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WA BEARS

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
15,807
And MugaB?
I've reckon moron Matt was an alt and someone forgot the log in details.

I heard Muga got banned … not a complete surprise as he was suspended a couple of times:.., Moron Matt was a bit creepy … went through a stage where he would put a smiley face on literally every post I made …
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,278
Changed his name to sir pss and tears lol
let’s see perthwrongs

lies about having western reds admins who are now geriatrics as friends that he used to have coffee dates with.

claims to be this know it all reds guy and wasn’t even in the country when reds were a thing

Lies about having secret covert government sources as connections telling him things about Perth bears nrl

Lies about his true feelings of bears. Says one here thing and a totally different thing on his cave Facebook page that he is admin of

Lies about insiders calling him about Perth bears status. He literally just copied everything redblackbear said months ago

speaking of which every claim perthwrongs has said about Perth bears has turned out to be complete wrong. Every time redblackbears shows him up, perthwrongs won’t even acknowledge it. Perthwrongs constantly bein proven he is full of shit about knowing anything regarding Perth bears nrl expansion

Sensationalises media headlines in his cave Facebook page and makes massive things out of absolutely nothing

Constantly talks shit about Peter V’Landys on his cave Facebook page he is admin of yet vlandys is the only admin in recent history who has shown any interest in bringing in a Perth nrl side. Perthwrongs fails to compute this

Claims to be an expert on tv broadcast deals and yet knows crap all

Claims to be an expert in Stadiums yet know crap all

Claims to be an expert in expansion topics and yet knows crap all about locations including his own in pert

thinks nrl clubs annual reports have any bearing on his sad existence. Thinks he can actually understand them and yet is constantly wrong in his assessment. Real loser vibes here.

Claims to be an expert in rugby league in Australia and yet knows crap all about qrl and nswrl and constantly bags out the governing bodies and doesn’t understand what they actually do

Fabricates the western reds history to try fit his crap house narrative and clueless opinions

all this and the scrawny 60 year old Pom from hull still thinks he know stuff and thinks himself as important which is hilariously cringe and laughable. At least 2 posters here have made and exposed perthwrongs claims to be absolute horse shit on multiple occasions.

Have I missed anything?

perthwrongs, liar, bullshit artist, pathetic excuse for a man. Ding dong
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
15,807
Just read that article ….. nothing new of course … we know the AFL rag over there is crapping themselves …

Sad to see that they are constantly referred to as “Western” should clearly be Perth Bears..
 

SirPies&Beers

Juniors
Messages
1,278
Just read that article ….. nothing new of course … we know the AFL rag over there is crapping themselves …

Sad to see that they are constantly referred to as “Western” should clearly be Perth Bears..
Yes you are right nothing new about the actual bid but it is highlighting the Aussie rules fear.

billy Moore’s comments are months old too. Taken from a previous report.
 
Messages
941
Just read that article ….. nothing new of course … we know the AFL rag over there is crapping themselves …

Sad to see that they are constantly referred to as “Western” should clearly be Perth Bears..
I assume you are referring to this article:
I`m just glad they seem to be finally attempting to put some of the falsifications around the bid to bed, highlighting the economic benefit large sport`s franchises bring and calling out the grubby tactics being used by Seven and the fumbles. Once again it plays into the common narrative these days of the fumbles running scared.

AFL and its media friends play dirty over NRL’s Western Bears​

The Western Bears would deliver a $500 million economic boost over 10 years as the AFL bunkers down for a ‘Wild West War’ amid the NRL’s push for an 18th rugby league franchise in Perth.
This masthead can reveal expansion D-Day is looming, with the NRL set to hold urgent talks with the WA government in the face of a political smear campaign that threatens to derail rugby league’s Perth project.

The NRL will resume negotiations with WA premier Roger Cook in the coming weeks with a view to the NRL making a definitive call on expansion to Perth.

The NRL will know in coming weeks if Perth’s Western Bears are the code’s 18th team in 2027.

A report, obtained by this masthead, shows a new NRL franchise would deliver an economic benefit of $51.9 million per season to Western Australia _ a $519m boost over the next decade.

That would more than compensate for the WA government’s start-up costs in setting up an 18th NRL club in Perth.

Under the NRL’s blueprint, the WA government would invest in a stadium upgrade of HBF Park, plus a Centre of Excellence for the Western Bears.

The NRL is reportedly seeking a $120 million licence fee. But no such entry payment will exist. The NRL will not receive a cent of any $320 million injection, with the government funds to be pumped into infrastructure and grassroots investment to build a rugby league bedrock in WA.


‘THEY HAVE THE RESOURCES TO MAKE AN NRL TEAM WORK’


The NRL’s greatest coach Wayne Bennett, who was part of rugby league’s most recent expansion phase with the Dolphins in October 2021, is adamant WA can bankroll a Perth franchise.

“Western Australia has a market, so we can grow our national footprint by going to Perth,” he said.

“I’m a fan of growing the game.

“Some of Australia’s biggest companies are in Western Australia, so they have the resources and the population to make an NRL team work.”

But there are fears the Western Bears are on the brink of collapse following a political firestorm over the past month that has seen WA premier Cook come under attack over his support for a new NRL team in Perth.

Cook secured another term a fortnight ago with what was dubbed a “resounding victory” and the outcome of the election was regarded as the final hurdle to the WA premier shaking hands with the NRL on the Western Bears.

But a political powderkeg has turned the blowtorch on Cook and left the Western Bears walking a tightrope.


DIRTY TACTICS AS AFL INTERESTS PANIC

There is a view high-powered AFL officials are in the background playing dirty pool, mindful of the NRL threat and the prospect of a turf war for the hearts and minds of three million WA residents if Perth opens its arms to rugby league’s Bears.

Western Australia has long been regarded as an AFL stronghold via the market duopoly of West Coast Eagles and Fremantle.

The NRL is wading through choppy political waters in a sink-or-swim battle for rugby league’s first WA team since the death of the Western Reds in 1997.

The state’s leading newspaper, the West Australian, has been vicious in its coverage of the NRL’s expansion push to Perth. Last week, V’landys was sensationally accused of having brokered a “secret deal” with Cook, after the ARLC chair told this masthead the NRL had temporarily “downed tools” on talks with the WA government until the election was over.

The NRL insists no formal deal is in place, nor even an in-principle agreement with the WA government.

Such is the uncertainty, the NRL has about four weeks to strike a deal with the WA government or face aborting the Western Bears project, with the ARLC needing clarity on an 18 or 19-team league before kicking off negotiations on the code’s next TV rights deal.

Intriguingly, the West Australian is owned by Seven West Media, which has control of the Seven Network, the free-to-air broadcaster which inked a $1.5 billion deal with the AFL in 2022. Billionaire Kerry Stokes is chairman of the Seven West Media empire fanning the flames of NRL expansion discontent.

Stokes and the AFL ostensibly have unfettered control of the WA market. The NRL’s Western Bears would represent a dangerous market raider.

The AFL is under threat like never before.

The NRL last month released data that showed they have dethroned the AFL as the most-watched code in Australian sport and rugby league’s expansion to Perth would give the sport the bona fide national footprint they have lacked for decades.

“There are dirty tactics to shut the NRL out of Perth,” one industry source told this masthead.

“The AFL is no longer the No.1 code with viewers. By expanding to Perth and Papua New Guinea, the NRL will not only have a national reach, but tentacles globally in the Pacific via PNG.”

GOOD NEWS BEARS​

GOOD-NEWS-BEARS_aR7Trx2lx.png

Industry report into yearly economic benefits of an 18th NRL team in Perth
  • Visitation expenditure $14.4m
  • Direct inflow expenditure per season $6.5m
  • Employment impact (132 roles) $23m
  • Media impact per season $6m
  • Sponsorship growth per season $2m
GRAND ANNUAL TOTAL: $51.9 million

NRL A $500 MILLION BOON TO WA

Last month, the Western Bears became an unwitting political hot potato.

Viewed as a rugby league advocate, Cook was slammed by WA opposition leader Libby Mettam for allegedly holding “secret meetings” with V’landys. Mettam also promised WA voters her government would not commit to paying $320 million for an NRL team.

Suddenly under fire, Cook played a straight political bat, saying: “What he (V’landys) has to understand in that NRL in WA is not a major sporting code”, before adding: “WA NRL has to be worthwhile for the WA taxpayer.”

According to the top-secret economic-benefit report, the Western Bears will justify any purported Cook gamble.

Industry experts assessed the benefits of a Perth NRL team in five key areas.

Visitation was valued at $14.4 million per year, direct inflow expenditure would generate $6.5m and the most significant boost was employment, with an estimated 132 jobs worth around $23m annually.

SportWest, the peak industry body for sport in Western Australia, found that each participant in organised sport generates a return of $10,178 for the state of WA.

Based on that formula, a 30-man Western Bears squad would be worth $1.52 million to WA over a five-year term leading into the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.

Those figures alone underscore why V’landys is keen to deliver an NRL licence to WA, turning up the heat on the AFL in a market that saw 59,721 and 59,358 fans attend the last two Origin matches at Perth’s Optus Stadium in 2019 and 2022.


A TEAM FOR THE WA PEOPLE

Bears director Billy Moore has been involved in high-powered merger talks with WA chiefs. He is adamant the Western Bears can co-exist with AFL’s West Coast and Fremantle without bad blood in the Wild West.

“We are very hopeful the Western Bears will not be dead,” he said.

“This is not a shotgun marriage, it’s a perfect fit.

“There’s no doubt WA is currently an AFL state but I see it very much like Queensland where all sports have a bona fide supporter and participation base.

“There doesn’t have to a sporting war, just a realignment of attention.

“Until the box is ticked and we get the nod, I accept there is a possibility that something could go wrong.

“But I know from our talks the WA government very much wants a team in Perth.

“We’re humble enough to be part of the Western Australian family and they would be part of our historical family at the Bears.

“The Western Bears would absolutely be a team for the WA people.”

Dolphins boss Terry Reader, whose new franchise club will stage an NRL fixture in Perth for a third consecutive season in June, says an 18th team in Perth is a no-brainer.

“I’m a big fan of Perth. I think it can be a great success,” he said.

“We have played over there two years in a row and we play in Perth again the Saturday after State of Origin this year, so we have quite a close relationship with the Perth people.

“We have helped Perth with their expansion bid through the process.

“The year before we had 47,000 watching us at Optus Stadium and there were 1000 Perth fans with Dolphins colours watching us at a captain’s run.

“We were nine months old. That blew us away. Wayne (Bennett) looked at me and said, ‘Have a look at this, we are in Perth and we have a thousand people in Dolphins kit watching us train’.

“Rugby league has a real heartbeat in WA. Origin has sold out at Optus Stadium and we had a 20,000-sellout at HBF for a stand-alone game last year.

“The biggest thing for Perth is it gives the NRL another time zone for TV.

“Being two hours behind the eastern seaboard, it’s perfect for TV timeslots. The NRL is already the most watched-code in Australia and if we have a Perth franchise, it really does put the ‘N’ in National Rugby League.”

Asked if the AFL should be threatened by the NRL in Perth, Reader said: “Rugby league certainly has a place in WA.

“Is there a big enough population for an NRL team in Perth ... I believe there is.”
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
71,452
Finally an east coast newspaper gets it right! Sounds like someone at nrlhq has been on the blower to Badel lol

one thing nrl could do in the debate is tell WA what it is offering to put in. That would help a lot in public perception. they could be saying that over ten years of the club they will be putting in at least $250mill into the club and game in WA. Helps balance the public perception a bit.
 
Last edited:

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
71,452
Heres what should be happening and how it should be spun:

Wa govt agree to fund
shs program and do‘s for ten years $15mill
Matched 1:1 funding to nrlwa $50mill
ken Allen field improvements $15mill
training. Centre $35mill

wa govt support for grassroots sport in WA $115mill

then spin some sht about oerth falling behind the east coast for rectangular stadium (perth people hate to feel inferior in any way to east coast) and that a $220mill upgrade of hbf is to be undertaken to help glory and force sustainability as well as ensure our nrl club is competitive.

wa govt committment $335mill

At same time vlad is stood next to him announcing how important perth is to the nrl and committing $50mill to rl grassroots in wa and a further $200-250mill to the nrl club (grant in effect) over the next ten years.

that then looks like genuine partnership.

Heck if Norths want to get off their arse and throw in $’s to improve pathways in NS and announce at same time even better.
 

insert.pause

First Grade
Messages
6,495
The stadium redevelopment shouldn’t even be an issue, if there’s a third tenant using it it will require upgrades, which benefits three codes. Surely twiggy would support his force playing in a better facility.
 

insert.pause

First Grade
Messages
6,495
Finally an east coast newspaper gets it right! Sounds like someone at nrlhq has been on the blower to Badel lol

one thing nrl could do in the debate is tell WA what it is offering to put in. That would help a lot in public perception. they could be saying that over ten years of the club they will be putting in at least $250mill into the club and game in WA. Helps balance the public perception a bit.
StinkyPete is one of V’landys favourites…
 

taste2taste

Bench
Messages
2,601
This is sounding like the stink the Union/AFL media kicked up in Sydney about the NRL upgrading stadiums with tax payers money. The NSW governmant bowed to the pressure.

If the WA government tells the public how much money a team will generate and how money jobs will be created surley the public will be ok with it ? But if it wont win votes its hard to see a team being given the green light.

Anyone here live in Perth and tell us how negative the papers, news, talkpack and talk on the street is ? Im assuming its the right wing media who are putting pressure on ? It wouldnt matter what the left WA gov did they would find fault.
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
37,777
Seeing everyone is posting crap … I’ll ask a question… what happened to Moron Matt?
Friends with Matt on Twitter
Finally an east coast newspaper gets it right! Sounds like someone at nrlhq has been on the blower to Badel lol

one thing nrl could do in the debate is tell WA what it is offering to put in. That would help a lot in public perception. they could be saying that over ten years of the club they will be putting in at least $250mill into the club and game in WA. Helps balance the public perception a bit.
Maybe it was someone on this forum ?

You know people that actually know stuff not just repost articles from a months ago
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
37,777
The stadium redevelopment shouldn’t even be an issue, if there’s a third tenant using it it will require upgrades, which benefits three codes. Surely twiggy would support his force playing in a better facility.
There will be 3 tenants

Bears
Force
Glory

Plus any women’s sides they have
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
37,777
I assume you are referring to this article:
I`m just glad they seem to be finally attempting to put some of the falsifications around the bid to bed, highlighting the economic benefit large sport`s franchises bring and calling out the grubby tactics being used by Seven and the fumbles. Once again it plays into the common narrative these days of the fumbles running scared.

AFL and its media friends play dirty over NRL’s Western Bears​

The Western Bears would deliver a $500 million economic boost over 10 years as the AFL bunkers down for a ‘Wild West War’ amid the NRL’s push for an 18th rugby league franchise in Perth.
This masthead can reveal expansion D-Day is looming, with the NRL set to hold urgent talks with the WA government in the face of a political smear campaign that threatens to derail rugby league’s Perth project.

The NRL will resume negotiations with WA premier Roger Cook in the coming weeks with a view to the NRL making a definitive call on expansion to Perth.

The NRL will know in coming weeks if Perth’s Western Bears are the code’s 18th team in 2027.

A report, obtained by this masthead, shows a new NRL franchise would deliver an economic benefit of $51.9 million per season to Western Australia _ a $519m boost over the next decade.

That would more than compensate for the WA government’s start-up costs in setting up an 18th NRL club in Perth.

Under the NRL’s blueprint, the WA government would invest in a stadium upgrade of HBF Park, plus a Centre of Excellence for the Western Bears.

The NRL is reportedly seeking a $120 million licence fee. But no such entry payment will exist. The NRL will not receive a cent of any $320 million injection, with the government funds to be pumped into infrastructure and grassroots investment to build a rugby league bedrock in WA.


‘THEY HAVE THE RESOURCES TO MAKE AN NRL TEAM WORK’


The NRL’s greatest coach Wayne Bennett, who was part of rugby league’s most recent expansion phase with the Dolphins in October 2021, is adamant WA can bankroll a Perth franchise.

“Western Australia has a market, so we can grow our national footprint by going to Perth,” he said.

“I’m a fan of growing the game.

“Some of Australia’s biggest companies are in Western Australia, so they have the resources and the population to make an NRL team work.”

But there are fears the Western Bears are on the brink of collapse following a political firestorm over the past month that has seen WA premier Cook come under attack over his support for a new NRL team in Perth.

Cook secured another term a fortnight ago with what was dubbed a “resounding victory” and the outcome of the election was regarded as the final hurdle to the WA premier shaking hands with the NRL on the Western Bears.

But a political powderkeg has turned the blowtorch on Cook and left the Western Bears walking a tightrope.


DIRTY TACTICS AS AFL INTERESTS PANIC

There is a view high-powered AFL officials are in the background playing dirty pool, mindful of the NRL threat and the prospect of a turf war for the hearts and minds of three million WA residents if Perth opens its arms to rugby league’s Bears.

Western Australia has long been regarded as an AFL stronghold via the market duopoly of West Coast Eagles and Fremantle.

The NRL is wading through choppy political waters in a sink-or-swim battle for rugby league’s first WA team since the death of the Western Reds in 1997.

The state’s leading newspaper, the West Australian, has been vicious in its coverage of the NRL’s expansion push to Perth. Last week, V’landys was sensationally accused of having brokered a “secret deal” with Cook, after the ARLC chair told this masthead the NRL had temporarily “downed tools” on talks with the WA government until the election was over.

The NRL insists no formal deal is in place, nor even an in-principle agreement with the WA government.

Such is the uncertainty, the NRL has about four weeks to strike a deal with the WA government or face aborting the Western Bears project, with the ARLC needing clarity on an 18 or 19-team league before kicking off negotiations on the code’s next TV rights deal.

Intriguingly, the West Australian is owned by Seven West Media, which has control of the Seven Network, the free-to-air broadcaster which inked a $1.5 billion deal with the AFL in 2022. Billionaire Kerry Stokes is chairman of the Seven West Media empire fanning the flames of NRL expansion discontent.

Stokes and the AFL ostensibly have unfettered control of the WA market. The NRL’s Western Bears would represent a dangerous market raider.

The AFL is under threat like never before.

The NRL last month released data that showed they have dethroned the AFL as the most-watched code in Australian sport and rugby league’s expansion to Perth would give the sport the bona fide national footprint they have lacked for decades.

“There are dirty tactics to shut the NRL out of Perth,” one industry source told this masthead.

“The AFL is no longer the No.1 code with viewers. By expanding to Perth and Papua New Guinea, the NRL will not only have a national reach, but tentacles globally in the Pacific via PNG.”

GOOD NEWS BEARS​

GOOD-NEWS-BEARS_aR7Trx2lx.png

Industry report into yearly economic benefits of an 18th NRL team in Perth
  • Visitation expenditure $14.4m
  • Direct inflow expenditure per season $6.5m
  • Employment impact (132 roles) $23m
  • Media impact per season $6m
  • Sponsorship growth per season $2m
GRAND ANNUAL TOTAL: $51.9 million

NRL A $500 MILLION BOON TO WA

Last month, the Western Bears became an unwitting political hot potato.

Viewed as a rugby league advocate, Cook was slammed by WA opposition leader Libby Mettam for allegedly holding “secret meetings” with V’landys. Mettam also promised WA voters her government would not commit to paying $320 million for an NRL team.

Suddenly under fire, Cook played a straight political bat, saying: “What he (V’landys) has to understand in that NRL in WA is not a major sporting code”, before adding: “WA NRL has to be worthwhile for the WA taxpayer.”

According to the top-secret economic-benefit report, the Western Bears will justify any purported Cook gamble.

Industry experts assessed the benefits of a Perth NRL team in five key areas.

Visitation was valued at $14.4 million per year, direct inflow expenditure would generate $6.5m and the most significant boost was employment, with an estimated 132 jobs worth around $23m annually.

SportWest, the peak industry body for sport in Western Australia, found that each participant in organised sport generates a return of $10,178 for the state of WA.

Based on that formula, a 30-man Western Bears squad would be worth $1.52 million to WA over a five-year term leading into the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.

Those figures alone underscore why V’landys is keen to deliver an NRL licence to WA, turning up the heat on the AFL in a market that saw 59,721 and 59,358 fans attend the last two Origin matches at Perth’s Optus Stadium in 2019 and 2022.


A TEAM FOR THE WA PEOPLE

Bears director Billy Moore has been involved in high-powered merger talks with WA chiefs. He is adamant the Western Bears can co-exist with AFL’s West Coast and Fremantle without bad blood in the Wild West.

“We are very hopeful the Western Bears will not be dead,” he said.

“This is not a shotgun marriage, it’s a perfect fit.

“There’s no doubt WA is currently an AFL state but I see it very much like Queensland where all sports have a bona fide supporter and participation base.

“There doesn’t have to a sporting war, just a realignment of attention.

“Until the box is ticked and we get the nod, I accept there is a possibility that something could go wrong.

“But I know from our talks the WA government very much wants a team in Perth.

“We’re humble enough to be part of the Western Australian family and they would be part of our historical family at the Bears.

“The Western Bears would absolutely be a team for the WA people.”

Dolphins boss Terry Reader, whose new franchise club will stage an NRL fixture in Perth for a third consecutive season in June, says an 18th team in Perth is a no-brainer.

“I’m a big fan of Perth. I think it can be a great success,” he said.

“We have played over there two years in a row and we play in Perth again the Saturday after State of Origin this year, so we have quite a close relationship with the Perth people.

“We have helped Perth with their expansion bid through the process.

“The year before we had 47,000 watching us at Optus Stadium and there were 1000 Perth fans with Dolphins colours watching us at a captain’s run.

“We were nine months old. That blew us away. Wayne (Bennett) looked at me and said, ‘Have a look at this, we are in Perth and we have a thousand people in Dolphins kit watching us train’.

“Rugby league has a real heartbeat in WA. Origin has sold out at Optus Stadium and we had a 20,000-sellout at HBF for a stand-alone game last year.

“The biggest thing for Perth is it gives the NRL another time zone for TV.

“Being two hours behind the eastern seaboard, it’s perfect for TV timeslots. The NRL is already the most watched-code in Australia and if we have a Perth franchise, it really does put the ‘N’ in National Rugby League.”

Asked if the AFL should be threatened by the NRL in Perth, Reader said: “Rugby league certainly has a place in WA.

“Is there a big enough population for an NRL team in Perth ... I believe there is.”
That’s a cracker of an article

The quality of rugby league journalism is coming out of the toilet to something resembling respectability
 

mongoose

Coach
Messages
11,909
NRL A $500 MILLION BOON TO WA

Last month, the Western Bears became an unwitting political hot potato.

Viewed as a rugby league advocate, Cook was slammed by WA opposition leader Libby Mettam for allegedly holding “secret meetings” with V’landys. Mettam also promised WA voters her government would not commit to paying $320 million for an NRL team.

Suddenly under fire, Cook played a straight political bat, saying: “What he (V’landys) has to understand in that NRL in WA is not a major sporting code”, before adding: “WA NRL has to be worthwhile for the WA taxpayer.”

According to the top-secret economic-benefit report, the Western Bears will justify any purported Cook gamble.

Industry experts assessed the benefits of a Perth NRL team in five key areas.

Visitation was valued at $14.4 million per year, direct inflow expenditure would generate $6.5m and the most significant boost was employment, with an estimated 132 jobs worth around $23m annually.

SportWest, the peak industry body for sport in Western Australia, found that each participant in organised sport generates a return of $10,178 for the state of WA.

Based on that formula, a 30-man Western Bears squad would be worth $1.52 million to WA over a five-year term leading into the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.

Those figures alone underscore why V’landys is keen to deliver an NRL licence to WA, turning up the heat on the AFL in a market that saw 59,721 and 59,358 fans attend the last two Origin matches at Perth’s Optus Stadium in 2019 and 2022.


A TEAM FOR THE WA PEOPLE

Bears director Billy Moore has been involved in high-powered merger talks with WA chiefs. He is adamant the Western Bears can co-exist with AFL’s West Coast and Fremantle without bad blood in the Wild West.

“We are very hopeful the Western Bears will not be dead,” he said.

“This is not a shotgun marriage, it’s a perfect fit.

“There’s no doubt WA is currently an AFL state but I see it very much like Queensland where all sports have a bona fide supporter and participation base.

“There doesn’t have to a sporting war, just a realignment of attention.

“Until the box is ticked and we get the nod, I accept there is a possibility that something could go wrong.

“But I know from our talks the WA government very much wants a team in Perth.

“We’re humble enough to be part of the Western Australian family and they would be part of our historical family at the Bears.

“The Western Bears would absolutely be a team for the WA people.”

Dolphins boss Terry Reader, whose new franchise club will stage an NRL fixture in Perth for a third consecutive season in June, says an 18th team in Perth is a no-brainer.

“I’m a big fan of Perth. I think it can be a great success,” he said.

“We have played over there two years in a row and we play in Perth again the Saturday after State of Origin this year, so we have quite a close relationship with the Perth people.

“We have helped Perth with their expansion bid through the process.

“The year before we had 47,000 watching us at Optus Stadium and there were 1000 Perth fans with Dolphins colours watching us at a captain’s run.

“We were nine months old. That blew us away. Wayne (Bennett) looked at me and said, ‘Have a look at this, we are in Perth and we have a thousand people in Dolphins kit watching us train’.

“Rugby league has a real heartbeat in WA. Origin has sold out at Optus Stadium and we had a 20,000-sellout at HBF for a stand-alone game last year.

“The biggest thing for Perth is it gives the NRL another time zone for TV.

“Being two hours behind the eastern seaboard, it’s perfect for TV timeslots. The NRL is already the most watched-code in Australia and if we have a Perth franchise, it really does put the ‘N’ in National Rugby League.”

Asked if the AFL should be threatened by the NRL in Perth, Reader said: “Rugby league certainly has a place in WA.

“Is there a big enough population for an NRL team in Perth ... I believe there is.”
Have been saying for years the WA landscape will just mirror QLD. AFL has a good foothold in QLD despite what some of the code warrior crazies on here report. League can gain a good one in WA, probably reasonably quickly too.

WA is just showing how insular it is fighting against an NRL team. I'm assuming Perth has a islander demographic? maybe not as big as the east coast, but those kids are never going to play AFL. So some people in the WA govt and media don't want these kids to play anything?
 

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