I am already on record as being critical of JO'C and his advisers, managers, whatever wrt the manner by which they have led these tortuous 'negotiations' for many months whilst unquestionably affecting focus and stability within the Force as JO'C's current employers.
However:
- just days ago most posters here were congratulating JO'C as a player and expressing delight with his seeming decision to stay with the Force, yet, now that position has altered, and solely on the basis of a skilful PR action plan from RugbyWA, he's being derided as incontestably the guilty party who has acted arrogantly and greedily (or versions thereof) and indeed, congrats to that gutsy Force management for ending all discussions with him;
- all this, and we have heard absolutely zero of JO'C's version of events, or his perspective on his own personal strategy in this situation. What we have heard is the inevitably self-protecting and self-promoting version of events from RugbyWA who obviously decided a 'get on the front foot' media release was both smart and appropriate (I don't blame them for that, but let's not be naive as to the dynamics at play here);
- the Force has been going for 6 years without getting into the S1X finals. They have shamelessly and very prominently promoted JO'C as their prize star and if they have reaped a bout of egomaniacal behaviour from him, they are at least partly responsible for underpinning that at every turn in their commercial use of his talent and persona;
- JO'C is young, world class player who's smart enough to know that the Force need to significantly upgrade elements of its playing roster and equally hold on to its other top talent to stand any credible hope of breaking out of its 'coulda, mighta, maybe-one-day, never-quite-get-there' position within the S15. No talent of JO'C's calibre and young age, and with many good options, would want to sit in a franchise that never gets to the very top, and that he might demand some commitments from RugbyWA to improve the Force's chances might be disagreeable to some, but it's neither irrational nor unexpected, especially when the promotional spotlight is constantly upon him to deliver top billing and max game points for the Force;
- that he's egotistical, self-promoting, aware of his worth will be distasteful to some, but this is a harsh reality of top line, global sports when dealing with genuine star talent and franchises simply have to be clever and capable enough themselves to deal with star players like this and somehow get them to mutually acceptable outcomes. This won't be the first or last time a franchise has to grit its teeth and work with a brilliant 20 year old player who thinks he owns the world - that's the business sports franchises are in baby, suck it up or get out of it. Was RugbyWA smart to set JO'C a defined deadline to agree terms by? I'm not sure, that tactic can often badly backfire in complex deal-making situations where neither party is dominant - the S15 was over for the Force, it was not really essential for them to have signed JO'C by some immediate arbitrary date in June 2011;
- the hard business bottom line is that the Force needed JO'C more than JO'C needed them. Their crowd numbers and top line $ income are in linear decline, they have not held the Mitchells or Giteaus or even Crosses, and if they lose Pocock they will risk landing in a very precarious place as a commercially viable rugby franchise;
- when we see 81,000 fans at ANZ last night for SOO II, one asks: does rugby in competition with other codes need as many young, charismatic, promotable stars as it can get its hands on, and then hold them...I think the answer could be yes.
All I am arguing for here is some balance, a bit of understanding of the likely inner world of JO'C, and the consideration of the many factors at play in situations like this and that need to be weighed before a rushed - and very harsh - judgement re JO'C and his character and maturity is made.