I can't work out whether this 'review board' is genius or madness.
I mean, it's another fcking review. We've done about 28 since 2003, but we're supposed to believe it's THIS one that is going to fix everything. OK.
TBH it couldn't get much fucking worse. We're at rock bottom so these dickheads will claim dead cat bounce as overwhelming success.
I saw an article the other day about Rennie having to do what the Boks did, and cut some names who just aren't doing it.
"At least the fucken fuel's cheap and I don't have to deal with that tool from Play School, with the feral gronk and his ginsu boomerang."Probably still making his way from Perth to NSFW HQ to protest the Force getting cut.
"Fucken GPS schools GPS. This doesn't look anything like Darwin."
Anyone who wants to coach professional sport needs to be resilient.
he didn't fuck around at the Chiefs. Didn't matter what your name was. If you didn't perform for a few games he'd show you to the pine and give the next bloke in line a look.I saw an article the other day about Rennie having to do what the Boks did, and cut some names who just aren't doing it.
WOAH, WOAH, WOAH, hold your horses, you can't just wade in and review the latest review plan so abruptly. Need to send your review of the latest upcoming review upstairs for review first.I can't work out whether this 'review board' is genius or madness.
I mean, it's another fcking review. We've done about 28 since 2003, but we're supposed to believe it's THIS one that is going to fix everything.
I can't work out whether this 'review board' is genius or madness.
I mean, it's another fcking review. We've done about 28 since 2003, but we're supposed to believe it's THIS one that is going to fix everything. OK.
But.... there are so many different warring tribes in Aussie rugby at the moment, that just getting them in a room to bang out an agreed list of priorities might actually work.
If nothing else it's pleasing to see mentions of women and WA in the initial list, though no doubt there will be plenty of 'good rugby men' from the usual corners.
".....that tool from Play School, with the feral gronk and his ginsu boomerang."
WOAH, WOAH, WOAH, hold your horses, you can't just wade in and review the latest review plan so abruptly. Need to send your review of the latest upcoming review upstairs for review first.
There are a few fundamentals anyone wanting to put a plan for RA has to accept, which I think many don't.
Number one, it is a multi-million dollar business, not a social club. It has employees, overheads and running costs, and must generate sufficient income to cover them. It can borrow money, but any debt has to be serviced. If it continues to lose money, it must fail.
Number two, it is in the entertainment business. All it's revenue relies entirely on the number of eyes and ears engaged by the product. That includes bums on seats at games, broadcast deals which rely entirely on the number of people who will watch/listen to the games, thus allowing broadcasters to sell advertising and monetise it. Likewise sponsorships rely on the number of people who will see the sponsor being associated with the game, and thus attracted to that sponsor's products.
Thirdly, the shareholders are the rugby community, the so-called 'grassroots' we all get so excited about, everything from Shute Shield to Mudgee under 12's. The continually called for funding of 'grassroots', however you allocate that, is basically the paying of dividends to the shareholders. Like any business, dividends can only be paid when you generate a profit, generated by (2) to ensure you can cover (1).
There's a lot of talk about culture, junior development etc etc, but from an RA point of view, the ability to do all of that comes back to these three essential elements, and any plan that doesn't comprehensively address these three cannot be sustainable.
Gnostic, you are exactly correct, which is why I said this is what had to be accepted in a plan, not what is currently happening.
I mean, theoretically it wouldn't matter whether it was the grassroots (the shareholders as I referred to them) who were watching the game or someone else, just as long as there was enough of them to produce a profit to pay a dividend to the shareholders ie provide funding for the grassroots.
The reality, of course, is that the people already involved in rugby are the obvious market, and any plan has to entice them to come and support the professional product. To be truly successful, however, I think they have to attract a larger audience then just the rugby faithful. And this, of course can be done. There are thousands of people who follow AFL who don't, and haven't, played the game nor are they involved in a local club.
Points 3 and 2 should be linked but they are not and haven't been for some time. By that I mean the "grassroots you speak of are not watching or paying to attend the games that these "elite" business people are putting on. Hence they are not a business, they are a socialist enterprise existing off the shareholders continually tipping in their fees etc.
As long as we get an upgrade on Castle, I really don't care
Units like Gallop are available and would be an upgrade