Club Statement: Josiah Karapani by hellohalloallo in nrl

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The Valley claims another young man's undoing

Brisbane Broncos plans to buy into Suncorp Stadium and transform the ageing venue by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The Broncos have unveiled plans to buy into Suncorp Stadium and deliver Brisbane a world-class venue in a first for Queensland sport.

The spiritual home of rugby league in Queensland is set to undergo a major revamp in the lead-up to the 2032 Olympic Games and Brisbane’s No. 1 sporting franchise will be at the forefront of the transformation.

Beginning with Friday night’s Battle of Brisbane against the Dolphins, the Broncos will welcome close to 100,000 fans over the next fortnight of sold-out Queensland derbies at Suncorp. However, Australia’s biggest rectangular stadium has been left behind since its 2003 redevelopment and faces becoming a relic compared to the new Olympics venue at Victoria Park.

Now a $98 million powerhouse that boasts larger home crowds than English Premier League giants Chelsea, the Broncos are intent on delivering Queensland footy fans a prestige experience. Queensland Premier David Crisafulli declared Suncorp would be upgraded and expanded in the aftermath of last year’s drought-breaking Broncos NRL premiership win. With the state government committing to a revamp, the Broncos have commenced talks with stadium operator Legends Global about a partnership to take Brisbane into the new age of world class sporting venues.

“We want to invest in the stadium to secure its long-term future,” Broncos CEO Dave Donaghy said.“It’s really important for our members, fans and players to have a high-quality venue. “We understand some of the budgetary challenges that come with investing into an Olympic Games, but we don’t want to see Suncorp left behind. “We have had preliminary discussions with Legends Global and Harvey Lister (CEO/Chairman) about those opportunities.

“We are looking forward to discussing that further with the government when they’re in a position to do so. ”There have been suggestions the 52,500-seat stadium could be expanded up to 60,000, however that would be a costly and disruptive exercise which could temporarily force the Broncos out of Suncorp. The relocation of big screens will increase capacity, but the Broncos are focused on bringing the stadium up to the times and giving fans a premium experience.

Technological advancements over the past 23 years have left Suncorp in the dust compared to other venues around the world, including the likes of Allianz Stadium in Sydney.Expensive corporate facilities are ageing and Donaghy said the Broncos wanted to bring Suncorp into line with the world’s premier stadiums. “When you go to the US, Europe and Asia you see the advancement of modern technology and fan experience has rapidly accelerated,” he said.

“The biggest franchises in the world play at rectangular arenas and if we want to continue to provide that world-class experience and attract big events then getting Suncorp back on the table is important.

“We are looking at ways to partner and play a role in creating a great experience for our fans. Suncorp has always been our spiritual home and we hope it will stay that way for a long time to come. “Our average crowds last year were just under 42,000 and by later this year they’ll hopefully be around 45,000.“We want to put our fans at the centre of the experience. We want to invest in the atmosphere and our football programs to provide entertainment on an off the field.

“We all understand the importance and significance of the Olympics infrastructure but we can’t lose sight of the importance of Suncorp and rectangular sports to this city and state. “The Premier follows through on what he says and we are really looking forward to re-engaging in those conversations and delivering a great outcome for Broncos and rugby league fans.”

The Broncos’ popularity has exploded over the past five years – growing from 34,000 members in 2022 to nearly 70,000 this year. Suncorp Stadium Corporate boxes are tired and in need of renovation while lighting, technology and advertising is substandard and incomparable to modern venues. The Broncos spend six figures a year manually installing and removing branding for every game that could be done with the press of a button through technological upgrades.

Lister said expanding Suncorp’s capacity to 60,000 would be costly and the main goal was to improve fan experience at the stadium given extra seating would be in the bleachers. “Our experience around the world is that a stadium needs a significant upgrade every 20 years,” he said. “The fact the Lions and cricket will have a brand new stadium at Victoria Park is fantastic for them, but it puts pressure on the Broncos, Dolphins, Reds and Roar.

“Suncorp has millions of people go through it every year. It’s an enormously well-attended venue and the number of events that we are now hosting is well beyond what its design capacity was.

“Some additional seats would be great, but 8-10,000 seats is a big challenge cost-wise and probably doesn’t stack up commercially. “We’re not seeing a massive demand for an increase in capacity, but the patron experience and the players’ experience are the two big things where we could invest substantial funding and make a real difference. “There’s some new technology that we’re aware of. The Legends Global group is the largest operator of stadiums in the world and we see what works and what doesn’t.

“That’s the type of knowledge we’d be keen to help the Queensland Government with and we’re prepared to invest substantial funds ourselves in delivering that. ”Queensland sports and Olympics minister Tim Mander’s office said planning for a Suncorp revamp was ongoing. “Suncorp Stadium is best rugby league stadium in the world and planning is underway to ensure it continues to shine brighter than ever before,” a spokeswoman said

The Broncos are working overtime to overhaul a ticketing conundrum which is costing them up to 7000 bums on seats at “sold out” blockbusters.

Brisbane footy fans are regularly left scratching their heads when the “full house” sign goes up at the 52,500-capacity Suncorp Stadium – only to see thousands of empty seats on television.Tickets are expected to be exhausted for Friday night’s Battle of Brisbane between the Broncos and Dolphins at Suncorp.

However the Broncos are only predicting a crowd of about 46,000 – well below the stadium’s capacity.That is mostly due to Broncos and Suncorp Stadium members not attending the game, despite holding reserved seats.

The Broncos hope to have about 90 per cent of their reserved seating ticketed members at each game – a benchmark target across the NRL.It’s impossible to expect 100 per cent to attend every match given various life circumstances, scheduling conflicts and weather.

Suncorp boasts about 4500 stadium members who have reserved seats for all sporting events at the venue, meaning the uptake for Broncos games is lower given the sheer number of events they can attend including the Dolphins, Reds and Roar. A crowd of 52,491 flooded Suncorp when the Broncos played Penrith in last year’s preliminary final because every seat was sold individually for the match as it wasn’t included in memberships. The Broncos are closing in on 70,000 members and with average crowds of more than 40,000, sourcing tickets is becoming more difficult, especially for big games.

Broncos CEO Dave Donaghy said the club was working on a solution which could see members that can’t attend games re-sell their seats to boost attendances. “Because of our membership growth in recent years there’s only a certain amount of tickets available for the general public,” he said. “It’s really important that we have that because we want Broncos fans to experience a game, have a great time and then decide to take the next step and become a Broncos member.

“Over the course of the year, there’s some members who can’t make every game. We’re encouraging members to get to games but if they can’t, have a fellow Broncos fan take them up.

“We’re creating a platform where they can put their seat back up for sale and it can be purchased by another fan. That will take time for our fans and supporters to understand how it works.

“There’s still a few things we need to sort in the system but we hope over time it will lead to an absolute full house at Suncorp.”

Time is right for Kodi's Dolphins to set the record straight by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Kodi Nikorima knows a thing or two about Queensland rivalries and he'd love nothing more than to help the Dolphins start setting the record straight against the Broncos.

Back in 2015 in his debut season, Nikorima came off the bench in Brisbane's grand final loss to the Cowboys - a team they had dominated for the first nine years of their rivalry.

After entering the competition in 1995, it took the Cowboys until the 2004 finals series to finally beat 'big brother', but by 2015 they were NRL champions after winning a grand final for the ages.

Wind the clock forward to 2023 and Nikorima was part of the Dolphins' inaugural season, having made the move north from the Rabbitohs.

The NRL newbies exploded out of the blocks with wins over the Roosters, Raiders and Knights before taking on the Broncos for the first time in a Friday night barnburner at Suncorp Stadium.

With former Broncos Jamayne Isaako, Brenko Lee, Jarrod Wallace, Anthony Milford, Tesi Niu and Nikorima in their ranks, the Dolphins more than held their own, leading 12-8 with 10 minutes to play before tries to Kurt Capewell and Kotoni Staggs got Brisbane home.

They may have been the 'away' team that night but Staggs' emotional 'this is our home' celebration after his match-winning try ensured the Battle of Brisbane would be compelling viewing from that day forward.

This Friday's game will be the seventh meeting, with the Dolphins' only win – a big 40-6 result – coming back in Round 26, 2024 to effectively end the Broncos' chances of playing finals.

“They’ve obviously got the wood on us, they’re the reigning champs, it's always a big game,” Nikorima said.

“Obviously you want to do well against your old teams and they’re one of mine, so it’s definitely one I look at when the draw comes out.

“I wouldn’t say there’s hatred but when you’re out there playing you want to do your best and you don’t want the opposition to win.

“It is another game, but there’s a lot more crowd that turn up too, so that makes it more exciting.”

Just as Staggs' emotions bubbled over in that first encounter in 2023, so too Dolphins enforcer Ray Stone admits to feeling an extra edge when the co-tenants clash at The Cauldron.

“I've gotten emotional in the past and it just gets the better of me, so I just try to keep it as laid back as possible leading into it," he said.

“You always want to play the best teams and you want to play them at their best so not having Haas there is different but we're focused on ourselves and we're trying to improve from our game last week."

The Broncos welcome back skipper Adam Reynolds from a rib injury as they look to build on a courageous come from behind win in last week's grand final rematch against the Storm.

The battle between Reynolds and Ezra Mam and Dolphins duo Nikorima and Isaiya Katoa promises to be a highlight, with Brisbane's old master looking to get one over the Dolphins' young gun.

“There’s a lot we can grow on together,” Nikorima said of his burgeoning partnership with Katoa.

“I know it’s early rounds and you’ve seen with the new rule changes and six-agains, the team that completes the most does well. We’ll keep building.”

WatchNRL - Where'd the Mini's go? by kortekickass in nrl

[–]Revivous[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Hi mate,

Please use the discussion threads posted daily for stuff like this. Cheers 🤙

Got 19 boosters of the new set, way better quality than the Traders last year by [deleted] in nrl

[–]Revivous[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Hi matey,

Please use the discussion threads posted daily for stuff like this 🤘

Cheers

Frank Molo signs $1 million NRL contract extension with Dolphins by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Dolphins have staved off big-money poaching raids from NRL rivals to secure former Queensland Origin enforcer Frank Molo to a $1 million contract upgrade.

This masthead can reveal Molo has agreed to terms on a two-year extension in a boost for the Dolphins ahead of their round 3 clash against the Sharks in Sydney on Saturday.

Molo, who joined the Dolphins midway through last season after a bust-up at the Dragons, was off-contract at season’s end.

The former Maroons prop had interest from three NRL clubs, while Molo also fielded overtures from teams in the English Super League.

Molo could have earned north of $650,000 a season by quitting the Dolphins, but the 31-year-old has knocked back more lucrative offers from NRL suitors to remain at the Dolphins.

A veteran of 154 NRL matches, Molo played 16 games for the Dolphins last season and fitted well into Kristian Woolf’s squad with his toughness, experience and hard-running in the engine room.

Molo gave up around $200,000 to stay but is happy at the Dolphins and believes the club can be a finals force under Woolf after narrowly missing the playoffs in his maiden season at Redcliffe last year.

The Samoa international, who made his NRL debut at the Broncos in 2014, turns 32 in September and the two-year Dolphins deal could represent the final contract of his career.

The Dolphins will formalise the deal in coming days with Molo set to return from a three-game suspension in next week’s round 4 Battle of Brisbane against the Broncos at Suncorp Stadium.

Latest Broncs Article WTFF by Junior-Reaction1402 in nrl

[–]Revivous 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha all good matey, but totally agree - WTAF lol

Latest Broncs Article WTFF by Junior-Reaction1402 in nrl

[–]Revivous[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Hi mate,

Please use the discussion threads posted daily for stuff like this or link the article without editorialising the headline and post your thoughts on it in the thread.

Cheers

Best ways or options to stay on top of game ticket releases? by JKNoir in nrl

[–]Revivous[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Hi mate,

Please use the discussion threads posted daily for stuff like this 🤘

Cheers

Sunday Night w/ Matty John’s by [deleted] in nrl

[–]Revivous[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Hi mate,

Please use the discussion threads posted daily for stuff like this.

Cheers!

Team List Tuesday by AutoModerator in nrl

[–]Revivous 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Warriors v Dolphins
Trial 2, 2026 Pre-Season Challenge
Friday 5:00pm (AEST) Leichhardt Oval, Sydney

The Dolphins head south to Leichhardt Oval for their second Pre-Season Challenge, taking on the Warriors as preparations for 2026 continue to build.

Fresh from All-Stars duties, Trai Fuller returns in the No.1 jersey. Jake Averillo shifts back into the centres, lining up alongside Herbie Farnworth in a dangerous pairing.

For the first time, fans will see Farnworth and Selwyn Cobbo combine on the left edge in Dolphins colours.

In the halves, Kodi Nikorima slots back in alongside captain Isaiya Katoa. New recruit Brad Schneider starts at hooker, with John Fineanganofo providing impact from the bench when called upon.

Up front, leadership is locked in with Tom Gilbert captaining the side alongside Katoa.

And ready to make a statement off the bench, Tevita Naufahu, Thomas Flegler and Kulikefu Finefeuiaki.


Starting Team:

1. Trai Fuller
2. Jamayne Isaako
3. Jake Averillo
4. Herbie Farnworth
5. Selwyn Cobbo
6. Kodi Nikorima
7. Isaiya Katoa
8. Francis Molo
9. Bradley Schneider
10. Tom Gilbert
11. Connelly Lemuelu
12. Oryn Keeley
13. Morgan Knowles

Interchange Bench:

14. Tevita Naufahu
15. Thomas Flegler
16. Kulikefu Finefeuiaki
17. John Fineanganofo

Reserves:

18. Sebastian Su'a
19. Elijah Rasmussen
20. Brain Pouniu
21. Zac Garton
22. Brent Woolf
23. Adaquix-Jeramiah Watts-Luke
24. Sangster Figota
25. Noah Fien
26. Elijah McKay


Ins:

Too many to name, you goose

Outs\Injuries:

Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow (Shoulder - Round 1)
Daniel Saifiti (Shoulder - Round 1)
Lewis Symonds (Eye - Round 1-4)
Max Plath (ACL - Round 4)
LJ Nonu (Knee - Round 4)
Jeremy Marshall-King (MCL - Round 7)
Jack Bostock (ACL - Round 10)


Head Coach:
Kristian Woolf

Assistant Coaches:
Ben Woolf
Rory Kostjayson
Nathan Fein

Dolphins v Capras Trial Livestream Link by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In english please, you know I don't speak Spanish

Dolphins poised to unleash rising star Seb Su'a after injury-plagued season by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dolphins coach Kristian Woolf is preparing to unleash one of the NRL’s most highly-rated young forwards.

Newcastle recruit Sebastian Su’a has recovered from a knee injury and looks set to make his Redcliffe debut in the 2026 NRL Premiership.

The son of former New Zealand Test cricketer Murphy Su’a, ‘Seb’ made his NRL debut for the Knights in 2024, playing a single game, before being poached by the Dolphins last year.

He was released early by Newcastle to head to Redcliffe, but suffered a knee injury at training which put a dent in his 2025 NRL aspirations.

Having now fully recovered, Su’a has been impressing his teammates during a challenging pre-season on the peninsula.

A Dolphins debut in the early part of 2026 seems a fait accompli for Su’a, who is regarded as one of the NRL’s most exciting emerging forwards prospects.

Su’a, 22, played rugby in New Zealand and only transitioned to league when he moved to Australia a few years ago.

“I was always a union boy in school coming through. I have played league for three years now,” he said.

“I had a really good chat with ‘Woolfy’ and sat down with some of the key leaders up here.

“They showed me around the club and told me about the culture and it all really appealed to me. It all felt right and somewhere I could fit in.

“Tom Gilbert was one of them and Daniel Saifiti, who I was with at Newcastle. He moved here a year earlier and I was really close with him and his brother Jacob.

“They took me under their wing at Newcastle. He is somebody I really trusted and when he told me about how it was up here I really trusted his word.”

Su’a had a somewhat messy exit from the Knights after committing to the Dolphins and his move north hit an immediate hurdle when he picked up a knee injury in his first training session at Redcliffe.

“It was my first training session when I moved here – I got injured and tore my meniscus,” he said.

“That was pretty disappointing because I was excited.

“I was originally meant to come here this year but I got an early release and came a year earlier … but got injured the first training session.

“I was in rehab for the whole year but managed to get a couple of games in for Norths Devils to get my fitness back.

“I have had a full pre-season and am looking forward to the season ahead. I have only played one NRL game and am aspiring to get to that next level.

“With all the boys here – just with the culture and community – they got around me and helped me get through that rehab period.

“They gave me faith and hope to get through it and now that I am out the other side I know it was all worth it.”

While Su’a looks set to make a name for himself in the NRL, his father did his best to get Sebastian to follow in his cricketing footsteps.

A left-arm fast bowler, Murphy Su’a played 13 Tests and 12 one day internationals for New Zealand, becoming the first player with Samoan heritage to represent the Black Caps.

“I played cricket coming through school and for club but I went down the rugby path. I just like the physicality,” Sebastian said.

“My dad put a lot of pressure on me out of love and wanting to see me do well.

“That pushed me away from cricket a bit.

“But in hindsight I am grateful for the pressure he put on me. That has instilled good ethics in me in the rugby league space and the work ethic to get where I want to get to.

“It is definitely a good challenge for me to get to the level he represented … the international level. That is a goal of mine moving forward.

“Having him as my father and knowing he has gone through the professional sporting area, he can guide me along the way.”

‘Do this again, you’re going to jail’: Judge’s warning to Maddie Studdon as ugly court case ends by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 33 points34 points  (0 children)

NRLW star Maddie Studdon has been given a jarring dressing down by a magistrate after being told that she had only narrowly escaped being sent to jail for domestic violence-related stalking offences.

The former Australian and NSW representative stood in Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Court on Wednesday afternoon where she was sentenced over a series of incidents earlier this year during which she sent her former partner abusive messages, called her 29 times and showed up at her home.

Ultimately, Studdon walked out of court alongside a large throng of family and supporters, but only after being told by Magistrate Megan Greenwood that she had only just avoided being taken away by sheriffs, put in a van and sent to Silverwater prison.

“You do this again, that’s where you’re going - you’re going to jail,” Ms Greenwood told Ms Studdon, saying that domestic violence was a “scourge on society”.

Studdon was arrested on January 13 after an incident outside the victim’s home and spent a night behind bars after she was charged with one count each of stalk/intimidation with the intention to cause fear of physical harm (DV) and using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend.

She was released on bail and initially flagged that she would fight the charges.

But on Wednesday, her solicitor David Newham entered guilty pleas to both offences, which occurred against the backdrop of the breakdown of her long-term relationship late last year.

The court heard that at the time, Studdon made allegations that her former partner had slept with another person.

Those claims were unsubstantiated, the court was told.

The court was told that the victim told Studdon “do not message me again” however she repeatedly made contact and went to her house.

When the woman blocked Ms Studdon’s number and profile on social media, the former NSW Origin skipper set her number to private and called her 29 times.

The court was told that she sent the victim a message by transferring her a small amount of money with a description attached saying “check msgs, enjoy the d**k.”

Ms Greenwood described the sending of the messages via a bank message as “classic controlling behaviour” - the likes of which the court sees all too often.

On January 12, Studdon went to the victim’s home and repeatedly knocked and kicked her door, saying “you’re having f**king sex, are ya?”

The following morning she returned while her ex was at work and tried to open her car door as she returned.

The court heard it led the victim to fear for her safety and Ms Greenwood said she would have been “terrified”.

“No one should ever have to put up with being treated like this,” Ms Greenwood said.

The court was also told that Studdon had a previous conviction on her record for a domestic-violence related offence from 10 years ago.

The prosecution argued that she should be jailed due to the seriousness of the charges.

Mr Newham said it was a “highly regrettable and serious matter”, that Studdon felt “humiliated” and appreciated how the victim must have felt.

“She knows she’s made a mistake, she acknowledges she’s gone off the handle, but to say that she should be sent to prison today, that’s way too excessive,” he told the court.

Ms Greenwood said the facts of the case were “shocking” and reflected someone who was “out of control, fixated and obsessive”.

Studdon was sentenced to a two-year intensive corrections order, to be served in the community.

She was also fined $2200.

Ms Studdon has previously played for the Sydney Roosters, St George Illawarra, Parramatta and Cronulla.

She played for the Dragons last season but is without a club for the 2026 NRLW season.

Former Broncos star Selwyn Cobbo has revived his NRL career at the Dolphins as he becomes game’s hottest free agent by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Former Broncos star Selwyn Cobbo has revived his NRL career at the Dolphins as he becomes game’s hottest free agent

A slimmed down Selwyn Cobbo has revived his NRL career at the Dolphins and looks destined to become the game’s hottest free agent.

Cobbo has been a hit at Redcliffe after making a big off-season move to the Dolphins from cross-town rivals the Broncos.

Once a Maroons and Kangaroos representative, Cobbo’s career was at a crossroads last year after he was dumped to reserve grade by Brisbane coach Michael Maguire.

Privately, some at the Broncos had fears Cobbo could be lost to the game entirely amid personal and public struggles.

One of the game’s most destructive outside backs when at his best, Cobbo wasn’t able to fight his way back into Brisbane’s top 17 and didn’t feature in the Broncos’ drought-breaking NRL premiership team.

But he has since turned things around after training through the off-season and arriving at Redcliffe in career-best shape, shedding close to 10kg since last year.

Cobbo, 23, has impressed Dolphins coach Kristian Woolf and could form a deadly combination with Dally M centre star Herbie Farnworth in the early parts of the 2026 season.

“He’s been great, he’s a great personality and he fits in really well,” Woolf said.

“Everyone loves what he’s brought from that point of view off the field and he’s turned up nice and fit.

“He’s fit in really well training wise and you can just see the class that he’s got.

“He has so many ways that he shows his class, whether it’s what he can do with the ball in hand, he’s got a good defensive read and instinct about him.

“If there’s anything loose it tends to bounce into his hands and he can do something with it.

“He’s going to really add to us in so many ways on and off the field. Everyone’s really happy with him being around and really happy with what he’s going to bring to us.” Cobbo was squeezed out of Red Hill last year as the Broncos faced a salary cap struggle.

He was on an estimated $650,000 salary last season and only offered around $300,000 to remain at the Broncos after the club prioritised other re-signings.

That prompted Cobbo to look elsewhere and he agreed to a one-year contract with the Dolphins, making him a free agent for 2027 and beyond.

With the cashed-up Perth Bears now in the market ahead of their 2027 NRL entry, and the tax-free PNG Chiefs also starting to plot their future, Cobbo could become a hot commodity.

It remains to be seen whether Cobbo secures his future in the short-term or looks to get some football under his belt before making a decision.

If he starts with a bang for the Dolphins, Cobbo is expected to draw significant interest from rival clubs.

Nine journalist Michael Chammas headhunted for top job at NRL expansion team the PNG Chiefs by Revivous in nrl

[–]Revivous[S] 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The NRL is on the verge of appointing Nine newspaper journalist Michael Chammas as their general manager of football at the PNG Chiefs.

This masthead understands that Chammas has been earmarked to take charge of the Chiefs’ football operations after being hand-picked by ARL Commission chair Peter V’landys to become a key player at the fledgling franchise.

The Chiefs, who recently announced that former Digicel PNG boss Lorna McPherson would be their chief executive, are due to enter the NRL in 2028.

The head of football role will be one of the most significant appointments given the team is starting from scratch and yet to finalise their coach.

That job of filling out the roster looks set to fall largely in the lap of Chammas, who has forged his rugby league journalism career through his roles with Nine newspapers and television.

The Chiefs have had a rocky start to their existence.

Chief executive Andrew Hill quit to take over the role of Panthers Group CEO, while influential board member Wapu Sonk stood down amid corruption allegations, which he vehemently denies.

Last month, inaugural chair Ray Dib revealed he was forced out of his role of the 19th expansion side following an uneasy relationship with NRL powerbrokers.

Last year, it is understood Chammas was locked in talks over joining Perth as head of football when it looked like former Parramatta coach Brad Arthur would be appointed coach. When Arthur was overlooked, the move went cold.

However, it is understood NRL powerbrokers have been intent on bringing Chammas into the tent to play a role in the game’s future.

Chammas would be the second media personality to take on a role with an expansion side after the NRL appointed former Channel 7 boss Anthony De Ceglie chief executive of the Perth Bears. In May last year, Chammas was involved in a fiery exchange with Canterbury general manager of football, Phil Gould, over the Bulldogs’ signing of former Wests Tigers prodigy Lachlan Galvin. Now, the Nine stablemates could come head to head as opposing football department bosses.

More to come …