More than three decades after it was defeated in court, a draft could return to the NRL

innsaneink

Well-known member
Abold plan to introduce a rookie draft to equalise talent as the competition expands will soon be delivered to the NRL and its clubs.

A Pathways Steering Committee (PSC) is finalising a list of recommendations relating to the flow of junior talent into the elite level. They include the introduction of a national under-21s competition, regulations relating to when youngsters can engage an agent, and an accreditation scheme for junior coaches


However, the topic that will spark most interest is the prospect of implementing a rookie draft, which would signal a radical change in the way promising prospects graduate to the NRL. While the AFL has had a draft for top talent since 1986, attempts to introduce the system to rugby league were short-lived.

There hasn’t been a draft in rugby league since 1991, when Terry Hill led a successful legal action by 127 players against the NSWRL that resulted in it being abolished. However, the PSC, which includes Roosters coach Trent Robinson, NRL executive Brock Schaefer, Storm general manager Frank Ponissi, Queensland Rugby League chief executive Ben Ikin and Panthers rugby league chief Matt Cameron, is assessing how player movement is regulated at a time when the NRL is looking to eventually expand to a 20-team competition.


While the salary cap has long been hailed as a successful talent equalisation measure, the divide between the stronger and weaker clubs has never been greater. There have been only three different premiers during the past eight seasons, while Wests Tigers will next year aim to avoid a fourth consecutive wooden spoon and haven’t played a finals game since 2011.


The PSC met last week and is finalising its recommendations. It will deliver its recommendations at the next meeting of club chief executives with a view to then passing them on for the consideration of the ARL Commission before Christmas. While members of the PSC declined to be quoted while the process was ongoing, this masthead has been told a rookie draft is a key plank in the plan.

There are a number of different models being floated. Some of the solutions look at tweaks to the contracting model that could equalise talent without introducing a draft. However, a draft remains a primary consideration, one that could lead the NRL to transform it into an event that is commercialised and promoted like several major sporting organisations overseas, particularly in the US.

Given that a draft would require a teenager to potentially move interstate and overseas, the stakeholders – including the Rugby League Players Association – would want assurances that each club would provide the facilities and support required for them to successfully make the transition. The issue is more relevant than ever given the NRL is looking at introducing new franchises in Papua New Guinea and Perth.


In a bid to level out the competition, the draft would allow clubs to make a pick from the emerging talent pool: teams at the bottom of the ladder would get the first choice and so on until the premiers made their pick. In a bid to reward clubs that develop players – Penrith are considered to have the best junior nursery in the country – one option is to allow every club to quarantine their best junior from the draft process.

Another consideration in dispersing talent is putting a cap on how many players can be contracted to any club academy, as well as limiting how much juniors can be paid at each age group. The measure would prevent the strong development clubs from stockpiling players, resulting in them finishing their footballing apprenticeship at another franchise if they are surplus to requirements.

The other big-ticket item is the potential introduction of a national under-21s competition. It would mark the first such venture since the controversial National Youth Competition (NYC) for under-20s players, which began in 2018 but was disbanded a decade later. 🤔 🤔 🤔


The under-21s teams would be aligned with NRL clubs and would probably play each other once. However, to keep costs down, it would not mirror the home-and-away NRL draw or necessarily act as a curtain-raiser to first grade matches.

 
Welp this sucks, a draft would return when we have endured the worst few years in our history, and now starting to look tonnes better so we can't even reap the benefits. if we do good next year i will protest the draft out of pure pettiness
 
The other big-ticket item is the potential introduction of a national under-21s competition. It would mark the first such venture since the controversial National Youth Competition (NYC) for under-20s players, which began in 2018 but was disbanded a decade later. 🤔 🤔 🤔

When did the NYC actually have a comp?
 
bundling player contracts, 3rd parties n allowances into a mega cap - established1st graders get sold 2 the highest bidder.
 
bad idea on all levels,it will just be gamed like the salary cap is. The NRL should get fair dinkum n clean that up 1st .

Merlot + teams will tank 2 get a 1st/2nd round draft
pick like in the NFL/NBA. Police the cap like you said!
 
Merlot + teams will tank 2 get a 1st/2nd round draft
pick like in the NFL/NBA. Police the cap like you said!
Wouldnt that only work if you came last and guaranteed first pick?
Anything else (higher up the ladder) you dunno who teams behind you may select

It seems to me clubs like us who produce a lot but cant climb the ladder getting an early pick on ONE player is little consolation
Ive never liked the idea of telling players where they HAVE to go
 
Wouldnt that only work if you came last and guaranteed first pick?
Anything else (higher up the ladder) you dunno who teams behind you may select

It seems to me clubs like us who produce a lot but cant climb the ladder getting an early pick on ONE player is little consolation
Ive never liked the idea of telling players where they HAVE to go

Yes Ink that's how it goes bro, lower on the ladder
or table the higher pick you get - what makes it more
difficult is when franchises trade players to get a
pick higher up the draft. I don't think they've even
fully planned it out yet, telling a young gun player
where they're going to go is horrible, it's worth it
in the states because top 3 draft picks get PAID good.
The other thing to consider is, is the fact that fans
of rugby league clubs wouldn't tolerate their teams
tanking in the hopes of some gun trades at the end
of the year, punters will boycott the clubs lol won't
work. We don't need to Americanize our sports,
We're already doing it with our politics, leave it alone!
 
Wouldnt that only work if you came last and guaranteed first pick?
Anything else (higher up the ladder) you dunno who teams behind you may select

It seems to me clubs like us who produce a lot but cant climb the ladder getting an early pick on ONE player is little consolation
Ive never liked the idea of telling players where they HAVE to go
if other sports are an indication of how it will work,we can swap our 1st pick with a club for a combination of their picks during the trade period,its a weird game of 3 D chess for the NRL to gain more control over clubs n over saturate the game.Last time it was mentioned it came with a threat that the clubs wont be funded to the NRL's full potential,NRL wanted to contract the top tier kids to NRL ,not clubs, from a list to disperse around the game,with the flow on effect sooner or later NRL controlled all movement of talent/a back door to owning player contracts/clubs product
 
Welp this sucks, a draft would return when we have endured the worst few years in our history, and now starting to look tonnes better so we can't even reap the benefits. if we do good next year i will protest the draft out of pure pettiness
That would be quintessential Wests Tigers.

The moment we're about to, finally, get our shit together and rebuild the club properly, from a base of primarily junior talent, from one of the biggest nurseries in the game, the NRL step in and introduce a draft to cut that advantage back.

I've always been a fan of a draft of sorts, but geez, the timing, as always with our beloved but cursed club, couldn't be worse 😂

(... if it were to go ahead)
 
The rich stay at the top and bottom sides still struggle. You want a fair system in place police the cap properly and fairly. Develop junior talent via the national u/21 great Perth, PNG ,Fiji need to have sides in this sort of competition to develop their players and expose them to a higher standard.
 
A youth player draft is completely unnecessary. It just promotes losing and heaps pressure on players who may be 3-4 years away from meaningful contributions. People struggle now to understand that a gun 19-y.o. forward is years away from being good in the NRL - imagine when he gets drafted #1.

Drafts for administration would help though because poor boards and administrators are what keep clubs at the bottom.

Perhaps a journalist expansion draft would also help, as it is the myths the absolute hackjobs in the current NRL media spin that perpetuate player perspectives eg. Tigers is a basketcase! The Roosters is paradise!
 

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