I have deliberately avoided this thread since I heard the news. It has been an interesting read this morning looking at the differeing points of view. There’s a bit going on with the PNG visit, but I think the reaction from some is overcooked. If you strip the emotion out of it, there are some very real positives and a few legitimate concerns.
On the surface the trip raises eyebrows; but, a trip to PNG for a high profile player isn’t something that gets organised on a whim. For a player of Luai’s profile, travel like that would have been known well in advance. There’s no way he boards a plane into a developing rugby league market without the club being across it and the timing of his contract extension decision and the ten day turn around provide more weight to this being a planned event that is highly unlikely to have blindsided Benji.
The PNG franchise needs credibility and star power. Luai ticks both boxes. That makes him a logical target, not necessarily a guaranteed defection. From Luai’s perspective, this kind of visit is smart business: understanding the landscape, building relationships, and, strengthening his negotiating position.
For us it depends on your perspective of Luai and his value for money. The worst case and best case are almost polar opposites. If you are a fan the worst case is that he leaves and the best case is that he comes back more committed, having seen what’s not yet built compared to what he’s trying to help build at the Tigers. If you aren't a fan the worst case is that he stays and best case is that he leaves and frees up cap space for moe important acquisitions.
Regardless of personal opinion - if Luai leaves it will be a significant void to fill due to what he has bought to the club and his footy IQ. On the other hand it frees up a significant chunk of cap space. We’re talking marquee money that could be redistributed across multiple positions that could potentially strengthen the roster more broadlyr. This would normally be a problem for us as out depth for over a decade has been poor. However, at the moment it may not be a straight swap but we have some quality on our books with plenty of upside.
It’s alss worth remembering that Luai has been here before in a different context. He signed with the Tigers well in advance while still producing elite football at Penrith. His professionalism during that period never wavered; if anything, he doubled down.
That suggests to me that he is capable of separating contract situations from on-field performance and that movement or discussions of movement don’t equal disengagement. He was open and honest at Penrith so there is no reson to believe that whatever happens it will nto be transparent to the players, the club or the fans in this case.
There’s almost no chance Benji and the club weren’t in the loop. With a player like Luai, communication lines are constant. This would have been discussed and likely framed as an opportunity rather than a risk. Benji, in particular, understands the importance of empowering players while reinforcing the vision of the club. The conversations are probably less “are you leaving?” and more “what do you need to stay and how do we build this together?”
So where does that leave us? In a good postion; this is not a breaking point it is simply a decision point. Yes, there’s risk; but we have good depth with a development path so nothing to be overly concerned about. BUT, until there’s actual movement on a contract, it’s noise. Interesting noise, but noise nonetheless.
The story isn’t the PNG visit; it’s how the we (as a club) were prepared and how we respond. We know that Benji and the club will not come out and speak about recruiting and retention. If the playing group was not aware fo the visit (and it may have been kept out of the loop to prevent any leaks) you can bet there will be a discussion first thing this morning where Luai doubles down on his commitment to the playing group.
This is not a Galvin/TDS contract breach situation based on not wanting in. This is built in exit clause that, depending on your outlook, benefits Luai, the club, or both.
Personally, I don't have an issue either way. While he is a driving force at the club and in the current environment is a huge motivator,he is not irreplacable and our depth has high ceilings. Time to turn our attention to the real focus: belting the Sharks on Sunday.