All i see is an old man whining about 'how things were better back in my day'. They invariably weren't.
I don't agree much with Peter Fitz but this is a good tweet.
Have a look at the team lists from 1988 and the point he is making.
Note the Randwick team with no less than 3 Wallaby coaches playing.
It’s just people yearning to go back to the good old days.I don't get the appeal. I have three avenues where I can watch Wallabies play; NRC, Super Rugby and International matches. Why do I need to see the playing at club level?
I'd much rather see the up and comers playing at club land, those vying for Super Contracts with the higher tiered acting in support roles and engaging with the fans. That's to me more worth while than a wallaby level player beating up guys who have to work for a living.
RUPA (or the iteration they were at the time) were leading the negotiation. They went out of their way to keep the players informed of what was going on. They knew what the deal was.
It’s just people yearning to go back to the good old days.
Alas, you can’t turn the clock back.
We really have lost something along the way.
Well I know that a load of deals were done at an individual level. Some players took less than what the WRC were offering. I never heard of any collective bargaining at that stage that's for sure.
That's what club footy is all about. We really have lost something along the way.
WRC was the Packer bid that never got off the ground.
Ultimately the Australian players all signed with the ARU. The issue is that initially they wanted 100% of the broadcast revenue that the ARU were to receive through the deal and ended up settling with 90% which is still massively over the top.
The first RUPA President, Tony Dempsey wrote a book that went into many of the details. Reg reviewed it a few years ago. I am pretty sure it is the one and only book review on this website. http://www.greenandgoldrugby.com/book-review-for-love-money-by-tony-dempsey/
All i see is an old man whining about 'how things were better back in my day'. They invariably weren't.
WRC was the Packer bid that never got off the ground.
Ultimately the Australian players all signed with the ARU. The issue is that initially they wanted 100% of the broadcast revenue that the ARU were to receive through the deal and ended up settling with 90% which is still massively over the top.
The first RUPA President, Tony Dempsey wrote a book that went into many of the details. Reg reviewed it a few years ago. I am pretty sure it is the one and only book review on this website. http://www.greenandgoldrugby.com/book-review-for-love-money-by-tony-dempsey/
Well I know blokes that signed prior to all that.
Yet a club mate of mine is celebrating his 400th game for Wests; https://www.couriermail.com.au/spor...f5HDG5eQMso-GClwQVaPktAKlsH_zusMkUPVCA6Yku__U
Perhaps they should stop sending all the Ponies to the glue factory...
Plenty of people did sign with WRC (particularly just about all the Springboks) but ultimately none of those contracts went anywhere because it never happened.
I don't agree much with Peter Fitz but this is a good tweet.
Have a look at the team lists from 1988 and the point he is making.
Note the Randwick team with no less than 3 Wallaby coaches playing.
As I recall the Wallabies negotiations were lead by Phil Kearns and the ABs by Sean Fitzpatrick (captains at the time) but when they went to hook up on a videoconference with SA the Boks didn't show because Louis Luyt, the powerbroker in SA rugby then, had got involved. Without the Boks (and a few NZ players - Jeff Wilson and Josh Kronfeld had signed with the NZRU) the WRC deal collapsed. There's a good book about it, essentially the economics of it were flaky - the idea that placing a few key players in Asian teams would somehow stimulate huge support in those countries without a rugby history was flawed.