Wellsy4HullFC
Juniors
- Messages
- 178
Here's my take on things, baring in mind that I am trying to be as impartial as possible and that I can only go by what I've seen online.
David Nui has every right to run his league the way he sees fit.
However, any club in that league has every right to break away if they do not agree with that way.
It's a fact of life that some people are leaders and some are followers. New clubs are not in the best position to dictate on what they think is the best course of action for their development, and David Nui has proven that he can get things started. So I don't blame clubs for wanting to stay with him in that capacity. However, Nui has shown time and time again that he cannot take that league to the next level after so many (quite frankly ridiculous) false promises and pipe dreams (NRLUS anyone?). Clubs that want to go to that level cannot be blamed for believing that Nui can't take them there, and calls for a change were left on deaf ears so they broke away. That is their right.
Now, the USARL, under a new democratic system, may not reach that level either. But at least everyone has their say, and their is belief that if one way doesn't work then at least their will be another option with someone else without having to change or break away. AMNRL = Nui, USARL = everyone involved.
So basically, I have no issue in regards to rival competitions in the same country. If they both have something to offer, they'll both survive. If one is far stronger than the other, one won't (and thus be proven to not be the best method).
The only thing I don't agree with is the policy of selection for the national team. You're always going to get ringers on the grandparent rule, I have no issue with that. Those are the rules and if you want to take a stance whilst everyone else exploits them, then you're just going to miss out for the sake of nothing.
However, I find it totally unacceptable that Nui refuses to select players from the USARL. He'll select players from all over the world, but will ignore players in his own country. He's using "possible selection for the national team" as a tag line to attract people to the AMNRL, and to me that seems desperate. If he believed enough in his competition and the way it is run, he wouldn't need to try and get a cheap upper hand. And to me, this is where the AMNRL come across as unprofessional.
The national representative team should not belong to one person. It should represent the nation, and the RLIF should step in. If the AMNRL refuse to select players from all over the country, then they should not be the recognised governing body of the USA if there is another governing body that would. If you want to be the "officially recognised" governing body, you've got to toe the line, not b*tch about it on Twitter when your standards come in to question.
So there's my two pennies worth anyway. Separate competitions, fine. Using the national team as a pawn in the battle, not fine and the only the the RLIF need to rectify.
David Nui has every right to run his league the way he sees fit.
However, any club in that league has every right to break away if they do not agree with that way.
It's a fact of life that some people are leaders and some are followers. New clubs are not in the best position to dictate on what they think is the best course of action for their development, and David Nui has proven that he can get things started. So I don't blame clubs for wanting to stay with him in that capacity. However, Nui has shown time and time again that he cannot take that league to the next level after so many (quite frankly ridiculous) false promises and pipe dreams (NRLUS anyone?). Clubs that want to go to that level cannot be blamed for believing that Nui can't take them there, and calls for a change were left on deaf ears so they broke away. That is their right.
Now, the USARL, under a new democratic system, may not reach that level either. But at least everyone has their say, and their is belief that if one way doesn't work then at least their will be another option with someone else without having to change or break away. AMNRL = Nui, USARL = everyone involved.
So basically, I have no issue in regards to rival competitions in the same country. If they both have something to offer, they'll both survive. If one is far stronger than the other, one won't (and thus be proven to not be the best method).
The only thing I don't agree with is the policy of selection for the national team. You're always going to get ringers on the grandparent rule, I have no issue with that. Those are the rules and if you want to take a stance whilst everyone else exploits them, then you're just going to miss out for the sake of nothing.
However, I find it totally unacceptable that Nui refuses to select players from the USARL. He'll select players from all over the world, but will ignore players in his own country. He's using "possible selection for the national team" as a tag line to attract people to the AMNRL, and to me that seems desperate. If he believed enough in his competition and the way it is run, he wouldn't need to try and get a cheap upper hand. And to me, this is where the AMNRL come across as unprofessional.
The national representative team should not belong to one person. It should represent the nation, and the RLIF should step in. If the AMNRL refuse to select players from all over the country, then they should not be the recognised governing body of the USA if there is another governing body that would. If you want to be the "officially recognised" governing body, you've got to toe the line, not b*tch about it on Twitter when your standards come in to question.
So there's my two pennies worth anyway. Separate competitions, fine. Using the national team as a pawn in the battle, not fine and the only the the RLIF need to rectify.