Origin killing off RL

Which is the best football code? Here you can have it out with other football fans.
Post Reply
Swans4ever
Coach
Coach
Posts: 5942
Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2013 8:52 pm
Team: Sydney Swans
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Origin killing off RL

Post by Swans4ever »

ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES

By STEVE MASCORD


When you think about it dispassionately, representative football is quite a Victorian concept: “You’ve been chosen to represent the district – hip, hip, hurray!”

This quaint old convention is almost completely incompatible with an age where athletes are employed full time by their clubs and money comes from television rights for the club competition, not gate receipts. The only way representative games can remain relevant is through weight of money. In cricket and rugby union, as examples, representative competitions make more money than the club competitions.

In, say, American basketball and baseball, the national teams play quite infrequently because the club scene generates the cash. In soccer – that’s what I still call it here – and ice hockey, they seem to have something of a balance because both theatres are very profitable. It’s no coincidence that both these sports are in the Olympics. Rugby league is not.

In our sport, the only representative competition that makes money in Australia is State of Origin. The spectre of players pulling out uninjured, or playing in a curtain-raiser in preference to a full international (in the case of Anthony Milford), this weekend illustrates the disarray and apathy at other levels of representative rugby league. The authorities trying to encourage and foster under 20s Origin, City v Country and Test football are like that little Dutch boy with his finger in the dyke. But on the other side of the wall there is not water, but tonnes and tonnes of cash.

It’s only going to get harder for them as players are paid more and the NRL becomes a bigger and bigger behemoth. They are trying to maintain an amateur institution in a ruthless, cynical, professional environment. Australia is only playing New Zealand this Friday to satisfy a broadcasting contract and place a protective buffer around City v Country, the under 20s Origin and Fiji v Samoa. These games are seen as important to the code for altruistic reasons, but without a ‘'big bill'’ feature on the same weekend, they could never be staged.

Reporter Chris Irvine, of The Times, said on a recent edition of the Super League Back Chat TV show that Australia was “a big country with small minds”. He was discussing the apparent reluctance of the Australian Rugby League Commission to host Great Britain next year. The fact is, the rest of the rugby league world needs the Australian rugby league team more than Australia does. England/GB and New Zealand are like lower division teams whose big pay day comes when they play a glamour side in the cup. As things stand, only romance and the interests of the 17 players in green and gold require Australia to play home internationals. It serves no other purpose at all. Australia should mostly play away and if they must turn out on home soil, it should be in places where they are appreciated, such as Brisbane, Townsville, Newcastle, or even, depending on the opposition, Melbourne.

The Australian rugby league side should be like the US basketball "Dream Team": more often heard of than seen. They should play mainly just to help their rivals earn a quid. Instead of using the Anzac Test to insulate other matches that are in the game’s interests, we should be using our only profitable representative matches: State of Origin. The NRL’s reputation immediately before and after these games is already sullied: understrength teams attract poor crowds and ratings.

Denying clubs of the very men they employ is also hopelessly anachronistic and ridiculous. Let’s move the representative round to the weekend before Origin I. City-Country is no more a selection trial for NSW than Origin is for Australia. Club competitions could pause worldwide and everyone, but Australia, could play that weekend, giving us a competitive midyear international window.

Ten days before Origin, everyone could go into camp: NSW, Queensland, England, New Zealand, NSW under 20s, Fiji, the Czech Republic – everyone. Fox showing Fiji v Samoa indicates there is some interest in these matches – even if it doesn’t come from Channel Nine. If Nine want something that weekend, maybe one club game could be given to them as a peace offering.

Eventually, we might have two rep weekends and one Origin might be pushed – kicking and screaming – to a weekend. Take Australia largely off the international scene between World Cups and create mystique and expectation as everyone else plays and improves. The trans-Tasman Test is no longer big enough and strong enough to shield the fixtures underneath it this weekend. Only Origin can do that job. Milford more a Queenslander than a Samoan

A quick world about Milford and his ilk.

We have to be careful about accusing Queensland of ‘'stealing'’ Milford from Samoa. He was born and raised in Brisbane. Samoa were fortunate to have his services at the World Cup. Many of our international teams are “heritage” teams and it’s getting things arse-about to blow up when someone chooses to represent the place they were born and raised. David Mead, on the other hand, was born in Port Moresby. His selection for Country will not prevent the Kumuls from picking him, but it is a far bigger concern. Hayne try a classic, too Thanks to everyone who tweeted with tries to compare to Greg Inglis’ beauty on Friday. The Jarryd Hayne try in 2009 has been largely forgotten. See it here. Not the same distance as Inglis, but a similar number of defenders beaten.

Like we've been saying for awhile now SOO is the only part of the NRL that matters and it shows - and players getting picked from other countries or representing other countries and playing SOO - well it just makes a mockery of the whole concept!
LARGEST MEMBERSHIP, LARGEST PROFIT, LARGEST HOME CROWD AVERAGE - THE BIGGEST CLUB IN SYDNEY - THE SYDNEY SWANS
User avatar
Raiderdave
Coach
Coach
Posts: 16700
Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2011 1:10 pm
Team: Canberra
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by Raiderdave »

Swans4ever wrote:
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES

By STEVE MASCORD


When you think about it dispassionately, representative football is quite a Victorian concept: “You’ve been chosen to represent the district – hip, hip, hurray!”

This quaint old convention is almost completely incompatible with an age where athletes are employed full time by their clubs and money comes from television rights for the club competition, not gate receipts. The only way representative games can remain relevant is through weight of money. In cricket and rugby union, as examples, representative competitions make more money than the club competitions.

In, say, American basketball and baseball, the national teams play quite infrequently because the club scene generates the cash. In soccer – that’s what I still call it here – and ice hockey, they seem to have something of a balance because both theatres are very profitable. It’s no coincidence that both these sports are in the Olympics. Rugby league is not.

In our sport, the only representative competition that makes money in Australia is State of Origin. The spectre of players pulling out uninjured, or playing in a curtain-raiser in preference to a full international (in the case of Anthony Milford), this weekend illustrates the disarray and apathy at other levels of representative rugby league. The authorities trying to encourage and foster under 20s Origin, City v Country and Test football are like that little Dutch boy with his finger in the dyke. But on the other side of the wall there is not water, but tonnes and tonnes of cash.

It’s only going to get harder for them as players are paid more and the NRL becomes a bigger and bigger behemoth. They are trying to maintain an amateur institution in a ruthless, cynical, professional environment. Australia is only playing New Zealand this Friday to satisfy a broadcasting contract and place a protective buffer around City v Country, the under 20s Origin and Fiji v Samoa. These games are seen as important to the code for altruistic reasons, but without a ‘'big bill'’ feature on the same weekend, they could never be staged.

Reporter Chris Irvine, of The Times, said on a recent edition of the Super League Back Chat TV show that Australia was “a big country with small minds”. He was discussing the apparent reluctance of the Australian Rugby League Commission to host Great Britain next year. The fact is, the rest of the rugby league world needs the Australian rugby league team more than Australia does. England/GB and New Zealand are like lower division teams whose big pay day comes when they play a glamour side in the cup. As things stand, only romance and the interests of the 17 players in green and gold require Australia to play home internationals. It serves no other purpose at all. Australia should mostly play away and if they must turn out on home soil, it should be in places where they are appreciated, such as Brisbane, Townsville, Newcastle, or even, depending on the opposition, Melbourne.

The Australian rugby league side should be like the US basketball "Dream Team": more often heard of than seen. They should play mainly just to help their rivals earn a quid. Instead of using the Anzac Test to insulate other matches that are in the game’s interests, we should be using our only profitable representative matches: State of Origin. The NRL’s reputation immediately before and after these games is already sullied: understrength teams attract poor crowds and ratings.

Denying clubs of the very men they employ is also hopelessly anachronistic and ridiculous. Let’s move the representative round to the weekend before Origin I. City-Country is no more a selection trial for NSW than Origin is for Australia. Club competitions could pause worldwide and everyone, but Australia, could play that weekend, giving us a competitive midyear international window.

Ten days before Origin, everyone could go into camp: NSW, Queensland, England, New Zealand, NSW under 20s, Fiji, the Czech Republic – everyone. Fox showing Fiji v Samoa indicates there is some interest in these matches – even if it doesn’t come from Channel Nine. If Nine want something that weekend, maybe one club game could be given to them as a peace offering.

Eventually, we might have two rep weekends and one Origin might be pushed – kicking and screaming – to a weekend. Take Australia largely off the international scene between World Cups and create mystique and expectation as everyone else plays and improves. The trans-Tasman Test is no longer big enough and strong enough to shield the fixtures underneath it this weekend. Only Origin can do that job. Milford more a Queenslander than a Samoan

A quick world about Milford and his ilk.

We have to be careful about accusing Queensland of ‘'stealing'’ Milford from Samoa. He was born and raised in Brisbane. Samoa were fortunate to have his services at the World Cup. Many of our international teams are “heritage” teams and it’s getting things arse-about to blow up when someone chooses to represent the place they were born and raised. David Mead, on the other hand, was born in Port Moresby. His selection for Country will not prevent the Kumuls from picking him, but it is a far bigger concern. Hayne try a classic, too Thanks to everyone who tweeted with tries to compare to Greg Inglis’ beauty on Friday. The Jarryd Hayne try in 2009 has been largely forgotten. See it here. Not the same distance as Inglis, but a similar number of defenders beaten.

Like we've been saying for awhile now SOO is the only part of the NRL that matters and it shows - and players getting picked from other countries or representing other countries and playing SOO - well it just makes a mockery of the whole concept!

scanning
scanning

News Ltd :lol: :lol: :_<> :_<> :_<> :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/

seriously
when will these fumbling cockheads learn
nothing but a jealous old slut is News Ltd .... & they give it to RL every opportunity they can

another thread fail
from the king of thread fails

our resident filthy fucking Liar ... Swines :cool:
RL SOO II 4.194 Million veiwers
RL SOO I 4.068 Million
NRL GF 3.968 Million
VFL Grand Final 3.620 Million
SOO III 3.364 Million
NRL Prelim 2.219 Million
Kangaroos V NZ 1.214 Million

Sookerwhos V Japan 238K :lol:
AFLcrap1
Coach
Coach
Posts: 18930
Joined: Wed Oct 30, 2013 9:49 am
Team: The Scottish Puffins
Location:
Has thanked: 107 times
Been liked: 75 times

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by AFLcrap1 »

Looks like the foaming/frothing ,& rampant jealousy of RL rep games lasts all season.
Mention RLWC & they have convulsions.
Mention SOO & they stamp their feet & cry uncontrollably.
Keep it up fumblers ,very entertaining.
TLPG 🤣liar extraordinaire
You should thank me for publishing your IP

and I never published any actual IP. That's it.
🤣
I was a mod at the time .
Xman wrote
I also gave them to TLPG believing he was still a mod.I admit I made a mistake.
:^o :^o
adamj1300
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by adamj1300 »

Raiderdave wrote:
Swans4ever wrote:
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES

By STEVE MASCORD


When you think about it dispassionately, representative football is quite a Victorian concept: “You’ve been chosen to represent the district – hip, hip, hurray!”

This quaint old convention is almost completely incompatible with an age where athletes are employed full time by their clubs and money comes from television rights for the club competition, not gate receipts. The only way representative games can remain relevant is through weight of money. In cricket and rugby union, as examples, representative competitions make more money than the club competitions.

In, say, American basketball and baseball, the national teams play quite infrequently because the club scene generates the cash. In soccer – that’s what I still call it here – and ice hockey, they seem to have something of a balance because both theatres are very profitable. It’s no coincidence that both these sports are in the Olympics. Rugby league is not.

In our sport, the only representative competition that makes money in Australia is State of Origin. The spectre of players pulling out uninjured, or playing in a curtain-raiser in preference to a full international (in the case of Anthony Milford), this weekend illustrates the disarray and apathy at other levels of representative rugby league. The authorities trying to encourage and foster under 20s Origin, City v Country and Test football are like that little Dutch boy with his finger in the dyke. But on the other side of the wall there is not water, but tonnes and tonnes of cash.

It’s only going to get harder for them as players are paid more and the NRL becomes a bigger and bigger behemoth. They are trying to maintain an amateur institution in a ruthless, cynical, professional environment. Australia is only playing New Zealand this Friday to satisfy a broadcasting contract and place a protective buffer around City v Country, the under 20s Origin and Fiji v Samoa. These games are seen as important to the code for altruistic reasons, but without a ‘'big bill'’ feature on the same weekend, they could never be staged.

Reporter Chris Irvine, of The Times, said on a recent edition of the Super League Back Chat TV show that Australia was “a big country with small minds”. He was discussing the apparent reluctance of the Australian Rugby League Commission to host Great Britain next year. The fact is, the rest of the rugby league world needs the Australian rugby league team more than Australia does. England/GB and New Zealand are like lower division teams whose big pay day comes when they play a glamour side in the cup. As things stand, only romance and the interests of the 17 players in green and gold require Australia to play home internationals. It serves no other purpose at all. Australia should mostly play away and if they must turn out on home soil, it should be in places where they are appreciated, such as Brisbane, Townsville, Newcastle, or even, depending on the opposition, Melbourne.

The Australian rugby league side should be like the US basketball "Dream Team": more often heard of than seen. They should play mainly just to help their rivals earn a quid. Instead of using the Anzac Test to insulate other matches that are in the game’s interests, we should be using our only profitable representative matches: State of Origin. The NRL’s reputation immediately before and after these games is already sullied: understrength teams attract poor crowds and ratings.

Denying clubs of the very men they employ is also hopelessly anachronistic and ridiculous. Let’s move the representative round to the weekend before Origin I. City-Country is no more a selection trial for NSW than Origin is for Australia. Club competitions could pause worldwide and everyone, but Australia, could play that weekend, giving us a competitive midyear international window.

Ten days before Origin, everyone could go into camp: NSW, Queensland, England, New Zealand, NSW under 20s, Fiji, the Czech Republic – everyone. Fox showing Fiji v Samoa indicates there is some interest in these matches – even if it doesn’t come from Channel Nine. If Nine want something that weekend, maybe one club game could be given to them as a peace offering.

Eventually, we might have two rep weekends and one Origin might be pushed – kicking and screaming – to a weekend. Take Australia largely off the international scene between World Cups and create mystique and expectation as everyone else plays and improves. The trans-Tasman Test is no longer big enough and strong enough to shield the fixtures underneath it this weekend. Only Origin can do that job. Milford more a Queenslander than a Samoan

A quick world about Milford and his ilk.

We have to be careful about accusing Queensland of ‘'stealing'’ Milford from Samoa. He was born and raised in Brisbane. Samoa were fortunate to have his services at the World Cup. Many of our international teams are “heritage” teams and it’s getting things arse-about to blow up when someone chooses to represent the place they were born and raised. David Mead, on the other hand, was born in Port Moresby. His selection for Country will not prevent the Kumuls from picking him, but it is a far bigger concern. Hayne try a classic, too Thanks to everyone who tweeted with tries to compare to Greg Inglis’ beauty on Friday. The Jarryd Hayne try in 2009 has been largely forgotten. See it here. Not the same distance as Inglis, but a similar number of defenders beaten.

Like we've been saying for awhile now SOO is the only part of the NRL that matters and it shows - and players getting picked from other countries or representing other countries and playing SOO - well it just makes a mockery of the whole concept!

scanning
scanning

News Ltd :lol: :lol: :_<> :_<> :_<> :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/

seriously
when will these fumbling cockheads learn
nothing but a jealous old slut is News Ltd .... & they give it to RL every opportunity they can

another thread fail
from the king of thread fails

our resident filthy fucking Liar ... Swines :cool:
why is there jealously from News Ltd side towards the NRL,
after all they did own them up until a few years ago, then sold the dud product off.
:lol: :lol:
User avatar
Raiderdave
Coach
Coach
Posts: 16700
Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2011 1:10 pm
Team: Canberra
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by Raiderdave »

adamj1300 wrote:
Raiderdave wrote:
Swans4ever wrote:
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES

By STEVE MASCORD


When you think about it dispassionately, representative football is quite a Victorian concept: “You’ve been chosen to represent the district – hip, hip, hurray!”

This quaint old convention is almost completely incompatible with an age where athletes are employed full time by their clubs and money comes from television rights for the club competition, not gate receipts. The only way representative games can remain relevant is through weight of money. In cricket and rugby union, as examples, representative competitions make more money than the club competitions.

In, say, American basketball and baseball, the national teams play quite infrequently because the club scene generates the cash. In soccer – that’s what I still call it here – and ice hockey, they seem to have something of a balance because both theatres are very profitable. It’s no coincidence that both these sports are in the Olympics. Rugby league is not.

In our sport, the only representative competition that makes money in Australia is State of Origin. The spectre of players pulling out uninjured, or playing in a curtain-raiser in preference to a full international (in the case of Anthony Milford), this weekend illustrates the disarray and apathy at other levels of representative rugby league. The authorities trying to encourage and foster under 20s Origin, City v Country and Test football are like that little Dutch boy with his finger in the dyke. But on the other side of the wall there is not water, but tonnes and tonnes of cash.

It’s only going to get harder for them as players are paid more and the NRL becomes a bigger and bigger behemoth. They are trying to maintain an amateur institution in a ruthless, cynical, professional environment. Australia is only playing New Zealand this Friday to satisfy a broadcasting contract and place a protective buffer around City v Country, the under 20s Origin and Fiji v Samoa. These games are seen as important to the code for altruistic reasons, but without a ‘'big bill'’ feature on the same weekend, they could never be staged.

Reporter Chris Irvine, of The Times, said on a recent edition of the Super League Back Chat TV show that Australia was “a big country with small minds”. He was discussing the apparent reluctance of the Australian Rugby League Commission to host Great Britain next year. The fact is, the rest of the rugby league world needs the Australian rugby league team more than Australia does. England/GB and New Zealand are like lower division teams whose big pay day comes when they play a glamour side in the cup. As things stand, only romance and the interests of the 17 players in green and gold require Australia to play home internationals. It serves no other purpose at all. Australia should mostly play away and if they must turn out on home soil, it should be in places where they are appreciated, such as Brisbane, Townsville, Newcastle, or even, depending on the opposition, Melbourne.

The Australian rugby league side should be like the US basketball "Dream Team": more often heard of than seen. They should play mainly just to help their rivals earn a quid. Instead of using the Anzac Test to insulate other matches that are in the game’s interests, we should be using our only profitable representative matches: State of Origin. The NRL’s reputation immediately before and after these games is already sullied: understrength teams attract poor crowds and ratings.

Denying clubs of the very men they employ is also hopelessly anachronistic and ridiculous. Let’s move the representative round to the weekend before Origin I. City-Country is no more a selection trial for NSW than Origin is for Australia. Club competitions could pause worldwide and everyone, but Australia, could play that weekend, giving us a competitive midyear international window.

Ten days before Origin, everyone could go into camp: NSW, Queensland, England, New Zealand, NSW under 20s, Fiji, the Czech Republic – everyone. Fox showing Fiji v Samoa indicates there is some interest in these matches – even if it doesn’t come from Channel Nine. If Nine want something that weekend, maybe one club game could be given to them as a peace offering.

Eventually, we might have two rep weekends and one Origin might be pushed – kicking and screaming – to a weekend. Take Australia largely off the international scene between World Cups and create mystique and expectation as everyone else plays and improves. The trans-Tasman Test is no longer big enough and strong enough to shield the fixtures underneath it this weekend. Only Origin can do that job. Milford more a Queenslander than a Samoan

A quick world about Milford and his ilk.

We have to be careful about accusing Queensland of ‘'stealing'’ Milford from Samoa. He was born and raised in Brisbane. Samoa were fortunate to have his services at the World Cup. Many of our international teams are “heritage” teams and it’s getting things arse-about to blow up when someone chooses to represent the place they were born and raised. David Mead, on the other hand, was born in Port Moresby. His selection for Country will not prevent the Kumuls from picking him, but it is a far bigger concern. Hayne try a classic, too Thanks to everyone who tweeted with tries to compare to Greg Inglis’ beauty on Friday. The Jarryd Hayne try in 2009 has been largely forgotten. See it here. Not the same distance as Inglis, but a similar number of defenders beaten.

Like we've been saying for awhile now SOO is the only part of the NRL that matters and it shows - and players getting picked from other countries or representing other countries and playing SOO - well it just makes a mockery of the whole concept!

scanning
scanning

News Ltd :lol: :lol: :_<> :_<> :_<> :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/

seriously
when will these fumbling cockheads learn
nothing but a jealous old slut is News Ltd .... & they give it to RL every opportunity they can

another thread fail
from the king of thread fails

our resident filthy fucking Liar ... Swines :cool:
why is there jealously from News Ltd side towards the NRL,
after all they did own them up until a few years ago, then sold the dud product off.
:lol: :lol:

ahhhhhhh
we showed them the door .... & they've never forgiven us twat :wink:

know something
about anything

then join the debate you illiterate gimp :cool:
RL SOO II 4.194 Million veiwers
RL SOO I 4.068 Million
NRL GF 3.968 Million
VFL Grand Final 3.620 Million
SOO III 3.364 Million
NRL Prelim 2.219 Million
Kangaroos V NZ 1.214 Million

Sookerwhos V Japan 238K :lol:
ParraEelsNRL
Coach
Coach
Posts: 9498
Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 7:52 am
Team: Parramatta
Location: Rugby League Heartland
Has thanked: 14 times
Been liked: 9 times

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by ParraEelsNRL »

Full of shit, the RLWC made over $4 million in 2008 out here, we have had 4 nations since then and as far as I recall, they had very good ratings when held in Aus with a 20k average.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Rugby ... ur_Nations

How in the world would it lose money, the poms don't seem to lose money when holding the 4 nations, and they're no where near Australia in terms of the support for the game?

So sick and tired of the bullshit in the media.
signature removed by Admin.
User has been banned for this and similar comments.
User avatar
NRLCrap1
Coach
Coach
Posts: 3174
Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2012 1:46 pm
Team: MYOB
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by NRLCrap1 »

Hey, goose, this thread is about SOO, not fricking internationals!!
DON'T MAKE ANY BETS WITH ELIAGH!! HE WELCHES WHEN HE LOSES!!
DAVE'S RIVER IN EGYPT - JUNIOR ACT TEAMS: AFL 109 RL 107
CHEWBACCA IS A GOOSE! A GOOSE I TELL YOU! A GOOSE!
ParraEelsNRL
Coach
Coach
Posts: 9498
Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 7:52 am
Team: Parramatta
Location: Rugby League Heartland
Has thanked: 14 times
Been liked: 9 times

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by ParraEelsNRL »

NRLCrap1 wrote:
Hey, goose, this thread is about SOO, not fricking internationals!!
Dickhead.
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES
signature removed by Admin.
User has been banned for this and similar comments.
Cracker
Coach
Coach
Posts: 1217
Joined: Wed Feb 26, 2014 4:56 pm
Team: Bulldogs
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by Cracker »

Very poorly written article. I think's it's more opinion than fact.
User avatar
NRLCrap1
Coach
Coach
Posts: 3174
Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2012 1:46 pm
Team: MYOB
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by NRLCrap1 »

ParraEelsNRL wrote:
NRLCrap1 wrote:
Hey, goose, this thread is about SOO, not fricking internationals!!
Dickhead.
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES
You bolded the wrong part, goose! And what's the title of this thread?
DON'T MAKE ANY BETS WITH ELIAGH!! HE WELCHES WHEN HE LOSES!!
DAVE'S RIVER IN EGYPT - JUNIOR ACT TEAMS: AFL 109 RL 107
CHEWBACCA IS A GOOSE! A GOOSE I TELL YOU! A GOOSE!
AFLcrap1
Coach
Coach
Posts: 18930
Joined: Wed Oct 30, 2013 9:49 am
Team: The Scottish Puffins
Location:
Has thanked: 107 times
Been liked: 75 times

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by AFLcrap1 »

NRLCrap1 wrote:
ParraEelsNRL wrote:
NRLCrap1 wrote:
Hey, goose, this thread is about SOO, not fricking internationals!!
Dickhead.
ONLY STATE OF ORIGIN IS BIG ENOUGH TO PROTECT RUGBY LEAGUES OTHER REPRESENTATIVE MATCHES
You bolded the wrong part, goose! And what's the title of this thread?
:(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/
Dumber than Dogshit.

Here is the title of the thread.

Origin killing off RL

So tell me what was played FRI & SAT night .
AUS V NZ.
FIJI V SAMOA.
They were RL games you backward hick. Just like in the thread title.

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
TLPG 🤣liar extraordinaire
You should thank me for publishing your IP

and I never published any actual IP. That's it.
🤣
I was a mod at the time .
Xman wrote
I also gave them to TLPG believing he was still a mod.I admit I made a mistake.
:^o :^o
Fred
Coach
Coach
Posts: 9282
Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2011 9:13 am
Team: Collingwood
Location: Gold Coast
Has thanked: 95 times
Been liked: 156 times

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by Fred »

I think the whole debate about origin and it's impact on the nrl season is one had by many a rl supporter. Just look at The Roar for instance. I can't for the life of me work out why it isn't played after the grand final ? It is big enough and successful enough for this and would continue to be so. It is farcical that it compromises the nrl season so much.
Veni, vidi, vici
User avatar
Drac
Coach
Coach
Posts: 1019
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2012 3:14 pm
Team: Adelaide Crows
Location:
Has thanked: 0
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by Drac »

Raiderdave wrote:

scanning
scanning

News Ltd :lol: :lol: :_<> :_<> :_<> :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/ :(/

seriously
when will these fumbling cockheads learn
nothing but a jealous old slut is News Ltd .... & they give it to RL every opportunity they can

another thread fail
from the king of thread fails

our resident filthy fucking Liar ... Swines :cool:

I thought Mascord was generally considered by you lot to be a quality League journalist?
Raiderdave wrote:
perception is reality
214Four
Seniors
Seniors
Posts: 392
Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2012 3:51 pm
Team: Wests Tigers - Balmain - Western Sydney Wanderers
Location: Westsern Sydney
Has thanked: 1 time
Been liked: 0

Re: Origin killing off RL

Post by 214Four »

Yarn!! :roll:
Thats all this thread deserves. pointless so ill move on :>::
Image

"Wearing tight shorts is a bootable offense!"
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 74 guests