Strewthcobber
Simon Poidevin (60)
Given all the departures (and returns) its quite hard to come up with the 25 players or so who will be on a top up for next year....
But despite that he could help to the promotion of Super Rugby in OZ. The Media loves him, so Super Rugby would have more advertisement than the AFL lol
The League media will go through the cycles of grief like they did with Folau. And, if he's a success, player agents all over the NRL will start to use him as a lever.
Mungo fans will cream their daks over one of theirs conquering yet another sport.
Who can't pay him what he thinks he deserves.
Now, all the Super Rugby clubs are running at or close to a loss and the ARU are scrambling for ideas to to right the Super Rugby ship and get it healthy, and get the clubs to be operating in the black.
We all know bums on seats (at games and in front of the TV) makes money.
Is this the ARU having a crack at trying to bolster the Super Rugby competition and build the Super Rugby image and brand?
The NRC can't market off Wallaby players, but they could market off "marque" players, along the lines of what the A league did by bringing in a big name or two.
Super Rugby and NRC have the same problem: no easy FTA access. Can't really solve that problem for the good of rugby as a whole with a few extra bums on seats.
Very true, but we have to start somewhere.
FTA is the key, but if nobody wants to watch it then does it matter if its on FTA? It's hard to sell something nobody watches, and even harder to sell after it rates poorly on FTA.
If the Hayne train adds audience and interest, then it adds value to the product and increases the value to FTA and heading in the direction we need.
I think you'd have to be a sky blue supporter to think that Groucho.
Most balanced observers understand that the Waratahs will be the recipients of the most benefit of the current ARU top up system, through no special treatment of the ARU.
There's limited cash available, the ARU needs to contract on the basis of what the Wallabies need, not leave that up to the discretion of each franchise equally. As a result, with NSW producing a large number of players, a large number will choose to be based in NSW, despite being able to earn their top up wherever they go in Australia.
That's the reality of the situation and what it needs to deliver.
Giving a player an ARU top up, when he's not eligible for the Wallabies, to play for the Waratahs who do receive the most benefit of the top up system would be flagrant favoritism for the Waratahs. Does anybody honestly believe if any other state brought forward the prospect of a player not eligible for the Wallabies, that the ARU would cough anything up for a top up?
You can't help where the Wallabies on Contracts choose to play, but helping one Super Rugby team, who has the most Wallabies, with money for a player not to help the national cause? Is the ARU going to establish a marquee fund for each franchise? What if the Force think bringing Aaron Sandilands across in the second row might be a huge marketing coup?
Very true, but we have to start somewhere.
FTA is the key, but if nobody wants to watch it then does it matter if its on FTA? It's hard to sell something nobody watches, and even harder to sell after it rates poorly on FTA.
If the Hayne train adds audience and interest, then it adds value to the product and increases the value to FTA and heading in the direction we need.
Yes I've read elsewhere that there is no top uo.I wonder if he's speaking about the code more broadly when he says 'we will make a compelling offer'.
He doesn't say if that offer will come from the ARU, or a Super team.
.
Wouldn't mind if the ARU paid him to play in the NRC whilst he's still a rookie convert. No amount of money in any other circumstance will bring that competition significant media exposure. It would be money well spent. Also I'd be pretty miffed if he missed his first preseason with the Tahs playing in Japan. He'd be next to useless when he returns.