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WA BEARS

Bukowski

Bench
Messages
2,642
I'm going to be interested to see (presuming Perth is announced as in) if
A) The WA govt has upped its finical support and in what areas
B) What model of ownership the NRL has landed on
C) if the Western Bears consortium are back as alluded to in last weeks article
D) If not who is running the club
E) is 2027 still the intended admission season
Will yellow be one of the clubs colours. 😅
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,515
can't leave out the important stuff hey. any issue if colours are just bears now with a dash of yellow on shorts or sleeves or something? after all it's still bears. i get the whole wa colour thing but it's not a state rep team etc.
you're late into this one but discussed infinitum previously the new club has to pay homage to the bears traditions but first and foremost be perceived as a new West Australian club for West Australians. This juxtaposition between old and new needs to be reflected in the name, logo and colours.
 

Nuke

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
5,357
Origin II as the curtain-raiser to the Knights in Perth just days later. I like it.
Up the Knights!

I'll get to wave my old Western Reds flag around at the double-header like at the Dolphins-Roosters game a few months ago too show my support for a WA team, then Blue it up before getting into the main attraction for the year in my eyes.

It will be a great year to be a League fan in WA, I think.
 

Bukowski

Bench
Messages
2,642
can't leave out the important stuff hey. any issue if colours are just bears now with a dash of yellow on shorts or sleeves or something? after all it's still bears. i get the whole wa colour thing but it's not a state rep team etc.
Doesn't really bother me but alot of the bears fans are against the yellow. It's like old balmain fans not liking the magpie on the west tigers sleeve. Who gives a rats.
 

Red&BlackBear

First Grade
Messages
5,424
The WA premier and $500m came to Sydney. The Perth Bears dream is alive and well
Michael Chammas
By Michael Chammas
November 21, 2024 — 6.54pm
Save

The push for Perth to be the home of the NRL’s 18th team was revived in a meeting between Western Australia premier Roger Cook and Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V’landys at Racing NSW’s Druitt Street headquarters on Thursday morning.

The meeting came on the same day as the NRL rejected an offer of a $20 million licence fee from the privately owned consortium behind the Western Bears and instead chose to back a Western Australian government proposal for a Perth-based team worth up to $500 million in funding and infrastructure investment.

WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.
WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.CREDIT: FLAVIO BRANCALEONE
Cook met with V’landys’ after the ARLC chairman asked the WA government to kick in $120 million ($12 million a year over 10 years) to ensure a team was established on the west coast of Australia.

There was significant progress in the first face-to-face meeting of the influential pair as the WA government offered a significant financial uplift in its contribution to the bid.

Advertisement

Under the proposed operating model, the NRL would control the team in its start-up years before handing over the organisation to the club’s members and elected directors.

For its part, the WA government would help fund community, pathways, development and infrastructure projects.

NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.
NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.CREDIT: NICK MOIR
That funding would be worth $350 million-to-$500 million and would include a proposal to increase Perth’s rectangular HBF Stadium from a 22,500-seat venue to a 27,000-seat venue and upgrade the stadium’s facilities to ensure the new team could earn up to 70 per cent of its game-day revenue from corporate partnerships.

It’s a redevelopment plan that has long been called for by soccer and rugby union bodies. The funding also includes major infrastructure upgrades.

Advertisement

The cost of opening HBF stadium is estimated to be $150,000 each game, but the government has offered a period of rent-free use for the NRL.

Another significant development is the in-principle agreement to match, dollar-for-dollar, any funding from NRL Western Australia.

HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.
HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.CREDIT: NIB STADIUM
Other channels of funding from the government would include an injection of $25 million (joint funded by the City of Fremantle and the state government) into a temporary high-performance facility at Ken Allen Field in Fremantle while a long-term centre of excellence, which will double as a community asset, is built in Malaga.

The government’s revised proposal included a revised offer of payment for a $20 million licence fee from the Western Bears consortium that was rejected by the NRL last month.

Advertisement

The NRL believes a direct partnership with the WA government is a better option than allowing private investors to run the Perth club.

The WA government has also pledged to introduce rugby league into the curriculum of up to 24 high schools in the Perth metropolitan area and says it will fund community development officers to ensure that the elite program is linked to the community grassroots programs. A lack of connection between the two was deemed as a shortcoming of failed Super Rugby franchise Western Force.

Sources with knowledge of the situation talking under the condition of anonymity due to confidentiality told this masthead the NRL was willing to draw forward on the annual club grant (approximately $17 million a year per club) to provide the Perth team financial assistance in its start-up months before they entered the competition.

The WA government has indicated it is not opposed to the Bears brand, which has been a prerequisite for the NRL to consider a team from Perth.

Preliminary discussions have been had for the team to play at least a trial game at North Sydney Oval each year. There is also a suggestion that a Perth-based team could play at least one NRL game in Sydney each year, potentially against North Sydney’s former joint venture partner Manly at Allianz Stadium.

Advertisement

RELATED ARTICLE
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While it wasn’t discussed at Thursday’s meeting, a Perth-based team would like the NRL to consider making players available to sign in 2027 as soon as the team is announced as the 18th franchise.

Under current rules, a team in Perth would not be able to sign a player until November 1 next year, as long as they weren’t contracted beyond 2026.

One of the ideas floated is the potential for Perth to enter negotiations with any player coming off contract in 2026 at any time but an expression of interest in a particular player would then make him available for all other clubs to negotiate with to ensure the Bears aren’t given an unfair advantage.

The NRL wants to press forward with discussions in the hope of announcing a new team by the end of the year, providing it with a launchpad to go to broadcasters with as it heads into negotiations for the lucrative TV rights from 2028. It appears a foregone conclusion that a team in Papua New Guinea will be handed the license to be the 19th.

 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,515
Looks like the NRL is going to own and fund the start up of the club with WA govt chipping in some of the initial start up costs relating to venue usage before the CofE is built. Good to see an expectation of 1 for 1 funding for grassroots between NRL and Govt.

Lots of good news in that article. Id have still preferred a WA owned club but I suppose its as good as we can now hope for. NRL better not screw it up.
 

Matt_CBY

Juniors
Messages
1,462
The WA premier and $500m came to Sydney. The Perth Bears dream is alive and well
Michael Chammas
By Michael Chammas
November 21, 2024 — 6.54pm
Save

The push for Perth to be the home of the NRL’s 18th team was revived in a meeting between Western Australia premier Roger Cook and Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V’landys at Racing NSW’s Druitt Street headquarters on Thursday morning.

The meeting came on the same day as the NRL rejected an offer of a $20 million licence fee from the privately owned consortium behind the Western Bears and instead chose to back a Western Australian government proposal for a Perth-based team worth up to $500 million in funding and infrastructure investment.

WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.
WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.CREDIT: FLAVIO BRANCALEONE
Cook met with V’landys’ after the ARLC chairman asked the WA government to kick in $120 million ($12 million a year over 10 years) to ensure a team was established on the west coast of Australia.

There was significant progress in the first face-to-face meeting of the influential pair as the WA government offered a significant financial uplift in its contribution to the bid.

Advertisement

Under the proposed operating model, the NRL would control the team in its start-up years before handing over the organisation to the club’s members and elected directors.

For its part, the WA government would help fund community, pathways, development and infrastructure projects.

NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.
NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.CREDIT: NICK MOIR
That funding would be worth $350 million-to-$500 million and would include a proposal to increase Perth’s rectangular HBF Stadium from a 22,500-seat venue to a 27,000-seat venue and upgrade the stadium’s facilities to ensure the new team could earn up to 70 per cent of its game-day revenue from corporate partnerships.

It’s a redevelopment plan that has long been called for by soccer and rugby union bodies. The funding also includes major infrastructure upgrades.

Advertisement

The cost of opening HBF stadium is estimated to be $150,000 each game, but the government has offered a period of rent-free use for the NRL.

Another significant development is the in-principle agreement to match, dollar-for-dollar, any funding from NRL Western Australia.

HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.
HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.CREDIT: NIB STADIUM
Other channels of funding from the government would include an injection of $25 million (joint funded by the City of Fremantle and the state government) into a temporary high-performance facility at Ken Allen Field in Fremantle while a long-term centre of excellence, which will double as a community asset, is built in Malaga.

The government’s revised proposal included a revised offer of payment for a $20 million licence fee from the Western Bears consortium that was rejected by the NRL last month.

Advertisement

The NRL believes a direct partnership with the WA government is a better option than allowing private investors to run the Perth club.

The WA government has also pledged to introduce rugby league into the curriculum of up to 24 high schools in the Perth metropolitan area and says it will fund community development officers to ensure that the elite program is linked to the community grassroots programs. A lack of connection between the two was deemed as a shortcoming of failed Super Rugby franchise Western Force.

Sources with knowledge of the situation talking under the condition of anonymity due to confidentiality told this masthead the NRL was willing to draw forward on the annual club grant (approximately $17 million a year per club) to provide the Perth team financial assistance in its start-up months before they entered the competition.

The WA government has indicated it is not opposed to the Bears brand, which has been a prerequisite for the NRL to consider a team from Perth.

Preliminary discussions have been had for the team to play at least a trial game at North Sydney Oval each year. There is also a suggestion that a Perth-based team could play at least one NRL game in Sydney each year, potentially against North Sydney’s former joint venture partner Manly at Allianz Stadium.

Advertisement

RELATED ARTICLE
Laying down the law … Benji Marshall
Analysis
NRL 2025
Three players to front board, another can’t train: Why Benji’s got Tigers right where he wants them
While it wasn’t discussed at Thursday’s meeting, a Perth-based team would like the NRL to consider making players available to sign in 2027 as soon as the team is announced as the 18th franchise.

Under current rules, a team in Perth would not be able to sign a player until November 1 next year, as long as they weren’t contracted beyond 2026.

One of the ideas floated is the potential for Perth to enter negotiations with any player coming off contract in 2026 at any time but an expression of interest in a particular player would then make him available for all other clubs to negotiate with to ensure the Bears aren’t given an unfair advantage.

The NRL wants to press forward with discussions in the hope of announcing a new team by the end of the year, providing it with a launchpad to go to broadcasters with as it heads into negotiations for the lucrative TV rights from 2028. It appears a foregone conclusion that a team in Papua New Guinea will be handed the license to be the 19th.

Couldn’t ask for much more than this. The details sound great.
 

Matt_CBY

Juniors
Messages
1,462
The WA premier and $500m came to Sydney. The Perth Bears dream is alive and well
Michael Chammas
By Michael Chammas
November 21, 2024 — 6.54pm
Save

The push for Perth to be the home of the NRL’s 18th team was revived in a meeting between Western Australia premier Roger Cook and Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V’landys at Racing NSW’s Druitt Street headquarters on Thursday morning.

The meeting came on the same day as the NRL rejected an offer of a $20 million licence fee from the privately owned consortium behind the Western Bears and instead chose to back a Western Australian government proposal for a Perth-based team worth up to $500 million in funding and infrastructure investment.

WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.
WA premier Roger Cook leaves a meeting with Peter V’landys on Thursday morning.CREDIT: FLAVIO BRANCALEONE
Cook met with V’landys’ after the ARLC chairman asked the WA government to kick in $120 million ($12 million a year over 10 years) to ensure a team was established on the west coast of Australia.

There was significant progress in the first face-to-face meeting of the influential pair as the WA government offered a significant financial uplift in its contribution to the bid.

Advertisement

Under the proposed operating model, the NRL would control the team in its start-up years before handing over the organisation to the club’s members and elected directors.

For its part, the WA government would help fund community, pathways, development and infrastructure projects.

NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.
NRL bosses Andrew Abdo and Peter V’landys.CREDIT: NICK MOIR
That funding would be worth $350 million-to-$500 million and would include a proposal to increase Perth’s rectangular HBF Stadium from a 22,500-seat venue to a 27,000-seat venue and upgrade the stadium’s facilities to ensure the new team could earn up to 70 per cent of its game-day revenue from corporate partnerships.

It’s a redevelopment plan that has long been called for by soccer and rugby union bodies. The funding also includes major infrastructure upgrades.

Advertisement

The cost of opening HBF stadium is estimated to be $150,000 each game, but the government has offered a period of rent-free use for the NRL.

Another significant development is the in-principle agreement to match, dollar-for-dollar, any funding from NRL Western Australia.

HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.
HBF Stadium in Perth could be getting an upgrade.CREDIT: NIB STADIUM
Other channels of funding from the government would include an injection of $25 million (joint funded by the City of Fremantle and the state government) into a temporary high-performance facility at Ken Allen Field in Fremantle while a long-term centre of excellence, which will double as a community asset, is built in Malaga.

The government’s revised proposal included a revised offer of payment for a $20 million licence fee from the Western Bears consortium that was rejected by the NRL last month.

Advertisement

The NRL believes a direct partnership with the WA government is a better option than allowing private investors to run the Perth club.

The WA government has also pledged to introduce rugby league into the curriculum of up to 24 high schools in the Perth metropolitan area and says it will fund community development officers to ensure that the elite program is linked to the community grassroots programs. A lack of connection between the two was deemed as a shortcoming of failed Super Rugby franchise Western Force.

Sources with knowledge of the situation talking under the condition of anonymity due to confidentiality told this masthead the NRL was willing to draw forward on the annual club grant (approximately $17 million a year per club) to provide the Perth team financial assistance in its start-up months before they entered the competition.

The WA government has indicated it is not opposed to the Bears brand, which has been a prerequisite for the NRL to consider a team from Perth.

Preliminary discussions have been had for the team to play at least a trial game at North Sydney Oval each year. There is also a suggestion that a Perth-based team could play at least one NRL game in Sydney each year, potentially against North Sydney’s former joint venture partner Manly at Allianz Stadium.

Advertisement

RELATED ARTICLE
Laying down the law … Benji Marshall
Analysis
NRL 2025
Three players to front board, another can’t train: Why Benji’s got Tigers right where he wants them
While it wasn’t discussed at Thursday’s meeting, a Perth-based team would like the NRL to consider making players available to sign in 2027 as soon as the team is announced as the 18th franchise.

Under current rules, a team in Perth would not be able to sign a player until November 1 next year, as long as they weren’t contracted beyond 2026.

One of the ideas floated is the potential for Perth to enter negotiations with any player coming off contract in 2026 at any time but an expression of interest in a particular player would then make him available for all other clubs to negotiate with to ensure the Bears aren’t given an unfair advantage.

The NRL wants to press forward with discussions in the hope of announcing a new team by the end of the year, providing it with a launchpad to go to broadcasters with as it heads into negotiations for the lucrative TV rights from 2028. It appears a foregone conclusion that a team in Papua New Guinea will be handed the license to be the 19th.


All the people who questioned your information can suck it now and all the people wanting the serious people on here to have a meltdown when Cumins bid is accepted can also suck it.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,515
So where we've landed

WA Govt committed to funding:
Stadium upgrade to 27k with new corporate stand+,
free stadium rental for set period,
Centre of Excellence in Malaga,
Training grounds in Freo whilst centre is built
development officers, 24 schools program, matched grassroots funding that NRLWA receives.

NRL will fund the start up costs of the club through early grant payment and will initially own and manage the club after the Western Bears bid group was turned down again despite offering a $20mill license fee.

NS Bears to remain a partner in the club with branding etc adopted by the Perth club (this is presumed not confirmed but with Vlad owning the club its a given)
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
33,520
Lot to unpack in that article

1. Pvl really wants nothing to do with Cummins rejecting his offer of a 20 mill license fee

2. Wa govt will pay ongoing money each year to help the club as pvl wanted

3. Rent free period at hbf park

4. Temporary coe will be in Fremantle

5. Wa govt to match any funds nrl wa invest into league

6. Wa govt to pay the 20 mill license fee
 

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