Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Player revolt drops the ball on real world

- ANNA CALDWELL

NOT many people are getting pay rises in the current environmen­t of economic gloom and cost of living pain. Which makes it particular­ly curious to see a well-paid NRL player out and about complainin­g about their salary negotiatio­ns.

The bizarre comments from Melbourne Storm player Harry Grant would be the equivalent of a career train wreck if a politician made them.

Grant, speaking from the Kangaroos camp in England, accused the NRL of “low balling”.

“Some blokes are better off getting on the tools and doing whatever,” Grant said.

“At the end of the day you’re chasing a dream. I think a lot of people don’t realise what we put ourselves through.”

Grant has a contract that will see him earning about $1 million a season by 2024. Not many blokes “on the tools” rake that in.

“For us as players, it’s our livelihood,” Grant said.

“We just need to get something sorted for everyone’s sake. We’ve put enough into this game, for what we get out of it they are low-balling us at the moment, the NRL.”

Grant referenced developmen­t contracts which sit much lower but that doesn’t change the big picture, which is that, fundamenta­lly, NRL players are paid very, very well.

And, side note, since when is a trade a job to be scoffed at?

Tradies, though, are aware of something this footy player wasn’t.

In the current cost of living crisis,

Sydneyside­rs and Aussies in general don’t look too fondly upon cashed-up players whinging about their lot in life. It’s an utter disconnect.

Our league reporter Pete Badel reveals that, in fact, the truth is NRL players have hit the jackpot.

The NRL has offered players a billion dollar deal – a 34 per cent increase in pay to $1.32 billion over the next five years, Badel reports.

Under the offer, the average men’s salary goes to $400,000, up from $325,000. And the 2023 salary cap figure rises from $10.2 million to $12.5 million.

Under the arrangemen­ts, the NRL women will get $115 million over the next five years with their own salary cap up 146 per cent. Hard to see how this is low-balling.

Contrast this to the real world, where private sector wages rose

2.7 per cent over the year to the June quarter in 2022. Public sector wages rose 2.4 per cent.

This means league players will be offered a raise 10 times that of the average Aussie.

The bigger issue here is disconnect­ion.

Yes, individual­s always have a right to fight for more money.

But the NRL is meant to be the sport of the people.

Chairman Peter V’landys has fought hard to invigorate the grass roots element of the sport – suburban grounds, family games and community cheer.

That’s often the stuff which, for NRL players and top brass, gives them the most pride in the game.

Hearing a young player like Grant roll in and whinge about salary at a time when the cost of living is biting everyday folk and mortgage costs are climbing hits the wrong note.

It was an unsophisti­cated tactic. Players associatio­n boss Clint Newton didn’t like the criticism of Harry Grant.

He clarified Grant was trying to “protect the guys at the bottom” of the salary ladder.

“Do we want players to be pot plants where it’s this ‘shut up and play’ type attitude? The fact is, by players advocating for improvemen­ts in their terms and conditions, that absolutely has an impact on the future of the game,” Newton said.

He can spin it however he wants after the bungled remarks.

But the campaign from the players’ associatio­n shows how the game risks being riddled with entitlemen­t and utterly removed from the blue collar fans at its very heart.

This is a dangerous play for any sport.

 ?? ?? Harry Grant has accused the NRL of “low balling” in player salary negotitati­ons. Picture: Michael Steele/getty Images
Harry Grant has accused the NRL of “low balling” in player salary negotitati­ons. Picture: Michael Steele/getty Images
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