McHunt
International Rep
Contributor
- Aug 25, 2018
- 17,984
- 31,045
you missed the point no training squad not on a nfl team period IE not getting paid in any form from nfleven those on the NFL training squads would make more than they would get in the NRL
you missed the point no training squad not on a nfl team period IE not getting paid in any form from nfl
I hate pvl as much as the next man but whats the big deal?it wont take cap space,it will reward clubs willing to put in the work.Then there is less than zero % chance they will be good enough to even make a QLD cup side ... and even if they could make a QLD cup side, no one relocates to the other side of the world for effectively a part time wage
Kayo show from last year, was fun to watch. About American rejects from pro sports playing league nowWhy are we bending over backwards for NFL rejects?
Biggest issue for me is their non wada drug testing in American Football.Kayo show from last year, was fun to watch. About American rejects from pro sports playing league now
Grid Iron is even more tedious than AFL. The only thing it has going for it is money and talent pool.I don’t see the harm and although very unlikely that many or any will have success, it will potentially bring some extra eyes to the sport.
Though there are already plenty of Americans playing in b leagues around the world who American sport fans wouldn’t care at all about.
I completely forgot they brought that guy over, thanks for posting that, serious blast from the pastBen and Shane Walker tried this in 2018 with Silas Redd. He didn't even play Cup and went home.
Impressive athlete but just couldn't grasp League.
Nothing lost though.
I don't think you understand how good the athletes are that miss out. And these blokes that miss out, are jobless and will need to go find a career. I'm sure a quite a few of them would be enticed over to Australia for 80k/yr to trial for a chance at a professional sporting career. I hope the Broncos do it, and I'd be targeting the bigger units to play prop, not a "skill" position.Then there is less than zero % chance they will be good enough to even make a QLD cup side ... and even if they could make a QLD cup side, no one relocates to the other side of the world for effectively a part time wage
It also depends whether PVL is just getting ahead of any enquiries that might come through after the Vegas match or in training sessions with other athletes. Better to float this stuff out there now rather than face grumbles about it later down the track if some club get cut a cap break for some random American who takes the bait.There is actually huge potential there, simply due to how many freaken Americans there are. It was discussed when Hayne went over there. He was a freak in our small pond but there would be hundreds of equivalent, if not better, potential players over there. The attributes required to be a League player aren't isolated to any particular population (though some show certain aspects towards certain positions, like big Polynesian forwards, or strong fast outside backs from Fiji or PNG etc), the hindrance would be the lack of exposure to league, both as entertainment that is watched and familiarised with, and actually playing and learning from a young age. But that has to start somewhere.
https://www.couriermail.com.au/ques...3/news-story/68c4f2804c03eacb2fd539fc8d864987 if you got access, lists what players are linked/signed to which clubs
Anyone able to post who we signed?
TriggeredAward-winning CEO Sir Peter V'landy's says they will/might/could scrap the cap or make concessions for clubs who sign American talent:
“It’s a wonderful idea. You only need half-a-dozen Americans to succeed and you would have a whole new following in the US because millions of sports fans in the States would follow their journey. There’s thousands of athletes that miss out on making the NFL and with the skill level of those players, they could easily adapt to rugby league very quickly. They are brilliant athletes."“To encourage the clubs, we need to allow salary-cap relief, so if you bring an American player out, it won‘t be counted in the salary cap.”“It’s an initiative we want to trial. I will hear some negatives from people saying it won’t work, but we’ve seen a lot more Polynesian players come through and succeed in the NRL. To me it if it works, it‘s a huge bonanza for rugby league and if it fails, there’s nothing really lost.”“The Pasifika club is a joint venture with the Australian government, no doubt about that. It couldn’t be done without their support. The government will invest in an NRL team in the Pacific because they believe in soft diplomacy. I am confident the government would continue to support an NRL team. It doesn’t matter who is in power. Our relationship with our Pacific neighbours is crucial to national security. The government will be committed to this for a decade and beyond. There will be hundreds of Pacific and PNG stars of the future that will be produced out of expansion. PNG alone has more than 10 million people and rugby league is the No.1 sport there. They have the talent base to support an NRL team.”