Chammas and Weedler

Wests Tigers boss takes holiday in US as Galvin crisis engulfs club

Danny Weidler
April 27, 2025 — 5.00am

The timing of Shane Richardson’s attempt to bring the Lachie Galvinsituation to a head has been widely condemned. Now we may be able to shed light on his haste to get a contract decision out of the 19-year-old.

Richardson has flown to the United States on a family holiday and will miss the next two Tigers games. That includes Sunday’s clash with the Sharks at Leichhardt, where Galvin will run out in the top grade for the first time since it was revealed he wanted out of the club.

The experienced club boss says even though the Tigers are going through a crisis “it’s business as usual”.

Richardson has a wedding to attend, but a vacation in the middle of the season is unusual for a club boss. The rival clubs I spoke to agreed with that notion. Particularly when you’re dealing with the biggest story in the game.

“It’s my niece’s wedding,” Richardson said. “I only have one brother and two nieces. I had it booked since September last year. The board has been aware since then. It is business as usual. The board has no problems. Family first.”

It’s difficult to argue with the decision to prioritise family, but the timing is unfortunate.

Galvin knocked back a $5.5 million, six-year extension offer that prompted the Tigers to announce his exit at the end of 2026. The Tigers released an extraordinary statement, declaring Galvin would not be with the club beyond 2026, but that he is expected to see out the final 18 months of his contract.

It’s not the first time Richardson has departed mid-season. Last May, he spent weeks in England allegedly, and bizarrely, trying to offer his own players to Super League clubs. Richardson has spent plenty of time in England during his career and visited several clubs on the trip.

Richardson justified the trip by saying he was trying to shop players to Super League clubs to clear out the roster for a rebuild. No players that we are aware of went to England as a direct result of those conversations.

Former Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe was heavily criticised by sections of the media when he went on a family trip with his young children to the Northern Territory. News Corp has previously hammered any club boss taking time out during the year. Fox Sports chief league reporter James Hooper wrote of Pascoe at the time: “This bloke is supposedly the boss. Leadership? Not so much. There’s an off-season from October to March for annual leave and family holidays.”

The timing of Richardson’s absence from Tiger Town could not be worse, with the Galvin issue up in the air and legal action looming. Everyone is entitled to take leave, and he can work via a laptop, but he has been the self-appointed protector of the club.

The Tigers boss is under fire for how this has all played out. It certainly didn’t seem necessary to demand an answer from Galvin two weeks ago as he was under contract until the end of next year.

But maybe Richardson believed he could sign Galvin then go on holiday having saved the day? Surely, given the involvement of controversial manager Isaac Moses, Richardson knew that was a long shot?

Instead, even Richo’s supporters – which this columnist has been – are questioning the timing and manner of these negotiations.

Richardson has been on a charm offensive with some of his supporters in the media who won’t touch this story, but some of his messaging is difficult to swallow. The emotional issue has been the notion that Benji Marshall’s coaching is a reason Galvin does not want to stay at the club. That story was spread by the Tigers, not the Moses camp.

Richardson has been trying to muddy that fact through interviews, but it simply is not correct.

Not only does he risk losing the PR war by leaving the country at this point, Richardson is leaving the Tigers to fight this battle through Marshall and the players, as they don’t have an experienced media manager to handle one of the bigger storms to have engulfed the club in recent times. That is not to criticise the person they have wedged into the position from another area of their business.

Another problem is the media release the Tigers put out in response to the story broken by this masthead’s journalist Michael Chammas and myself that Galvin had rejected the club’s offer to keep him. That media release will be used by the Moses camp to explain the creation of the unsafe working environment they claim Galvin is in.

He was ostracised from that moment, and frozen out by the playing group. It was already a developing situation behind the scenes, but from the moment the club officially confirmed the story, the anti-Galvin sentiment kicked in.

Richardson may also want to be careful with his words the next time he jumps on a podcast on the PR campaign. Eyebrows were raised when he told James Graham on The Bye Round that the Tigers spent six weeks finding “opportunities for him in the future, opportunities for him externally, opportunities for him around a deal done with a major car company, a whole range of things that we put in place to surround the deal”.

We’re not sure what he planned to “surround the deal” with, nor are we suggesting any wrongdoing, but we can tell you that clubs were left scratching their heads after that comment. The NRL was also made aware of it by people in the game.
It's a family wedding. Geez these journos are sick in the head.
 
Bit of spin from DW in that article

Richo didn’t “demand” an answer from Galvin . There was no deadline given .

He wanted to put forward an offer and was told don’t bother he isn’t staying .

If LG wasn’t offered an upgrade & extension the media & manager would be saying Richo isn’t doing his job .

How long was he supposed to say nothing about LG not staying beyond his current contract ?

Calling it a PR war is overly dramatic . LG has indicated he’s leaving & the club has said they’re moving on . What war is happening ?

As for the innuendo about the deals surrounding the offer . Nobody but Richo will ever know because the offer wasn’t even looked at .
 
Bwaiff is suddenly becoming my favourite NRL commentator: was asked to step outside by Latrine; gave it to Benny and his dodgy relo; called out Nein commentators; and now wants to bash Danny Wanker. Make it happen. Bwaiff for next immortal with free Gatorade for life.

View attachment 22056
. . . . . and I'll throw in the strapping.

Would love to see Weed Whacker Weidler all bandaged up looking like a mummy, smack him good Bwaiff.
 
It’s all just a ruse so richo can sign the players he spoke about on podcast and set up for our game in Vegas next year 😂😂😂
 
Wests Tigers boss takes holiday in US as Galvin crisis engulfs club

Danny Weidler
April 27, 2025 — 5.00am

The timing of Shane Richardson’s attempt to bring the Lachie Galvinsituation to a head has been widely condemned. Now we may be able to shed light on his haste to get a contract decision out of the 19-year-old.

Richardson has flown to the United States on a family holiday and will miss the next two Tigers games. That includes Sunday’s clash with the Sharks at Leichhardt, where Galvin will run out in the top grade for the first time since it was revealed he wanted out of the club.

The experienced club boss says even though the Tigers are going through a crisis “it’s business as usual”.

Richardson has a wedding to attend, but a vacation in the middle of the season is unusual for a club boss. The rival clubs I spoke to agreed with that notion. Particularly when you’re dealing with the biggest story in the game.

“It’s my niece’s wedding,” Richardson said. “I only have one brother and two nieces. I had it booked since September last year. The board has been aware since then. It is business as usual. The board has no problems. Family first.”

It’s difficult to argue with the decision to prioritise family, but the timing is unfortunate.

Galvin knocked back a $5.5 million, six-year extension offer that prompted the Tigers to announce his exit at the end of 2026. The Tigers released an extraordinary statement, declaring Galvin would not be with the club beyond 2026, but that he is expected to see out the final 18 months of his contract.

It’s not the first time Richardson has departed mid-season. Last May, he spent weeks in England allegedly, and bizarrely, trying to offer his own players to Super League clubs. Richardson has spent plenty of time in England during his career and visited several clubs on the trip.

Richardson justified the trip by saying he was trying to shop players to Super League clubs to clear out the roster for a rebuild. No players that we are aware of went to England as a direct result of those conversations.

Former Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe was heavily criticised by sections of the media when he went on a family trip with his young children to the Northern Territory. News Corp has previously hammered any club boss taking time out during the year. Fox Sports chief league reporter James Hooper wrote of Pascoe at the time: “This bloke is supposedly the boss. Leadership? Not so much. There’s an off-season from October to March for annual leave and family holidays.”

The timing of Richardson’s absence from Tiger Town could not be worse, with the Galvin issue up in the air and legal action looming. Everyone is entitled to take leave, and he can work via a laptop, but he has been the self-appointed protector of the club.

The Tigers boss is under fire for how this has all played out. It certainly didn’t seem necessary to demand an answer from Galvin two weeks ago as he was under contract until the end of next year.

But maybe Richardson believed he could sign Galvin then go on holiday having saved the day? Surely, given the involvement of controversial manager Isaac Moses, Richardson knew that was a long shot?

Instead, even Richo’s supporters – which this columnist has been – are questioning the timing and manner of these negotiations.

Richardson has been on a charm offensive with some of his supporters in the media who won’t touch this story, but some of his messaging is difficult to swallow. The emotional issue has been the notion that Benji Marshall’s coaching is a reason Galvin does not want to stay at the club. That story was spread by the Tigers, not the Moses camp.

Richardson has been trying to muddy that fact through interviews, but it simply is not correct.

Not only does he risk losing the PR war by leaving the country at this point, Richardson is leaving the Tigers to fight this battle through Marshall and the players, as they don’t have an experienced media manager to handle one of the bigger storms to have engulfed the club in recent times. That is not to criticise the person they have wedged into the position from another area of their business.

Another problem is the media release the Tigers put out in response to the story broken by this masthead’s journalist Michael Chammas and myself that Galvin had rejected the club’s offer to keep him. That media release will be used by the Moses camp to explain the creation of the unsafe working environment they claim Galvin is in.

He was ostracised from that moment, and frozen out by the playing group. It was already a developing situation behind the scenes, but from the moment the club officially confirmed the story, the anti-Galvin sentiment kicked in.

Richardson may also want to be careful with his words the next time he jumps on a podcast on the PR campaign. Eyebrows were raised when he told James Graham on The Bye Round that the Tigers spent six weeks finding “opportunities for him in the future, opportunities for him externally, opportunities for him around a deal done with a major car company, a whole range of things that we put in place to surround the deal”.

We’re not sure what he planned to “surround the deal” with, nor are we suggesting any wrongdoing, but we can tell you that clubs were left scratching their heads after that comment. The NRL was also made aware of it by people in the game.
What a toss pot Weilder is...
Tell me if he had a close family wedding to attend overseas he would pull the pin to stay at work to please the media..

It's not like he cannot get on the phone / email or even a zoom call if needed.

The Galvin rubbish is sorted and he is making him play out his contract.. DW just wants us to release him, so Moses gets his way but it's a no story now.
 
Same with Peter Fitzsimmons, he's been very critical of the Tigers and Richardson but not Moses. He just doesn't get what the Tigers have had to put up with.

This was a small part of his article today "As to your (Richo) equal insistence that Galvin “has never once said to us, not one time has he said to us, that Benji’s not a good coach or can’t coach,” to my neophyte legal eyes, that only bolsters the young fellow’s legal case. You say, Richo, he never said that. But we all know he was dropped to reserve grade and became, for that fortnight, the most hated figure in the game, attacked by his own team for “disrespecting the coach” and vilified by a howling mob of social and traditional media, asserting he said EXACTLY that. But you say he never did."

Isn't agreed upon that Moses, on behalf of his client, indicated Marshall can't coach and it was the reason he wanted to leave? However, he doesn't mention that.
Peter Fitzsimmons is a massive flog. I used to like what he had to say, but he has such a massive ego now and is of so full of himself. I stopped reading anything about 5 years ago with the crap he was saying about RL during COVID.

The best thing to do with this guy is to never click on his articles. By the way, he's also a douche bag.
 
Wests Tigers boss takes holiday in US as Galvin crisis engulfs club

Danny Weidler
April 27, 2025 — 5.00am

The timing of Shane Richardson’s attempt to bring the Lachie Galvinsituation to a head has been widely condemned. Now we may be able to shed light on his haste to get a contract decision out of the 19-year-old.

Richardson has flown to the United States on a family holiday and will miss the next two Tigers games. That includes Sunday’s clash with the Sharks at Leichhardt, where Galvin will run out in the top grade for the first time since it was revealed he wanted out of the club.

The experienced club boss says even though the Tigers are going through a crisis “it’s business as usual”.

Richardson has a wedding to attend, but a vacation in the middle of the season is unusual for a club boss. The rival clubs I spoke to agreed with that notion. Particularly when you’re dealing with the biggest story in the game.

“It’s my niece’s wedding,” Richardson said. “I only have one brother and two nieces. I had it booked since September last year. The board has been aware since then. It is business as usual. The board has no problems. Family first.”

It’s difficult to argue with the decision to prioritise family, but the timing is unfortunate.

Galvin knocked back a $5.5 million, six-year extension offer that prompted the Tigers to announce his exit at the end of 2026. The Tigers released an extraordinary statement, declaring Galvin would not be with the club beyond 2026, but that he is expected to see out the final 18 months of his contract.

It’s not the first time Richardson has departed mid-season. Last May, he spent weeks in England allegedly, and bizarrely, trying to offer his own players to Super League clubs. Richardson has spent plenty of time in England during his career and visited several clubs on the trip.

Richardson justified the trip by saying he was trying to shop players to Super League clubs to clear out the roster for a rebuild. No players that we are aware of went to England as a direct result of those conversations.

Former Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe was heavily criticised by sections of the media when he went on a family trip with his young children to the Northern Territory. News Corp has previously hammered any club boss taking time out during the year. Fox Sports chief league reporter James Hooper wrote of Pascoe at the time: “This bloke is supposedly the boss. Leadership? Not so much. There’s an off-season from October to March for annual leave and family holidays.”

The timing of Richardson’s absence from Tiger Town could not be worse, with the Galvin issue up in the air and legal action looming. Everyone is entitled to take leave, and he can work via a laptop, but he has been the self-appointed protector of the club.

The Tigers boss is under fire for how this has all played out. It certainly didn’t seem necessary to demand an answer from Galvin two weeks ago as he was under contract until the end of next year.

But maybe Richardson believed he could sign Galvin then go on holiday having saved the day? Surely, given the involvement of controversial manager Isaac Moses, Richardson knew that was a long shot?

Instead, even Richo’s supporters – which this columnist has been – are questioning the timing and manner of these negotiations.

Richardson has been on a charm offensive with some of his supporters in the media who won’t touch this story, but some of his messaging is difficult to swallow. The emotional issue has been the notion that Benji Marshall’s coaching is a reason Galvin does not want to stay at the club. That story was spread by the Tigers, not the Moses camp.

Richardson has been trying to muddy that fact through interviews, but it simply is not correct.

Not only does he risk losing the PR war by leaving the country at this point, Richardson is leaving the Tigers to fight this battle through Marshall and the players, as they don’t have an experienced media manager to handle one of the bigger storms to have engulfed the club in recent times. That is not to criticise the person they have wedged into the position from another area of their business.

Another problem is the media release the Tigers put out in response to the story broken by this masthead’s journalist Michael Chammas and myself that Galvin had rejected the club’s offer to keep him. That media release will be used by the Moses camp to explain the creation of the unsafe working environment they claim Galvin is in.

He was ostracised from that moment, and frozen out by the playing group. It was already a developing situation behind the scenes, but from the moment the club officially confirmed the story, the anti-Galvin sentiment kicked in.

Richardson may also want to be careful with his words the next time he jumps on a podcast on the PR campaign. Eyebrows were raised when he told James Graham on The Bye Round that the Tigers spent six weeks finding “opportunities for him in the future, opportunities for him externally, opportunities for him around a deal done with a major car company, a whole range of things that we put in place to surround the deal”.

We’re not sure what he planned to “surround the deal” with, nor are we suggesting any wrongdoing, but we can tell you that clubs were left scratching their heads after that comment. The NRL was also made aware of it by people in the game.
With the continued trash being put out...this is just another article attacking Richo that all stems from attending a family member's wedding. Can Richo claim that this is bullying from the journos?
 
Bit of spin from DW in that article

Richo didn’t “demand” an answer from Galvin . There was no deadline given .

He wanted to put forward an offer and was told don’t bother he isn’t staying .

If LG wasn’t offered an upgrade & extension the media & manager would be saying Richo isn’t doing his job .

How long was he supposed to say nothing about LG not staying beyond his current contract ?

Calling it a PR war is overly dramatic . LG has indicated he’s leaving & the club has said they’re moving on . What war is happening ?

As for the innuendo about the deals surrounding the offer . Nobody but Richo will ever know because the offer wasn’t even looked at .
Weedler has shown his true colours lately. He’s all about petty personal stuff in his stories. Ego.

Don’t click on his bullshit.
 
Wests Tigers boss takes holiday in US as Galvin crisis engulfs club

Danny Weidler
April 27, 2025 — 5.00am

The timing of Shane Richardson’s attempt to bring the Lachie Galvinsituation to a head has been widely condemned. Now we may be able to shed light on his haste to get a contract decision out of the 19-year-old.

Richardson has flown to the United States on a family holiday and will miss the next two Tigers games. That includes Sunday’s clash with the Sharks at Leichhardt, where Galvin will run out in the top grade for the first time since it was revealed he wanted out of the club.

The experienced club boss says even though the Tigers are going through a crisis “it’s business as usual”.

Richardson has a wedding to attend, but a vacation in the middle of the season is unusual for a club boss. The rival clubs I spoke to agreed with that notion. Particularly when you’re dealing with the biggest story in the game.

“It’s my niece’s wedding,” Richardson said. “I only have one brother and two nieces. I had it booked since September last year. The board has been aware since then. It is business as usual. The board has no problems. Family first.”

It’s difficult to argue with the decision to prioritise family, but the timing is unfortunate.

Galvin knocked back a $5.5 million, six-year extension offer that prompted the Tigers to announce his exit at the end of 2026. The Tigers released an extraordinary statement, declaring Galvin would not be with the club beyond 2026, but that he is expected to see out the final 18 months of his contract.

It’s not the first time Richardson has departed mid-season. Last May, he spent weeks in England allegedly, and bizarrely, trying to offer his own players to Super League clubs. Richardson has spent plenty of time in England during his career and visited several clubs on the trip.

Richardson justified the trip by saying he was trying to shop players to Super League clubs to clear out the roster for a rebuild. No players that we are aware of went to England as a direct result of those conversations.

Former Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe was heavily criticised by sections of the media when he went on a family trip with his young children to the Northern Territory. News Corp has previously hammered any club boss taking time out during the year. Fox Sports chief league reporter James Hooper wrote of Pascoe at the time: “This bloke is supposedly the boss. Leadership? Not so much. There’s an off-season from October to March for annual leave and family holidays.”

The timing of Richardson’s absence from Tiger Town could not be worse, with the Galvin issue up in the air and legal action looming. Everyone is entitled to take leave, and he can work via a laptop, but he has been the self-appointed protector of the club.

The Tigers boss is under fire for how this has all played out. It certainly didn’t seem necessary to demand an answer from Galvin two weeks ago as he was under contract until the end of next year.

But maybe Richardson believed he could sign Galvin then go on holiday having saved the day? Surely, given the involvement of controversial manager Isaac Moses, Richardson knew that was a long shot?

Instead, even Richo’s supporters – which this columnist has been – are questioning the timing and manner of these negotiations.

Richardson has been on a charm offensive with some of his supporters in the media who won’t touch this story, but some of his messaging is difficult to swallow. The emotional issue has been the notion that Benji Marshall’s coaching is a reason Galvin does not want to stay at the club. That story was spread by the Tigers, not the Moses camp.

Richardson has been trying to muddy that fact through interviews, but it simply is not correct.

Not only does he risk losing the PR war by leaving the country at this point, Richardson is leaving the Tigers to fight this battle through Marshall and the players, as they don’t have an experienced media manager to handle one of the bigger storms to have engulfed the club in recent times. That is not to criticise the person they have wedged into the position from another area of their business.

Another problem is the media release the Tigers put out in response to the story broken by this masthead’s journalist Michael Chammas and myself that Galvin had rejected the club’s offer to keep him. That media release will be used by the Moses camp to explain the creation of the unsafe working environment they claim Galvin is in.

He was ostracised from that moment, and frozen out by the playing group. It was already a developing situation behind the scenes, but from the moment the club officially confirmed the story, the anti-Galvin sentiment kicked in.

Richardson may also want to be careful with his words the next time he jumps on a podcast on the PR campaign. Eyebrows were raised when he told James Graham on The Bye Round that the Tigers spent six weeks finding “opportunities for him in the future, opportunities for him externally, opportunities for him around a deal done with a major car company, a whole range of things that we put in place to surround the deal”.

We’re not sure what he planned to “surround the deal” with, nor are we suggesting any wrongdoing, but we can tell you that clubs were left scratching their heads after that comment. The NRL was also made aware of it by people in the game.
Firstly, it’s not a crisis just because a journo says it is. He’s not signing an extension, he has a contract for this season and the next. Disappointing yes. Crisis no.
Secondly, as for the two weeks in the US - pretty sure Richo is not playing or coaching the next two weeks. A club CEO is important, but if them being at club HQ and every game for the entire 30-odd weeks of the season is the difference between winning and losing then a club has a whole other problem. That being with a lack of leadership depth and direction.
Finally, labeling Issac Moses as “controversial” is like describing the stink of sh!t as “complex”.
Weidler and Chammas are bottom feeding on Moses table scraps, as is Brent Reid. Bludgers.
 
Get on Apple Podcasts and give Triple M (or whatever show he is on) a one star rating. Write a comment that it’s because of low-integrity “journalism” from Weidler and Chammas.

It would be perversely fun to see how low we could get their star rating as a community.

Forget the board dramas and other petitions, put your collective weight behind this new cause and do something good for humanity while you’re at it.
 
Wests Tigers boss takes holiday in US as Galvin crisis engulfs club

Danny Weidler
April 27, 2025 — 5.00am

The timing of Shane Richardson’s attempt to bring the Lachie Galvinsituation to a head has been widely condemned. Now we may be able to shed light on his haste to get a contract decision out of the 19-year-old.

Richardson has flown to the United States on a family holiday and will miss the next two Tigers games. That includes Sunday’s clash with the Sharks at Leichhardt, where Galvin will run out in the top grade for the first time since it was revealed he wanted out of the club.

The experienced club boss says even though the Tigers are going through a crisis “it’s business as usual”.

Richardson has a wedding to attend, but a vacation in the middle of the season is unusual for a club boss. The rival clubs I spoke to agreed with that notion. Particularly when you’re dealing with the biggest story in the game.

“It’s my niece’s wedding,” Richardson said. “I only have one brother and two nieces. I had it booked since September last year. The board has been aware since then. It is business as usual. The board has no problems. Family first.”

It’s difficult to argue with the decision to prioritise family, but the timing is unfortunate.

Galvin knocked back a $5.5 million, six-year extension offer that prompted the Tigers to announce his exit at the end of 2026. The Tigers released an extraordinary statement, declaring Galvin would not be with the club beyond 2026, but that he is expected to see out the final 18 months of his contract.

It’s not the first time Richardson has departed mid-season. Last May, he spent weeks in England allegedly, and bizarrely, trying to offer his own players to Super League clubs. Richardson has spent plenty of time in England during his career and visited several clubs on the trip.

Richardson justified the trip by saying he was trying to shop players to Super League clubs to clear out the roster for a rebuild. No players that we are aware of went to England as a direct result of those conversations.

Former Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe was heavily criticised by sections of the media when he went on a family trip with his young children to the Northern Territory. News Corp has previously hammered any club boss taking time out during the year. Fox Sports chief league reporter James Hooper wrote of Pascoe at the time: “This bloke is supposedly the boss. Leadership? Not so much. There’s an off-season from October to March for annual leave and family holidays.”

The timing of Richardson’s absence from Tiger Town could not be worse, with the Galvin issue up in the air and legal action looming. Everyone is entitled to take leave, and he can work via a laptop, but he has been the self-appointed protector of the club.

The Tigers boss is under fire for how this has all played out. It certainly didn’t seem necessary to demand an answer from Galvin two weeks ago as he was under contract until the end of next year.

But maybe Richardson believed he could sign Galvin then go on holiday having saved the day? Surely, given the involvement of controversial manager Isaac Moses, Richardson knew that was a long shot?

Instead, even Richo’s supporters – which this columnist has been – are questioning the timing and manner of these negotiations.

Richardson has been on a charm offensive with some of his supporters in the media who won’t touch this story, but some of his messaging is difficult to swallow. The emotional issue has been the notion that Benji Marshall’s coaching is a reason Galvin does not want to stay at the club. That story was spread by the Tigers, not the Moses camp.

Richardson has been trying to muddy that fact through interviews, but it simply is not correct.

Not only does he risk losing the PR war by leaving the country at this point, Richardson is leaving the Tigers to fight this battle through Marshall and the players, as they don’t have an experienced media manager to handle one of the bigger storms to have engulfed the club in recent times. That is not to criticise the person they have wedged into the position from another area of their business.

Another problem is the media release the Tigers put out in response to the story broken by this masthead’s journalist Michael Chammas and myself that Galvin had rejected the club’s offer to keep him. That media release will be used by the Moses camp to explain the creation of the unsafe working environment they claim Galvin is in.

He was ostracised from that moment, and frozen out by the playing group. It was already a developing situation behind the scenes, but from the moment the club officially confirmed the story, the anti-Galvin sentiment kicked in.

Richardson may also want to be careful with his words the next time he jumps on a podcast on the PR campaign. Eyebrows were raised when he told James Graham on The Bye Round that the Tigers spent six weeks finding “opportunities for him in the future, opportunities for him externally, opportunities for him around a deal done with a major car company, a whole range of things that we put in place to surround the deal”.

We’re not sure what he planned to “surround the deal” with, nor are we suggesting any wrongdoing, but we can tell you that clubs were left scratching their heads after that comment. The NRL was also made aware of it by people in the game.
So eyebrows were raised by Richo saying he spent 6 weeks organising Galvins deal, etc etc. Funny how none of these eyebrows have been raised over the obvious breech of antitampering rules in the last 3 years of the game. Funny how none of these eyebrows were raised when Moses was tanking games to get out of his Tigers deal, Simona was kicked out of the game for less. Simona was allowing tries in or doing things to make money on the side. Moses was completely tanking, how none of the jurnos back then said he and his cousin Isaac should be look at for match fixing is beyond me.
Weidlers a tosser.
 
They should just have what exists in Football / Soccer with Bosman transfers. Players can sign a pre-contract 6 months out if they are moving to an overseas club, Within England they can't negotiate with any clubs until they are a free agent.

It's just too easy for these journos to stir the pot with things as they are.
 
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