Get Rid of The Donkeys
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On the bright side, we can use their logic to push for the Brisbane Broncos to rebrand as The Donkeys!One of the ARLC’s brilliant ideas. We’ll just have the mascot league soon enough
On the bright side, we can use their logic to push for the Brisbane Broncos to rebrand as The Donkeys!One of the ARLC’s brilliant ideas. We’ll just have the mascot league soon enough
Probably as many as for any other club, and probably more than some. I guess we’ll never know if we never try. The two years pre covid the bottom few so called heartland teams avg’d under 12k so the bars not exactly high!One-off double header against a new team playing 13 games - will the crowd still turn up if you're 2-20 and getting belted each week?
Doesn't mean that they are good options for the NRLW going forward.Wests and Cronulla would have to be bigger favourites than Cowboys or Canberra given their investment into the pathway systems, Wests especially (high schools, country champs, tarsha, NSW premiership) plus some 'big' players signed who may be swayed as marquee (Vette-Welsh, Apps, Sergis, Curtin).
Absolutely, it should be great news for women all over Australia not just women who live in Sydney.Doesn't mean that they are good options for the NRLW going forward.
I mean FFS, everybody with two braincells to rub together agrees that there're to many Sydney clubs in the NRL. So why would we knowing and willingly recreate that problem in the NRLW when there's no reason to?
Nothing to do with being "great news" for anyone.Absolutely, it should be great news for women all over Australia not just women who live in Sydney.
Gotcha, its bad news for women who love leagueNothing to do with being "great news" for anyone.
It should be built to be a viable product independent of the men's league, and as such a new source of income and a new way to promote the sport for NRL. Not an astroturfed publicity stunt of league a like AFLW (and most women's sport frankly) that runs out of steam after a few seasons once the novelty wears off.
No, I'm saying we shouldn't be looking at it as a product "for a female audience" any more than the Telstra premiership is "for a male audience".Gotcha, its bad news for women who love league
In reality then it needs to offer something different to the mens game. Otherwise it will always be looked on as second rate to the mens game and the followers of the mens game wont be that interested. I think thats a big part of the issues of womens sport generally, even in areas like Tennis and golf where the womens game is much more developed and followed. At the moment the traditional tackling style, clean PoTB and free flowing nature of the womens game is what makes it enjoyable and different from the grind of NRLM. If they can maintain that as they become more professional will be interesting to see.No, I'm saying we shouldn't be looking at it as a product "for a female audience" any more than the Telstra premiership is "for a male audience".
Make the male demographic unwelcome, or it uncool for them to support NRLW sides, and you're cutting off 50% of the potential audience and consumer base and basically murdering any chance that the league will be successful.
That is what has murdered the growth of basically every female league in America historically, and it always starts with political entities, lets be straight normally Feminists, whom only care about the sport and league in so much as they can use it to push their political agenda, saying things like it's 'great news for women'.
In other words what I'm saying is that if we want the NRLW to be successful then it needs to be great news for footy fans no matter who they are, not just for female footy fans.
Yeah such great kudos that none of them are capable of drawing an attendance larger than 3 digits until the final quarter of the game when people start getting in early for the NRL...Tricky one as I can see the Kudos, tv coverage and sponsorships etc that comes from branding same as NRL clubs
Um-hum, which is why it needs to target niche audiences that aren't, or can't be, supported by the men's league.In reality then it needs to offer something different to the mens game. Otherwise it will always be looked on as second rate to the mens game and the followers of the mens game wont be that interested. I think thats a big part of the issues of womens sport generally, even in areas like Tennis and golf where the womens game is much more developed and followed. At the moment the traditional tackling style, clean PoTB and free flowing nature of the womens game is what makes it enjoyable and different from the grind of NRLM. If they can maintain that as they become more professional will be interesting to see.
TBf can you name me a womens team sport in Australia (apart from AFLW in its early days) that can draw a 4 digit crowd? Its easier for NRL to package the NRLW into the tv deal where production costs can be rolled into NRL coverage than go out and find decent coverage for an independent womens comp that has no recognizable branding. But yes ultimately its probably to help share the costs, which if it is the only way of making it happen is fair enoughYeah such great kudos that none of them are capable of drawing an attendance larger than 3 digits until the final quarter of the game when people start getting in early for the NRL...
This argument that the women's teams sharing branding with the NRL sides leads to better coverage and sponsorship opportunities is the biggest baseless post-hock rationalisation I've seen in a long time.
Truth be told (and to be fair you said it yourself), the NRL, and most other women's leagues, do it that way because it's cheaper and easier.
Netball.TBf can you name me a womens team sport in Australia (apart from AFLW in its early days) that can draw a 4 digit crowd?
Easier doesn't mean better, and I simply don't accept that no broadcaster would be have been interest in the NRLW unless the NRL clubs were involved.Its easier for NRL to package the NRLW into the tv deal where production costs can be rolled into NRL coverage than go out and find decent coverage for an independent womens comp that has no recognizable branding. But yes ultimately its probably to help share the costs, which if it is the only way of making it happen is fair enough
Netball.
Now what I wonder is the major difference between Netball and the other leagues?
The other Australian example is Canberra Utd, the only independent club in A-league women's. Though I think they are struggling ATM, but that's more a product of the times.
BTW, the AFLW only had good crowds early on because tickets were free...
Easier doesn't mean better, and I simply don't accept that no broadcaster would be have been interest in the NRLW unless the NRL clubs were involved.
Sure the coverage may not have been as good as the NRL's at least initially, but as long as it's a decent standard than that's not an issue.
Whoever wrote that article needs to read few history books. The idiot said there's only been 34 teams in the game's history. There were clubs playing in northern England 13 years before the f**ken NSWRFL existed.Fittler tips Perth for NRL expansion team
With the Queensland-based Dolphins joining the NRL in 2023, NSW Blues coach Brad Fittler has tipped Perth as a potential expansion city as the code takes State of Origin west again in 2022.
Perth will host game two of this year's State of Origin series and Fittler believes the showcase fixture will draw even more support for the game in Western Australia.
"We've got the Dolphins coming in next year to the NRL and there's talk of another team to make it an 18-team competition in the near future so, Perth's always been one of those areas that we've spoke about," the Blues coach said.
"Obviously the time difference, it's a popular sport over here - the competition with the AFL is tough but it's something off this (Origin) game that will create a lot of interest and get rugby league rolling again."
The Dolphins are the NRL's first expansion side since Gold Coast in 2007 and the 34th club in the history of the game.
Perth last had a rugby league franchise in 1997 when the Perth Reds played in the Super League before being axed from the competition later that year.
Fittler tips Perth for NRL expansion team
With the Queensland-based Dolphins joining the NRL in 2023, NSW Blues coach Brad Fittler has tipped Perth as...www.manningrivertimes.com.au