Game on path to destruction
Font Size: Decrease Increase Print Page: Print Brent Read | July 28, 2008
THE NRL is at a crossroads and its survival could hinge on which path it takes in reaction to Sonny Bill Williams' dramatic exit from the game at the weekend.
One path is painful. It involves radical changes to the competition structure and its clubs.
The other leads nowhere. It travels in circles, retaining the status quo and leaving the game at the mercy of those waiting to pick it apart.
While other codes are striding ahead, rugby league is labouring. Sydney clubs are under immense financial pressure with no salvation in sight.
Elite players are deserting the game to take up lucrative offers from rugby union in France. Only three have gone, but more will follow unless something is done.
Yesterday, as the game digested Williams' decision to walk out on the Bulldogs to join French club Toulon on a two-year deal believed to be worth upwards of $2.6million, concerns were again raised for the NRL's future.
Those at the top preach calm but plenty are ready to hit the panic button. Matthew Johns has been involved in the game a long time and he fears it has seen its best days.
"I say that hoping I am wrong," he said. "But unless something radical is done, I fear I might be right."
Johns isn't the first to raise concerns. The NRL has been warned by its own chief executives it needs to consider its future.
As a result, a committee has been set up to develop a long-term strategy for where the game wants to be in years to come.
Against that backdrop, the world is closing in. French rugby union has poached three players within the past month. Two of those - Williams and St George Illawarra captain Mark Gasnier - are superstars.
In France, rugby union is a plaything for the rich and famous. The only limit is how much owners are prepared to spend.
"It's very easy to articulate the challenges and the problems that the game has got," NRL chief executive David Gallop said.
"It's very difficult to come up with solutions that will plug every hole. Large contracts are going to be on offer overseas.
"This sort of issue goes beyond the money and contracts and salary caps, it's about walking out on your team-mates ..."
Perhaps it's even bigger than that. Some think it's about rugby league's survival.
"I have never seen the game so vulnerable," Johns said.
"It's time for action. If it's too hard for the people who are running our game to call, have the dignity to stand aside and let someone else take control."
Gallop has called on the International Rugby Board to intervene and prevent Williams from switching codes, given he is still under contract at the Bulldogs.
He has also threatened to place a lifetime ban on Williams returning to the NRL if he does play rugby union.
It's a threat that is unlikely to concern Williams, given the riches that are on offer in European rugby union.
"I'll be calling on the IRB today to get involved on an urgent basis," Gallop said.
"Certainly we will be making an approach to them formally. They will know of this and they will know it is condoning international piracy to allow a player of either code to just walk out on a contract.
"They have control over the member nations and they can surely get involved to stop the registration of any contract in France.
"I would hope they would recognise that contractual stability is very important for both codes."
Gallop's cap-in-hand approach to the IRB drips of irony given rugby league spent years poaching rugby union players.
"If we're leaning on the IRB for help, we're in desperate trouble," Johns said.
Williams has been disillusioned with the game for several months, but his decision created shockwaves.
"I am bewildered and disappointed," Bulldogs legend Steve Mortimer said.
"I don't know if he is getting the right advice."
Read between the lines and Mortimer was referring to Williams' manager Khoder Nasser.
Nasser, who also manages world champion boxer Anthony Mundine, attempted to defend the indefensible last night. "There's a lot of things running through his mind and he obviously thought that was the best thing to do at the time," Nasser told the Nine Network.
"I haven't contacted him but I know Anthony Mundine has spoken to Sonny and that he said the only regret Sonny had was he couldn't tell all the fans or young kids that really look up to him the reasons why he had to do what he did.
"At the end of the day everyone is sitting here and thinking about their own selfish needs. Why hasn't he told us? No-one is thinking about Sonny and what Sonny did. Everyone is thinking about themselves. In time we'll see why."
However, he declined to reveal why Williams had turned his back on the Bulldogs.
Others were lining up to lambast Williams for walking out on his club, his team-mates and the fans.
"He's an adult," Gallop said.
"Whatever advice he's been getting, he has to make his own decision. And he has made that decision.
"I don't think we have to be blaming anyone else.
"To make this type of decision, without talking to anyone within your club, knowing how your team-mates might feel to be abandoned like this, indicates to me he is troubled."
In that respect, he shares something in common with the game he has abandoned.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24086435-5012431,00.html