell us what the targets are.

so Wb, Stop moving the goal posts, we aren’t talking About nrl first graders at this time, we are talking registered players.
Pad the figures all you want too

participation awards don’t mean anything

the only stat that matters is how many nrl players are being produced each year from pathways
 

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