WESTS Tigers want Campbelltonians to look beyond jersey colour — after public claims on the Advertiser's Facebook page of a disconnection between club and community.
Almost half of the more than 100 comments claimed the Tigers were not being a part of the Campbelltown community, or accused the club of being "too Balmain", blaming this for the poor crowd at the first Campbelltown Stadium game of the season.
But Wests Tigers western suburbs development manager Ben Rogers said actions over the past three years proved the club was committed to the local community.
The club now spends $500,000 a year, provides 10 staff to directly service the area and takes part in several programs and partnerships with local organisations and schools.
"It's an important part of the world for us," Mr Rogers said.
"The crowd figures aren't a reflection of what we'd like but we're not going to give up on the area."
He said the area possessed an extensive talent pool in Campbelltown junior competitions and the club intended to make every effort to produce more local NRL players like Chris Lawrence and James Tedesco.
"We realised we were losing kids so we decided [to do something] to keep them," he said. Mr Rogers also refuted claims the club didn't engage enough with the community.
He said a lot of work occurred behind the scenes in the community, particularly in Macquarie Fields, where several programs were run in co-operation with the police, TAFE and the Koch Centre for Youth.
"There's an enormous amount of things we do that don't get publicised," he said.
Feedback from readers suggested the predominantly orange Wests Tigers jerseys represented Balmain Tigers and failed to acknowledge the Western Suburbs Magpies. But Mr Rogers said people needed to look beyond the playing strip.
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"It's not Balmain, it's a Wests Tigers jersey," he said. "The Magpies jersey was mostly white in the later years and the two Wests Tigers playing strips are orange and white — and the heritage jersey is black and white.
"People want to debate the size and position of the magpie [on the jersey] but we don't want to be Balmain Tigers or Western Suburbs Magpies, we want to be a joint venture."
He also said suggestions Campbelltown should be the club's training base weren't practical.
"There is nowhere here where we can do weights apart from private gyms and we have to pay extra for that," he said. "We train at St Gregory's College for field but then players have to drive back to Concord from Campbelltown to the gym."
_Posted using RoarFEED 2013_
Not that I care where we train but that last comment about no place for the gym in Campbelltown sounds ridiculous to me. I'd assume we own the equipment in the gym so no place in campbelltown to put the equipment sounds weird. Telling supporters to get over the jersey isnt solving an issue either.
Mr Rogers seems the kind of bloke who accepts barriers and isnt concerned how to knock them down.