NRL considering radical changes to player pathways...

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NRL considering radical changes to player pathways
December 12, 2015 10:00pm
EXCLUSIVE The Daily Telegraph

NRL rising stars including Kangaroos rookie Sione Mata’utia, Kiwi international Jason Taumalolo, Dally M centre of the year James Roberts and Sydney Roosters young gun Jackson Hastings would’ve been deemed ineligible to make their first-grade debut under a controversial new proposal being considered by the ARL Commission.

According to a NRL pathways document leaked to The Sunday Telegraph, from 2018 the game’s most talented young stars will be banned from having a contract registered before they turn 19.

Mata’utia, Taumalolo, Roberts and Hastings lead a long list of the game’s most exciting young talent to have made their NRL debut in recent season under the age of 19.

Originally presented to all 16 club chief executives at a meeting 10-days ago, on December 3, the paperwork spells out in black and white a host of major changes including:

* the capping of pre-season matches to just two appearances for elite players — with the Auckland Nines, NRL All Stars, World Club Challenge and club trial matches, all equal to one match

* from 2018 a revamped state league will be called ‘Platinum League’ with the proposal for rival clubs to amalgamate their juniors into zones

* a recommendation that 2017 — not next season — will be the final year of the under-20s National Youth Competition (Holden Cup)

* from 2018 a revamped state league called ‘Platinum League’ with a salary cap of $400,000 will be introduced to replace the NSW Cup and with Channel Nine to televise one match every weekend

* every player will be awarded an increase of six to eight consecutive weeks annual leave during the off-season.

The level of detail included in the 24-page blueprint indicates the fabric of rugby league is set for a dramatic overhaul, possibly as early as next season.

Shane Richardson’s whole of the game plan has been eagerly awaited.
While the reduction in pre-season matches for elite players could impact the NRL’s ability to properly promote the majority of the pre-season tournaments, how individual clubs manage to best prepare their sides for season kick-off with the potential of their biggest names having had only one team hitout, will also create debate.

But perhaps the most polarising recommendation being considered by the ARL Commission is that from 2018, no contracts will be registered by the NRL before a player turns 19 and also from 2018, NRL clubs should no longer pay players before they turn 19.

While the recommendation is clearly a bid to curb player burnout and temper the fast-tracked promotion to first-grade of some of the game’s still-developing stars, the new rule infers that likes of Will Hopoate, Wade Graham, Matautia and Hastings — all of whom made their NRL debut before turning 19 — would be left to plying their trade in the lower grades.

The proposal has resulted in an immediate and obvious reaction from clubs that the rule would offer rival codes a free shot to poach rugby league’s best young talent with the lure of a contract that the NRL would be unwilling to entertain.

“It’s one of the most brain dead proposals I’ve ever seen, it’s embarrassing,’’ one senior club official said.

“Let’s just open the door to other codes and let them take our best teenagers.

“The proposal reads like someone in at the NRL is trying to prove they exist by coming up with a plan, if you can call it that, that will ultimately have far greater negative impact on the game as a whole, than anything positive.

“They talk about community engagement, well how does merging lower grade teams into zones cultivate community engagement? With less teams, it only dilutes it.’’

http://m.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/nrl-considering-radical-changes-to-player-pathways/story-fnp0lyn3-1227643210930?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A%20dailytelegraphnrlndm%20%28Daily%20Telegraph%20%7C%20NRL%29
 
Shane Richardson - you are a disgrace.

To think that he actually gets paid for ideas like this (and gets paid hundreds of thousands).

I still think he, Grant and Greenberg should hand in their resignation. (Thank God we already have gotten rid of Smith).

Blind Freddie could come up with a better proposal than that.
 
what do you guys think is so bad about it and do you have any better solutions?

i'm mostly against the 19 year old limit, the rest seems a step up from what we have now but not ideal either.
 
* from 2018 a revamped state league will be called ‘Platinum League’ with the proposal for rival clubs to amalgamate their juniors into zones

Wish they explained this a bit better
 
There goes Keebra Park then, by 19 there well and truly finished high school and we are not allowed to sign them to NRL Contracts? These guys that run our game got no idea, there slowly killing the game we love.
 
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/nrl/amalgamation-of-rival-clubs-juniors-into-zones-puts-league-communities-at-risk/news-story/e1a99b24f0f25fba535034a34adc8f8f
 
I wonder if the Reggie's amalgamation plan is with a view to NRL expansion down the track… Suddenly there's a lot more players available
 
@innsaneink said:
* from 2018 a revamped state league will be called ‘Platinum League’ with the proposal for rival clubs to amalgamate their juniors into zones

Wish they explained this a bit better

Only Assuming, but the Intrust Super Cup is a well spread competition with only a few BRL Clubs remaining. Maybe they are suggesting making it a better State Cup demographic?
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Up here we have alot of regional Queensland Teams:
PNG Hunters
Northern Pride- Cairns
Townsville Blackhawks
Mackay Cutters
CQ Capras - Rockhampton
Sunshine Coast Falcons
Redcliffe Dolphins
Ipswich Jets
Souths Logan Magpies - Logan City
Burliegh Bears - Gold Coast
Tweed Heads Seagulls

The rest is made up of 3 BRL Clubs - Wynnum; Norths & the MIGHTY TIGERS.
 
@Tiger Watto said:
@innsaneink said:
* from 2018 a revamped state league will be called ‘Platinum League’ with the proposal for rival clubs to amalgamate their juniors into zones

Wish they explained this a bit better

Only Assuming, but the Intrust Super Cup is a well spread competition with only a few BRL Clubs remaining. Maybe they are suggesting making it a better State Cup demographic?
\
\
\
Up here we have alot of regional Queensland Teams:
PNG Hunters
Northern Pride- Cairns
Townsville Blackhawks
Mackay Cutters
CQ Capras - Rockhampton
Sunshine Coast Falcons
Redcliffe Dolphins
Ipswich Jets
Souths Logan Magpies - Logan City
Burliegh Bears - Gold Coast
Tweed Heads Seagulls

The rest is made up of 3 BRL Clubs - Wynnum; Norths & the MIGHTY TIGERS.

A question Watto, how financially viable do you think it is to have so many regional teams, and the costs involved with so much travel on a regular basis? Is there much money invested into the Intrust Cup via sponsorships, local tv deals or attendance? Can't see how small clubs from Mackay or Cairns could survive in the long term.
 
bit more info…On the Platinum League proposal...

NRL faces rebellion over plans for second-tier "Platinum League"
Date November 30, 2015

Adrian Proszenko
Chief Rugby League Reporter

The NRL is heading for a fresh showdown with clubs over its it decision to carve up the second-tier competition into 11 NSW regions, a decision key stakeholders claim was made without proper consultation.

The ARLC has already agreed in principle to approve the "Platinum League", the revamped competition produced by the governing body's head of strategy, Shane Richardson. The project is one of the crucial pillars of the whole-of-game manifesto the former South Sydney CEO has been working on since his appointment earlier this year.

As part of the revamp of the pathways, the traditional NRL top 25 squad will be expanded to a top 30 from 2018 onwards, resulting in an additional $150,000 being added to each team's salary cap.

Players won't be able to engage a manager until the age of 17 and contracts won't be registered with NRL clubs until they turn 18\. Instead, rookie contracts will be permissible for up to three players per club, with a two-year duration.

However, the biggest concern for the NSWRL and the clubs is the Platinum League, given it has already been approved in-principle by the Commission without their input. The new competition, which will have an introductory salary cap of $400,000, will break NSW up into 11 regions:

New England (North Coast)
Hunter
Central and Far West
Canberra – South West
Illawarra – South Coast
Central Sydney
Canterbury-Bankstown, St George & Sutherland
Northern Beaches – Central Coast
Liverpool- Macarthur
Parramatta
Penrith.

Other inclusions, from the Pacific nations, New Zealand or affiliate states, will be on an application process.

The clubs fear the new boundaries could result in longer travel times for players and less control over their development pathways. It's unclear whether foundation clubs will remain in their current form, while the new boundaries could result in players from rival NRL teams being lumped together in the same feeder club. The scrapping of the National Youth Competition has also raised concerns, with the NSWRL believing the NRL should fund any replacement tournament to be put in its place.

As part of the revamp, the NSWRL and CRL would be merged into one body.

Richardson is planning to meet with the NSWRL and the clubs in coming days, but the fact the changes are all but signed off without the contribution of clubs has left many angry at the process.

The NSWRL board and the clubs have appointed a sub-committee to work through the issues and voice concerns.

"The committee expressed concern at many aspects of a proposal that NRL Head of Strategy Shane Richardson presented to the ARL Commission in October and which they believe has subsequently been approved in principle," the committee said in a statement.

"These concerns are shared by the NSWRL Board, Clubs and the CRL, with the NSWRL and the CRL today requesting an urgent meeting with Richardson prior to any further progress reports being provided to the Commission.

"Sub-committee Chairman Bob Millward has invited Richardson to the group's next meeting in mid-December."

The NRL is already on a war footing with clubs over club grants and how to spend the recently completed broadcast deal.

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/nrl-faces-rebellion-over-plans-for-secondtier-platinum-league-20151130-glbrqd.html?rand=495890#comments#ixzz3uHYPipc2
Follow us: @canberratimes on Twitter | CanberraTimes on Facebook
 
Lol… The nsw based clubs should form a breakawaycomp.

Surly Channel 10 will give Politis plenty of coin to get it off the ground.

We could be the Wests Potato Farmers
 
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