Signings, Suggestions & Rumours Discussion

I hate to be rude man but calm the farm a little.

We have a group of halves who first need to show us they are NRL first grade material.

Tick that off before we have them up there with the run away Dally M winner.

Nothing wrong with high hopes but I think you’re setting them up to fail.
This time of year, imaginations tend to be in overdrive. And not just due to Christmas.
 
Same article says Storm signed Rua to backup Harry Grant, and Rua is a promising player. So weird when Tigers release a player, and Tigers came last 2 years in a row, nobody takes that into account when assessing ex-Tigers players.
Rua is a promising player.

Very few players have improved at the Tigers in the past decade.

Let's see him in the Bellamy regime
Even Api said in an interview that this club was very different
 
That's not right.

I just googled "Souffs" and I saw lots of good stuff:

  • Images of Souff supporters with no teef
  • A Facebook blog about 15,000 days of failure
  • An Urban Dictionary article about LOL@Souffs
  • A site where you could buy an “I Hate Souffs” rugby league badge for $4.95 - highly recommended.
souths-vintage-rugby-league-badge.jpg
 
Anyone can predict the future, crystal balls are $52 on Amazon a most good mastheads have one for each team.
View attachment 9075
Why all of a sudden is a hack journo a masthead?
Masthead used to be the term for the heading at the top of the front page of the newspaper. In this context, Masthead is the generic name for the publisher. media owners like News Limited or Nine own multiple newspapers. In articles they use the term "this masthead" rather than "The Telegraph" or "Sydney Morning Herald" so that they can copy/paste the entire article in multiple papers, so by saying "this masthead" a News Ltd article can be printed in The Daily Telegraph, The Advertiser, The Australian, herald Sun Courier Mail etc and read normally without editing.
 
Masthead used to be the term for the heading at the top of the front page of the newspaper. In this context, Masthead is the generic name for the publisher. media owners like News Limited or Nine own multiple newspapers. In articles they use the term "this masthead" rather than "The Telegraph" or "Sydney Morning Herald" so that they can copy/paste the entire article in multiple papers, so by saying "this masthead" a News Ltd article can be printed in The Daily Telegraph, The Advertiser, The Australian, herald Sun Courier Mail etc and read normally without editing.
Thank you for your thorough explanation, appreciated. I had never come across it before the last year or so, makes sense that it’s use has something to do with current way the news is delivered or consumed.
 
Masthead used to be the term for the heading at the top of the front page of the newspaper. In this context, Masthead is the generic name for the publisher. media owners like News Limited or Nine own multiple newspapers. In articles they use the term "this masthead" rather than "The Telegraph" or "Sydney Morning Herald" so that they can copy/paste the entire article in multiple papers, so by saying "this masthead" a News Ltd article can be printed in The Daily Telegraph, The Advertiser, The Australian, herald Sun Courier Mail etc and read normally without editing.
Jeez you'd think they'd have learned to use the Find and Replace feature in Word by now
 
Masthead used to be the term for the heading at the top of the front page of the newspaper. In this context, Masthead is the generic name for the publisher. media owners like News Limited or Nine own multiple newspapers. In articles they use the term "this masthead" rather than "The Telegraph" or "Sydney Morning Herald" so that they can copy/paste the entire article in multiple papers, so by saying "this masthead" a News Ltd article can be printed in The Daily Telegraph, The Advertiser, The Australian, herald Sun Courier Mail etc and read normally without editing.
Muzz you sound like bulldog ritchie in disguise 🥸
 
  • Haha
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