HBG Directors give themselves Pay rise

It’s been dubbed ‘the most chaotic board in NSW’. But Wests Tigers’ owners are pushing for a pay rise

By Chris Barrett

March 7, 2026 — 4.21pm
Wests Tigers’ owners are bidding to give themselves a pay rise three months after a shambolic episode in which they sacked chairman Barry O’Farrell and three other directors before backflipping at the behest of the NRL.

The Holman Barnes Group, which owns 90 per cent of the Tigers and holds the licence for the NRL team, has for the past year been embroiled in turmoil that has threatened to spill over into the football club.

Now, its board members are seeking a boost which would see them collect more than their counterparts at most other Sydney clubs with ties to NRL teams.

HBG is proposing that its chairman’s annual honorarium be lifted from $51,341 to $65,000, the deputy chair’s fee to be raised from $33,371 to $50,000, and all other directors to get $32,500 instead of $25,670. All would also receive an extra $5000 if they sit on a club committee.

The effective $70,000 payment per annum for the chairman would eclipse the amounts paid to those in charge at most of Sydney’s major NRL-affiliated leagues clubs, including those with much larger membership bases.

Parramatta Leagues Club, which owns the Eels and has 65,000 members, gives its president $30,000 a year and other directors $20,000.

The 60,000-member Canterbury League Club, which is strongly linked to the Bulldogs and backs them financially, allows for a total of $229,801 to be paid to its seven directors including the chairman – an average of $32,828, although the chair and deputy chair receive a greater share.

St George Leagues Club, which owns 50 per cent of the Dragons and has 25,000 members, hands its chair $16,000 a year and ordinary directors $12,000, plus $2000 for each committee they sit on.

HBG has 27,000 members and the proposed honoraria for its board are exceeded only by those at Penrith NRL team owners Panthers Group, where total revenue was nearly $180 million in 2025 and which has a membership base of 148,000. The Panthers’ chairman receives $80,000 a year, its two deputies get $40,000 each and the remaining directors pick up $20,000 per annum.

Like those at other clubs, the HBG board members can take advantage of other perks of the position such as food and drinks. At the club’s annual general meeting on March 21 members will also be asked to approve its chairman and deputy receiving $500 per month hospitality cards.

As Holman Barnes Group’s business has expanded, the workload and governance responsibilities placed on directors have increased substantially,” said HBG vice-chairman Frank Primerano, who also sits on the Wests Tigers board.

“The proposed adjustments simply bring board honorariums into line with the scale of the organisation and the time commitment required, particularly as directors are increasingly involved in committees and strategic projects during this period of significant growth and investment.”

A source familiar with the activities of HBG, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said: “How can the most chaotic board in NSW simultaneously become one of the highest paid?

“If the stipend for the board were based on performance then quite obviously these people would be getting a pay cut, not a pay day.”

HBG, which oversees venues including Wests Ashfield, returned a net profit of $11.9 million in 2025 after raking in $52 million from poker machines and recording overall revenue of $100 million, according to its annual report.

But the organisation has been plagued by dysfunction during the past 18 months, with several board members controversially removed and former NSW premier O’Farrell and three other independent directors then sensationally axed from the Tigers last December less than a year after they were installed following a governance review.

After concerns were raised by the NRL, HBG reinstated them days later and O’Farrell was Tigers chairman. But the club was forced into a costly payout to Tigers chief executive Shane Richardson, who resigned amid the boardroom chaos 18 months into a four-year contract, and settled out of court with former HBG director Rick Wayde, a key instigator of the Tigers review, after he was banned for eight years.

HBG, which owns the NRL team via its control of Wests Magpies, has since beefed up its representation on the Tigers board, giving it an effective majority.

While the Tigers are governed separately to their owners, NRL funding for the team flows through HBG.

According to its latest financial report, HBG received $20 million from the NRL in 2025 and owes $36 million to players and head coach Benji Marshall over the next five years.

HBG is unusual in that the balance of power lies with 20 so-called debenture holders, who choose the majority of its directors under a decades-old, undemocratic system.

Only two of nine board seats are directly elected by the wider membership and there will not be a ballot for those spots at this month’s AGM after one of the three nominations withdrew.

The two remaining are well known to HBG board members: Shannon Cavanagh, a director of Wests Magpies alongside HBG chairman Dennis Burgess and Primerano, and Aldo Di Mento, a director of APIA Leichardt FC – the inner-west soccer team in which HGB bought a stake last year and on whose board Primerano and HBG chief executive Daniel Paton also sit.
 
The club doesn’t have to fill that position if it doesn’t want to , as bird is allocated that position for the year . They can if they want to however . It just opens up options , and stops purchasing or upgrading players into top 30 either for the Sake of it , or out of necessity and maybe promoting someone too soon … creating problems down the line .
This
 
I think we even have a doctor on that board now. Smrt.
Which is why I’m open minded to the idea that maybe there’s some brain power actually in the board , that might be above giving into thier base desires od making everything a Balmain v wests thing . And actually govern correctly . Ones also a barrister I think .
 
Bizzare mathmatics
It’s not maths mate . In years gone past we’ve promoted or signed players who have clauses in their contracts like player options … so we think sweet. Roster spot filled . Only when we do the roster management for the next season say 2027 , now we don’t have a spot for a junior because thier spot is being taken by this shit contract and reserve grade player we filling roster spot 28 because we had to in 2026 . Which puts players offside or worse , if we don’t have a way around it , leads them to leave .
Or we promote a young gun , he plays well or doesn’t , either way it goes to his head , and now he’s demanding D amount extra or he’s off to the eels because we gave him a top 30 out of necessity , not because he earnt it. Just 2 hypothetical outcomes that have actually stung us in the past.
 
I have the names but don't know if I'm allowed to share them. They will show up on ASIC soon enough
If it’s an 8 person board, I’ll have a stab it’s this …

Chair Barry O’Farrell
HBG chief executive Daniel Paton
HBG deputy chairman Frank Primerano
HBG board member Mick Liubinskas
HBG chief commercial officer Michelle Nielsen
Independent Michelle McDowell
Balmain Danny Stapleton
WM Leo Epifania

Basing it earlier media reports like this one


and who was in the group photo published yesterday (i.e. no Annabell Williams).
 
If it’s an 8 person board, I’ll have a stab it’s this …

Chair Barry O’Farrell
HBG chief executive Daniel Paton
HBG deputy chairman Frank Primerano
HBG board member Mick Liubinskas
HBG chief commercial officer Michelle Nielsen
Independent Michelle McDowell
Balmain Danny Stapleton
WM Leo Epifania

Basing it earlier media reports like this one


and who was in the group photo published yesterday (i.e. no Annabell Williams).
That is correct
 
It’s not maths mate . In years gone past we’ve promoted or signed players who have clauses in their contracts like player options … so we think sweet. Roster spot filled . Only when we do the roster management for the next season say 2027 , now we don’t have a spot for a junior because thier spot is being taken by this shit contract and reserve grade player we filling roster spot 28 because we had to in 2026 . Which puts players offside or worse , if we don’t have a way around it , leads them to leave .
Or we promote a young gun , he plays well or doesn’t , either way it goes to his head , and now he’s demanding D amount extra or he’s off to the eels because we gave him a top 30 out of necessity , not because he earnt it. Just 2 hypothetical outcomes that have actually stung us in the past.
that's it though a spot is filled by a guy that's not here ,yet its still on the cap
Thanks, but you cant edumacate imberciles
But we could announce it and have Bird of our books if we chose to - thats new to me
 
HBG havent told us a thing since Patons video. They are weak and pass the hard stuff back to the footy club.

What do you sell out of interest?
Those decisions were Wests Tigers related- so the club probably should be the ones announcing them I think.

Construction materials- concrete/adhesives/moisture barriers etc
 
Those decisions were Wests Tigers related- so the club probably should be the ones announcing them I think.

Construction materials- concrete/adhesives/moisture barriers etc
Reinstating the directors is club related? So why did hbg make the announcement to sack them? Do you not see that they have passed the buck and avoided accountability?
 
That is correct
HBG chief executive Daniel Paton
HBG deputy chairman Frank Primerano
HBG board member Mick Liubinskas
HBG chief commercial officer Michelle Nielsen

None of these are carry-overs from last years board are they?

Do we know much about them? I think I'd heard Liubinskas was a pretty good guy.
 
There is no proof that there is a mission from HBG to bring back the Magpies. Stop believing everything you read
Former CEO Lee Hagipantelis confirmed discussions that Dennis Burgess wants to turn the Wests Tigers into the Magpies -


Are you calling a respected council a liar?
 
Former CEO Lee Hagipantelis confirmed discussions that Dennis Burgess wants to turn the Wests Tigers into the Magpies -


Are you calling a respected council a liar?
From the article you posted next-

"Last year, the club claimed to have 20,000 members. After Richardson arrived, he forced the club to correct the record. That figure included thousands of juniors who don’t contribute any income to the club."

That was under Lee H's reign.

Fair to say not everything the respected council says is accurate.
 

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