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Shute Shield 2016

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Blackers13

Syd Malcolm (24)
M2B v Randi-Wix. This is the year of the West. Draw 20 all

You might require medical attention to get that splinter out Hugh! If it's the year of the West back yourself and the MTB! Seriously though, with the work that's gone in since the end of last season to close out games, a 20 all draw would be worse than a comprehensive loss. MTB to win at home.
 

Dave Beat

Paul McLean (56)
Dave Harvey
Dallan Murhpy
Hugh Perrett
Tim Davidson
Andrew Shaw
Angus Roberts
Alex Rokoboro
Luke Holmes
Ryan Hodgson
Brock James
Jono Jenkins

I know if i went hunting there would be a truckload more;
Jed Hollaway - has been great YTD.
Reece Hodge - 2013 Colts 10 / 2014 off / 2015 1st 12 - 2016 started at Rebels.
Few years back Neville Grade / Rebels / Wobs Squad.
Aaloatoa Boys
Coleman from Parra

I could twist it around when Super players come back to SS they cant hack it - Last year
  • Wicks had Hoiles / Kells / Bealle / Horwitz
  • Uni would also be a good example.
But I chose not to do that as it is a team game and I know there is alot more to it.
You have isolated players and expect them to star and make an impact when they weren't / aren't first choice player - your above point doesn't carry alot of arguement.

@Wilsonmate - I have been shat on by a Pelican once - it stinks.;)
 

Blackers13

Syd Malcolm (24)
Western Sydney inspired by Qantas Wallaby for Finals

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3/18/2016
By Patrick Foulkes
160317%20JGC%20TPN%20edit%20.jpg

Tatafu Polota-Nau visited the Western Sydney Junior Gold Cup team.​
The Western Sydney U17s side have had a visit from one of the Parramatta Two Blues own in Qantas Wallaby, Tatafu Polota-Nau who visited the side at training on Wednesday.
The team was preparing for the Southern Conference Final of the BMW JGC which will take place at TG Milner, Eastwood at 2pm on Sunday afternoon against the ACT.
Polota-Nau surprised the team at training to wish them the best of luck and to meet the players who would be representing Western Sydney in the BMW Junior Gold Cup Finals.
A stalwart of Rugby in Sydney’s West Tatafu had drafted a letter that went to each player focusing on the team’s journey to the Final and wishing them the best for the match.
For the young Western Sydney side, it was a great opportunity to meet one of their Wallaby heroes as U17s Head Coach, Jack Lloyd attested: “Our guys got an amazing kick out of Tatafu’s visit and it was a real surprise for them.
“The team has been working really hard since we started pre-season in November and for them to have come this far, has been a credit to the hard work they have put it.
“Tatafu’s letter really touched the kids to meet their idol who came from the same part of Sydney they did, it simply transcends Rugby-It was just a really great moment.”
The Western Sydney team won all five of its pool matches with a points difference of 120, the second best in the age group of the competition.
In the Northern Conference Final on Tuesday Brisbane won the U17s against Western Australia in a tight 26-24 victory and in the U15s Western Australia defeated Brisbane City Gold 26-10.
The winner of the Southern Conference Final in Sydney on Sunday will travel to Brisbane for the Junior Gold Cup U17s Final which will be a curtain raiser match to the Queensland Reds taking on the Waratahs at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane on Sunday 27 March.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Would love to.

Only Randwick and Sydney Uni have their full 2015 reports available.

The 2 clubs that are financially better off than the rest of the SS clubs. Interesting, and not an attack on them. Ask the presidents of the other clubs and you'll get a blanket answer
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Indeed. They play for junior sub-district clubs.


Hooper played for Manly reps from under 14's up until 19's

Horne also went through the SD's colts program. Sure both went there differently to others, but thats 2 examples, apposed to the vast majority that didn't, going back, oh i don't know, about 100 years of rugby history

They don't and wouldn't not play sub districts rugby that is ridiculous, it feeds into nothing, unlike the SS and QLD premier rugby.

I wonder what on earth would've happened to all the rugby players throughout history if comps like the SS and Premier Rugby weren't around?

How many world cups, bledisloe cups, tri nations & grand slam tours have we won since the ARU has adopted the idea of hand picking kids from the age of 14 as opposed to the former pattern where Aus schoolboys would go play club rugby against grown men with more experience, who are physically developed and have a professional work ethic and temperament, rather than being given a tracksuit and fed up through the 'nurturing program' and told that they're gods gift to rugby and that will always be the case.

It kills competition, it rips the soul out of the wallaby jumper and produces a teenager that doesn't need to work hard because he's already 'made it'
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Nope. Never said that. In fact have given credit to the junior system. The junior village clubs are where players come from, just not senior semi-elite teams, where funnily enough the vast majority of the budget goes (just going back to previous comments of mine about financial matters).

How about instead of resorting to personal insults because I dare not share your view, mount a coherent argument as to the development that the Shute Shield provides that cannot be replicated, and why it could not be replicated.

Your response to my comment that the Shute Shield does not adequately prepare players outside full time professional structures is just petulant and immature and does not address the mounting number of experienced campaigners who join Super Rugby teams in their mid 20s or later with a wealth of premier grade experience and absolutely struggle with the step up. Just off the top of my head the following players have been shown to be nowhere near where they needed to be:

Dave Harvey
Dallan Murhpy
Hugh Perrett
Tim Davidson
Andrew Shaw
Angus Roberts
Alex Rokoboro
Luke Holmes
Ryan Hodgson
Brock James
Jono Jenkins

These are all players that spent a significant amount of time playing in Premier Competitions, many were very good players at that level, but were unable to then step up to the next level despite this extensive experience.

Why not instead of just resorting to petty name calling with little real substance, you provide evidence or reasoning to support why the Shute Shield itself is such a vital and irreplaceable resource in it's current structure and how what it does is because of the good work by clubs, not by the fact that the structure protects them and ensures that decent players gravitate to them by virtue of that?

To quote the GAGR Rules, "Only a complete knob jockey resorts to personal insults anyway."


Personal? You want to talk about personal? You must use the same PR team as Bill Pulver, because how do you not see that it is 'personal' to uproot a competition which is run mostly by volunteer's, a lot of whom are/were life members, or who are on their way to being recognised by their respective clubs, on a pittance or to no financial gain and to turn around to the majority of this countries rugby players and say "we've already determined your not good enough, so we'll take your club, your chance away except for the select few and put them into a 'professional program' because..." i still don't know the reason, that's what is petulant and childish. Its an absolute miracle that these competitions produce such awesome running rugby despite everything the ARU has done to shut them down all for the glorification of their massive ego's to keep their job and pay packet relevant, because what could the volunteer's at club rugby possibly know about the game? Again, what is really petulant and childish here?

5 consecutive Bledisloe's between 98-2002 (did those wallabies come from club rugby or the NRC???), 0 since 2003, 3 Tri Nation's since 1996 (200,01,11), 1 World Cup since 1999. Do you think its just a coincidence that the VAST MAJORITY of those great players to win those competitions originally went through club rugby into super rugby into the wallabies? Or is that some weird coincidence? If it ain't broke don't fix it, unless you rip the guts of those competitions which have adequately produced great wallabies for decades, now it needs fixing, not to finish off the job of killing them all together.
 

Dave Beat

Paul McLean (56)
Personal? You want to talk about personal? You must use the same PR team as Bill Pulver, because how do you not see that it is 'personal' to uproot a competition which is run mostly by volunteer's, a lot of whom are/were life members, or who are on their way to being recognised by their respective clubs, on a pittance or to no financial gain and to turn around to the majority of this countries rugby players and say "we've already determined your not good enough, so we'll take your club, your chance away except for the select few and put them into a 'professional program' because." i still don't know the reason, that's what is petulant and childish. Its an absolute miracle that these competitions produce such awesome running rugby despite everything the ARU has done to shut them down all for the glorification of their massive ego's to keep their job and pay packet relevant, because what could the volunteer's at club rugby possibly know about the game? Again, what is really petulant and childish here?

5 consecutive Bledisloe's between 98-2002 (did those wallabies come from club rugby or the NRC???), 0 since 2003, 3 Tri Nation's since 1996 (200,01,11), 1 World Cup since 1999. Do you think its just a coincidence that the VAST MAJORITY of those great players to win those competitions originally went through club rugby into super rugby into the wallabies? Or is that some weird coincidence? If it ain't broke don't fix it, unless you rip the guts of those competitions which have adequately produced great wallabies for decades, now it needs fixing, not to finish off the job of killing them all together.


Yep, but at the same time we have also changed, and to manage change, the SS clubs have lifted standards as well which should nor be missed.

16 years Nokia ruled the mobile phone - where are they now?

Only referenced that as clubs have grown with the times, and if you ask me some have grown / evolved better than the Super Teams above them.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Personal? You want to talk about personal? You must use the same PR team as Bill Pulver, because how do you not see that it is 'personal' to uproot a competition which is run mostly by volunteer's, a lot of whom are/were life members, or who are on their way to being recognised by their respective clubs, on a pittance or to no financial gain and to turn around to the majority of this countries rugby players and say "we've already determined your not good enough, so we'll take your club, your chance away except for the select few and put them into a 'professional program' because." i still don't know the reason, that's what is petulant and childish. Its an absolute miracle that these competitions produce such awesome running rugby despite everything the ARU has done to shut them down all for the glorification of their massive ego's to keep their job and pay packet relevant, because what could the volunteer's at club rugby possibly know about the game? Again, what is really petulant and childish here?

5 consecutive Bledisloe's between 98-2002 (did those wallabies come from club rugby or the NRC???), 0 since 2003, 3 Tri Nation's since 1996 (200,01,11), 1 World Cup since 1999. Do you think its just a coincidence that the VAST MAJORITY of those great players to win those competitions originally went through club rugby into super rugby into the wallabies? Or is that some weird coincidence? If it ain't broke don't fix it, unless you rip the guts of those competitions which have adequately produced great wallabies for decades, now it needs fixing, not to finish off the job of killing them all together.


By the way, you only managed to come up with 11 examples of players that didn't work out in Professional Rugby, and that's entirely the clubs fault is it?

Rubbish

The fact that you only found 11 is laughable, that's going to prove a point is it? Rokobaro a wallaby? Laughable, if he spent some time actually working for a spot and developing against guys who were physically advanced, experienced and had some sort of work ethic he might have been decent. But that didn't happen did it, blame the clubs? Get a grip
 
T

Train Without a Station

Guest
I wonder what on earth would've happened to all the rugby players throughout history if comps like the SS and Premier Rugby weren't around?


Probably play in other competitions. It's that arrogance that I disagree so strongly with. If not for Shute Shield, players would just not exist.

How many games per year does a Manly rep team play? Every time we talk about this I get a different answer from different people at different clubs.

When did Rob Horne play colts? As a schoolboy? He debuted for the Waratahs the next year.

apposed to the vast majority that didn't, going back, oh i don't know, about 100 years of rugby history

That's your problem. Your view is based on what we've always done in the past. Not what's best in the future. Your comments about younger players coming through club rugby shows your ignorance of the rest of the world. Rugby does not exist in a vacuum. Australian Rugby competing with AFL, NRL and European Rugby for the best young players. You can say whatever you think is best, but unless that prevents aus rugby losing players because of a structure that's too much of a throwback to amateur days, it's irrelevant really.

We have only just reached a point where JGC players are now coming through to senior rugby. These provides a pathway that was never previously there.

You completely ignore my points. Saying players won't play sub-districts because it feeds into nothing is not answering my question.

It feeds into nothing because of the monopoly that the Shute Shield has on the semi-elite position.

If Shute Shield didn't exist would the franchises just not bother seeing who's out there? AFL teams look at suburban leagues and country footy to see who stands out and may shine in a better environment. Also if it didn't exist the players would play in the Kentwell Cup which would by default become premier grade.

But anyway my point is not to go through hypothetical scenarios. Just noting that your whole argument on the benefit, is based on the system that limits that benefit to the SS Clubs and protects them as a result.

You can attribute all you want to the club system. But most of your argument is BS. The question is how much of this have we won since players capable of playing for their state and the Wallabies almost immediately out of school like Horan, Little, Eales, Lynagh, Campese, Willie O, Herbert, Tune, Roff and their contemporaries have moved on.

Many of the remaining players of the golden age were Wallabies the year after they left school. Fuck that club rugby system must be potent to turn them into Wallabies within one season of playing in it. That or they were just naturally gifted and close to that level when they stepped into club rugby and Australia reaped the rewards. So the demise may be due to players coming from the levels below grade rugby not being the standard they once were.
 
T

Train Without a Station

Guest
Personal? You want to talk about personal? You must use the same PR team as Bill Pulver


No. I'm just trying to engage in a logical discussion. You're resorting to name calling and taking offence to the fact that a system that is largely amateur is being questioned about whether it can provide the benefits for professional rugby.
 

eastman

Arch Winning (36)
Wilsonmate I think you are entirely missing the point of what TWAS is saying- there is nothing inherently special about the Shute Shield clubs. That is, if they ceased to exist it would not be the end of rugby, the subdistrict clubs would rise and become the next level. Good rugby players would not completely stop playing rugby, they'd simply choose another avenue.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
How many subbies clubs are saying they should receive ARU funding ILTW?

The disdain is that the SS Clubs create a situation where they themselves inflate the going rate for players (by competing) and then ask for the ARU to assist in funding their programs.

Super franchises bring in revenue for the game. Does a 2nd Sydney team increase TV markets (which increases value), help appeal to new players (specifically juniors). Also you have to consider would a second Sydney team dilute the Waratahs support? Considering the state has been bailed out by the ARU twice and barely broke a profit after winning the title, surely this would just create 2 franchises needing the ARU to prop them up.

I'm not saying dismembering the Shute Shield is good for the game. I'm asking, if all the supporters want to say how integral it is, provide some reasoning behind this, and how if it was dismembered, it could not be replicated, and the disadvantage would be more than the time lag where new teams need to get up to speed with the level.

Right now part of the benefits that the Shute Shield and their teams provide is due to the fact they are protected as Shute Shield Clubs. Colleagues couldn't just instantly replace Easts. But a huge factor is the fact that all of the talent has gravitated to Easts by virtue of their place in the Shute Shield. Colleagues have no incentive to become a Shute Shield level enterprise because there is no mechanism for them to progress.

Now if the SS was disbanded the strongest clubs would form the Kentwell Cup and by default that would be the premier grade. If there were non SS Clubs there would be a lag while they get up to speed. What I want to be told is why if this was to occur, the game world be worse off, other than the lag of a couple of years while clubs get up to speed.

Basically what are (and can) the clubs doing better going forward, not retell us about the past and say that's why it's so important.

I'm not saying that's the way forward, I'm just saying justify it more than what amounts closely to "all the best players pass through here because the status quo provides no alternative for them to". The system funnels players to the SS clubs as it is.

I'll be the first to admit that players like Jordy Reid and Caydern Neville would not be playing Super Rugby if not for the Shute Shield but how many clubs beyond Uni and Manly are preparing numbers players for that step up?

We can talk about junior development but that would still occur. Almost every sub-union in Australia has junior representative teams without a premier grade team in that state's competition. The Gold Coast had one before the Gold Coast Breakers and continues to have one now that team has become part of Bond University. Despite the lack of alliance with the Hospitals Cup team, players like Jarred Butler still have progressed through the system.

Don't tell me what happens, the same as it happens every. Tell me what's unique and cannot be replaced, or will drop in quality permanently without the current system.


Not true, all super rugby franchises are running at a loss, not to mention the rebels and force who are furiously bleeding money and the ARU has propped them up, in excess of 4 million dollars. So your wrong there

If you want to know whats unique about competitions like the SS?

1. Its tribal, its geographic, there is an established supporter base. It matters to people, there's a connection within the communities a club surrounds, it has an atmosphere and history that surrounds it. Even for the players, it means something to them, that's where they grow up, that's what they aspired to, that's what they knew and that's what they love.

There is nothing like that in the NRC and there never will be, give me figures on supporters attending games, give me viewing figures of a type of "revolutionary rugby" which the ARU has "pissed away" its money on. Really revolutionary, fox sports could barely attract 10,00 viewers NATIONALLY. There are no viewing figures for the 57 year history of the Shute Shield, however, If you compare comparatively the money spent on the NRC compared to the shute shield, per capiter, the Shute Shield is producing superior viewing results at a tiny percentage of the cost. Cry me a river ARU its your own fault your broke.

2. Ask players where they'd rather be, SS/Premier rugby or the NRC. I have had direct contact with players and staff in certain NRC franchises (who asked not be made public as they're trying to do whats best for the game) The players do not care, they have no reason to be there, they don't feel like they're playing for anything. They're performances aren't recognised, the same guys that are picked ahead of them in club competitions are the same guys who get picked from the NRC into super rugby. They feel extremely strongly that if that's the case, they would want to play Shute Shield or have a crack overseas and try to make a living out of what limited time in rugby players have. In some cases ie Matt Sandell has not even played a game for the Sydney Stars (source wikipedia profile) and he's on the waratahs bench! So to say the NRC is a development stage is a load of crap.

There are also serious essentials lacking for sides to provide players. I quote "we go week to week, sometimes not being able to afford ice to treat inury, or even lollies for players to get a sugar rush then training" Its absurd to even suggest that this is a viable replacement to the system that i feel is better suited to continued development of Australian Rugby players.

Also, your quote that "Super Rugby brings in revenue to the game" is literally and incomprehensibly untrue. Quote from an article in 'The Roar'

Today we see five Super Rugby teams, with only two just making the top half of the competition. Australia is ranked sixth in the world and the ARU has announced a $6.3 million deficit.
The ARU is technically broke, as are four out of five of the Super franchises. Funding for Club Rugby has been reduced from $100k in 2009, to $28k in 2011 and to nil in 2015.
We do however have a third tier.
Rugby participants, the ARU proudly announced, are up by 16 per cent. This however is misleading as the numbers are bolstered by carnival participants (whatever this means) and strong growth in women’s rugby.
The number of serious participants is actually close to 248,000. It is from this group our Super and national teams come – and this is the real problem.
Australian rugby does not have enough boys playing rugby. This is not a new problem, but has got worse and is now critical. Club rugby participants rose by 1 per cent and despite the clubs best efforts this is not enough.
The ARU approach through the late 90s and 2000s has been to pick the low hanging fruit via talent identification programs. This in fact exacerbates the problem as many late-developing, but talented players are turned off and change codes or give sport away if they are not selected in a program.
There is no effective net to catch the late developers.

 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Wilsonmate I think you are entirely missing the point of what TWAS is saying- there is nothing inherently special about the Shute Shield clubs. That is, if they ceased to exist it would not be the end of rugby, the subdistrict clubs would rise and become the next level. Good rugby players would not completely stop playing rugby, they'd simply choose another avenue.



Please tell me what is so inherently special about the NRC then? It bleeds money, players don't want to be there and as far as development goes, Matt Sandell...hello????
 

Goldust

Bob McCowan (2)
Train, clearly the SS sticks in your claw. Thats ok, I am going to enjoy having the SS back this weekend and not lose sleep over what the rugby landscape looks like. Hopefully, you too are out watching some rugby somewhere. Enjoy.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
Probably play in other competitions. It's that arrogance that I disagree so strongly with. If not for Shute Shield, players would just not exist.

How many games per year does a Manly rep team play? Every time we talk about this I get a different answer from different people at different clubs.

When did Rob Horne play colts? As a schoolboy? He debuted for the Waratahs the next year.



That's your problem. Your view is based on what we've always done in the past. Not what's best in the future. Your comments about younger players coming through club rugby shows your ignorance of the rest of the world. Rugby does not exist in a vacuum. Australian Rugby competing with AFL, NRL and European Rugby for the best young players. You can say whatever you think is best, but unless that prevents aus rugby losing players because of a structure that's too much of a throwback to amateur days, it's irrelevant really.

We have only just reached a point where JGC players are now coming through to senior rugby. These provides a pathway that was never previously there.

You completely ignore my points. Saying players won't play sub-districts because it feeds into nothing is not answering my question.

It feeds into nothing because of the monopoly that the Shute Shield has on the semi-elite position.

If Shute Shield didn't exist would the franchises just not bother seeing who's out there? AFL teams look at suburban leagues and country footy to see who stands out and may shine in a better environment. Also if it didn't exist the players would play in the Kentwell Cup which would by default become premier grade.

But anyway my point is not to go through hypothetical scenarios. Just noting that your whole argument on the benefit, is based on the system that limits that benefit to the SS Clubs and protects them as a result.

You can attribute all you want to the club system. But most of your argument is BS. The question is how much of this have we won since players capable of playing for their state and the Wallabies almost immediately out of school like Horan, Little, Eales, Lynagh, Campese, Willie O, Herbert, Tune, Roff and their contemporaries have moved on.

Many of the remaining players of the golden age were Wallabies the year after they left school. Fuck that club rugby system must be potent to turn them into Wallabies within one season of playing in it. That or they were just naturally gifted and close to that level when they stepped into club rugby and Australia reaped the rewards. So the demise may be due to players coming from the levels below grade rugby not being the standard they once were.


Where do players go now? Rugby League, AFL and Soccer. Thats where they go, not subbies. What i'm saying is that if this is the current trend, that is far more likely to have happened if SS and alike competitions had never existed
 

AussieDominance

Trevor Allan (34)
I am glad you have the effort Dave Beat and wilsonmate cause I don't. Let's just try run Australian Rugby without the Shute Shield clubs.

Has it ever been inconceivable that some players are perhaps not good enough to make Super Rugby and that it has nothing to do with the pathway they came through. (Referring to the 11 players you named).

They are more likely to make it through the Shute Shield though as due to it's structure and development program is the best club rugby competition in Australia.
 

eastman

Arch Winning (36)
WIlsonmate, just to play Devil's Advocate if SS is so special/ tribal and connects to people, why does it not make any money? And if you're solution is that it doesn't receive funding well then that completely misses the point.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
WIlsonmate, just to play Devil's Advocate if SS is so special/ tribal and connects to people, why does it not make any money? And if you're solution is that it doesn't receive funding well then that completely misses the point.


Ive quoted statistics in an earlier post, but ill list them here too

Today we see five Super Rugby teams, with only two just making the top half of the competition. Australia is ranked sixth in the world and the ARU has announced a $6.3 million deficit.
The ARU is technically broke, as are four out of five of the Super franchises. Funding for Club Rugby has been reduced from $100k in 2009, to $28k in 2011 and to nil in 2015.
 
W

Wilsonmate

Guest
I am glad you have the effort Dave Beat and wilsonmate cause I don't. Let's just try run Australian Rugby without the Shute Shield clubs.

Has it ever been inconceivable that some players are perhaps not good enough to make Super Rugby and that it has nothing to do with the pathway they came through. (Referring to the 11 players you named).

They are more likely to make it through the Shute Shield though as due to it's structure and development program is the best club rugby competition in Australia.


Amen
 
T

Train Without a Station

Guest
Please tell me what is so inherently special about the NRC then? It bleeds money, players don't want to be there and as far as development goes, Matt Sandell.hello????


It concentrates the best talent in the country into a competition of 9 teams (now 8).

It doesn't bleed money. It is primarily funded by sponsorship and broadcaster. Who only are stumping up more cash due to it being a national competition.
 
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