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Waldron breaks silence on Storm scandal

GongPanther

Referee
Messages
28,676
Disgraced former Melbourne chief executive Brian Waldron has broken his silence to explain his part in the Storm's NRL salary cap scandal.
Speaking to Melbourne radio station SEN on Wednesday, a remorseful Waldron accepted full responsibility for the salary cap breaches that saw the club stripped of the 2007 and 2009 premierships and fined $1.7 million by the NRL, five years ago.
Waldron wasn't making excuses for the systematic breaches he oversaw, but he was at pains to point out the circumstances that led to them.
Circumstances he believes centred around the NRL's inflexibility with regard to game development payments to players.
"Don't take this as an excuse because there are no excuses, but we ran a business that had a dual charter of trying to grow the game and build the Storm," Waldron said.
"We wanted to be successful for ourselves and we wanted to be successful for the NRL [too]. We were a flagship like the Sydney Swans in Sydney.
"We struck a deal with the NRL, I felt, that we would organise to have a game development fund through the ARL's game development ... and we'd get some money out of that to pay players to grow the game down here.
"We did some contracts with players to do that. At the end of the first year when we'd paid the players some of that money we got told by the salary cap auditor that we weren't allowed to do that."
It was at that point that Waldron said the situation "steamrolled" and he felt compelled to continue to honour previous commitments made to players rather than re-do contracts in a bid to stay under the cap.
"I think we felt we had no option and that was wrong," he said.
"I think we felt that was what we needed to do to be successful and that was wrong because we had a great culture with great people.
"We felt obligated because we made some commitments to these players, but that was wrong too because we should have been better and been able to go to those players and explain the situation.
"We probably comforted ourselves and justified our behaviour because we thought others were doing it and that was wrong too. Whether or not they were is irrelevant."
Waldron said he accepted what he did was wrong.
"So I've been deliberately quiet for five years. But I've never been apologetic to those around me that I've told the truth to. We did the wrong thing and I'm very sorry," he said.
When asked why he was finally speaking on the subject Waldron said: "It's about redemption five years on.
"I'd like to try to get some redemption and this is part of it. To apologise and hopefully teach some lessons to others and that's why I now talk publicly, when I do."


https://au.sports.yahoo.com/league/news/article/-/26126883/waldron-breaks-silence-on-storm-scandal/
 

Maroon4life

Juniors
Messages
1,662
Disgraced former Melbourne chief executive Brian Waldron has broken his silence to explain his part in the Storm's NRL salary cap scandal.
Speaking to Melbourne radio station SEN on Wednesday, a remorseful Waldron accepted full responsibility for the salary cap breaches that saw the club stripped of the 2007 and 2009 premierships and fined $1.7 million by the NRL, five years ago.
Waldron wasn't making excuses for the systematic breaches he oversaw, but he was at pains to point out the circumstances that led to them.
Circumstances he believes centred around the NRL's inflexibility with regard to game development payments to players.
"Don't take this as an excuse because there are no excuses, but we ran a business that had a dual charter of trying to grow the game and build the Storm," Waldron said.
"We wanted to be successful for ourselves and we wanted to be successful for the NRL [too]. We were a flagship like the Sydney Swans in Sydney.
"We struck a deal with the NRL, I felt, that we would organise to have a game development fund through the ARL's game development ... and we'd get some money out of that to pay players to grow the game down here.
"We did some contracts with players to do that. At the end of the first year when we'd paid the players some of that money we got told by the salary cap auditor that we weren't allowed to do that."
It was at that point that Waldron said the situation "steamrolled" and he felt compelled to continue to honour previous commitments made to players rather than re-do contracts in a bid to stay under the cap.
"I think we felt we had no option and that was wrong," he said.
"I think we felt that was what we needed to do to be successful and that was wrong because we had a great culture with great people.
"We felt obligated because we made some commitments to these players, but that was wrong too because we should have been better and been able to go to those players and explain the situation.
"We probably comforted ourselves and justified our behaviour because we thought others were doing it and that was wrong too. Whether or not they were is irrelevant."
Waldron said he accepted what he did was wrong.
"So I've been deliberately quiet for five years. But I've never been apologetic to those around me that I've told the truth to. We did the wrong thing and I'm very sorry," he said.
When asked why he was finally speaking on the subject Waldron said: "It's about redemption five years on.
"I'd like to try to get some redemption and this is part of it. To apologise and hopefully teach some lessons to others and that's why I now talk publicly, when I do."


https://au.sports.yahoo.com/league/news/article/-/26126883/waldron-breaks-silence-on-storm-scandal/

TLDR - we had 4 of the best 5 players in the game and didn't want to lose any of them.
 

some11

Referee
Messages
24,511
http://www.news.com.au/sport/nrl/br...lary-cap-scandal/story-fndv325j-1227199508881

More quotes in the News link.

“That is irrelevant to the fact we breached the cap, however we weren’t successful because we breached the cap.

“We were successful because we had an amazing culture run by great people and I’m not talking about myself but the rest of the business.”

This guy still doesn't get it, retention of players they wouldn't otherwise be able to keep due to the salary cap was the whole reason they were successful. Remember when Smith looked like heading to the GC then all of a sudden signed a new deal?

They couldn't keep them all together so they decided to cheat, so many people (mainly deluded storm fans) don't understand this and use the phrase "they didn't play better because they were paid more" as some illogical rationale.
 

Someone

Bench
Messages
4,964
he's probably right about the culture thing making the storm successful, but obviously you cant cheat the cap. Its pretty simple.

they got their redemption premiership two years later so they cant be bitter about it.
 

_Johnsy

Referee
Messages
29,003
I see the club itself still refuses to accept any responsibility at all. There is no way that he was the only employee who knew about the cheating.
 

AJB1102

First Grade
Messages
6,339
Waldron trying to make out like the NRL somehow forced his hand and made him do something out of character in desperation. He was a dodgy bastard long before he made his way into Rugby League.
 

cleary89

Coach
Messages
16,583
f**k off. Wouldn't piss on him if he was on fire. Get back in your hole and don't come back out.
 
Messages
446
I have some regard for the Storm waving the flag in Gaelic football mad Melbourne. I also see the battle they have to attract players to that cold dark dank miserable city.

I somehow think that the NRL should have cut some slack in regards to the salary Cap for places like Canberra and Melbourne. No one in their right mind would live in either city.
That said, I also think the salary cap auditor may be a bit dirty that Slater, Smith, Cronk and Inglis didn't play out of Bondi Junction, or is that being a bit nasty?
 

Diesel

Referee
Messages
28,343
Would've liked to have heard how Smith didn't know about the rorting as he represented himself therefore would've signed two separate contracts with two different dollar amounts
 

Nice Beaver

First Grade
Messages
5,920
Would've liked to have heard how Smith didn't know about the rorting as he represented himself therefore would've signed two separate contracts with two different dollar amounts

Unfortunately you'll never hear it.

The smug prick is as deluded as the rest of them. They don't think they did anything wrong.

Pathetic.
 

AJB1102

First Grade
Messages
6,339
Unfortunately you'll never hear it.

The smug prick is as deluded as the rest of them. They don't think they did anything wrong.

Pathetic.

Its pretty sus.

Maybe Wally told them these extras were okay'd. But if you represent yourself ignorance is no defense.

As for the ones with 'accredited' managers, well how those blokes still have jobs is another big question but these f**kers seem to be all care (for their %) and no responsibility.
 

cleary89

Coach
Messages
16,583
We should actually be thanking them. When Cam smith was about to sign for GC he managed to sign 2 contracts so the storm could cheat the cap. But Brian Waldron was actually doing it for us so they could do well in Melbourne. And they had to honor his second contract apparently so then he wouldnt go to GC.
 

bottle

Coach
Messages
14,126
Cheated, got caught, now trying to palm off blame elsewhere under some altruistic mythology.
Filth, garbage, scum.
 

unforgiven

Bench
Messages
3,138
Would've liked to have heard how Smith didn't know about the rorting as he represented himself therefore would've signed two separate contracts with two different dollar amounts

This is the 1st thing that I have heard that may have made plausible for the players to be unaware of the rorting. IF and its a big IF what Waldron is saying is true, it is possible that the players had their playing contract and also signed a game development contract. Now Waldron states that they just kept paying the players what they agreed to after the salary cap auditor told them they couldn't do this. So and I can't believe I am about to say this, maybe the players didn't know.
 
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