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The question James Tedesco must answer
Peter FitzSimons - SMH
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There was an interesting juxtaposition this week in Australian sport. On the one hand you had James Tedesco, the colossally talented fullback for the Wests Tigers publicly duchessed by the Roosters – saying come with us, for less money, because at least you'll have a good team around you, and a stable club. And on the other you had Gary Ablett jnr announcing that after six years with the Gold Coast Suns on colossal wages, but little else to show for it, he'd had enough and would finish with them at the end of the year. Anything Tedesco can learn from Ablett's experience, before making his decision?
Try this? It is hard not to reckon that Ablett jnr has some regret all these years on for, seemingly, pursuing the money alone. The dual Brownlow medallist was the star of Geelong, just as his father before him, and was already on good coin before taking a colossal dollar to go to the Gold Coast where … pretty much nothing happened. A good half of the career of the most stupendously talented player in the game will simply read, "and then he went to the Gold Coast for six years ... "
True, if Ablett weeps now, it will at least likely be on silken sheets, which is something. But in the case of Tedesco – according to the figures provided by Andrew Webster on Friday – it looks like Tedesco would be asked to take a pay cut, from a likely $1.1 million offer by the Tigers, to a close-to $800K offer from the Roosters.
Get it? Ablett was offered huge money to go from a great team to a terrible team. Tedesco is being offered less money to go from a low-ranking team, to a potentially great team. What should he do?
For my money, he should stay with the Tigers. Be the bloke they build the team around. Be the one who steps up and makes the point, 'yes, right now we are on the bones of our arse, but only on the competition table ... we actually have the makings of a freaking dynasty here, if we just hang tight together and play our hearts out'.
The bottom line? Tedesco has the rare opportunity of taking the huge money, and staying with the team of his heart.
All up, it can't be that hard a decision?
Peter FitzSimons - SMH
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There was an interesting juxtaposition this week in Australian sport. On the one hand you had James Tedesco, the colossally talented fullback for the Wests Tigers publicly duchessed by the Roosters – saying come with us, for less money, because at least you'll have a good team around you, and a stable club. And on the other you had Gary Ablett jnr announcing that after six years with the Gold Coast Suns on colossal wages, but little else to show for it, he'd had enough and would finish with them at the end of the year. Anything Tedesco can learn from Ablett's experience, before making his decision?
Try this? It is hard not to reckon that Ablett jnr has some regret all these years on for, seemingly, pursuing the money alone. The dual Brownlow medallist was the star of Geelong, just as his father before him, and was already on good coin before taking a colossal dollar to go to the Gold Coast where … pretty much nothing happened. A good half of the career of the most stupendously talented player in the game will simply read, "and then he went to the Gold Coast for six years ... "
True, if Ablett weeps now, it will at least likely be on silken sheets, which is something. But in the case of Tedesco – according to the figures provided by Andrew Webster on Friday – it looks like Tedesco would be asked to take a pay cut, from a likely $1.1 million offer by the Tigers, to a close-to $800K offer from the Roosters.
Get it? Ablett was offered huge money to go from a great team to a terrible team. Tedesco is being offered less money to go from a low-ranking team, to a potentially great team. What should he do?
For my money, he should stay with the Tigers. Be the bloke they build the team around. Be the one who steps up and makes the point, 'yes, right now we are on the bones of our arse, but only on the competition table ... we actually have the makings of a freaking dynasty here, if we just hang tight together and play our hearts out'.
The bottom line? Tedesco has the rare opportunity of taking the huge money, and staying with the team of his heart.
All up, it can't be that hard a decision?