Sunday Star-Times

Bulldogs adamant Foran deal is yet to be signed off

- ADRIAN PROSZENKO, ADAM PENGILLY Bulldogs coach Des Hasler, above

Bulldogs coach Des Hasler has stressed that a deal for Warriors half Kieran Foran has not been completed while the club’s Kiwi boss Raelene Castle has allayed concerns the club is spending beyond its means.

Canterbury are poised to secure the services of Wests Tigers skipper Aaron Woods and Foran, although neither has signed a contract as yet.

‘‘I think it’s important we get the facts right rather than all the speculatio­n,’’ Hasler said. ‘‘No contracts have been signed. There is no agreement with those players. I’m sorry to say they haven’t signed here and there’s no contracts.

‘‘There have been some discussion­s with their management. So far [those talks] have been fairly positive. There’s no contracts signed [though].’’

Hasler also joked the Bulldogs’ main attraction for Woods and Foran would be ‘‘the colours of us, blue and white’’ and said speculatin­g about other potential destinatio­ns for the Australian prop was how ‘‘we create fake news’’.

But there will be some serious number crunching inside Bulldogs HQ when Woods and Foran pen deals and Hasler was in no mood to ponder how many players he would need to let go in the salary cap squeeze.

‘‘That’s an intuitive question,’’ Hasler said. ‘‘At this point in time, I think it’s counter-intuitive, counterpro­ductive that line of thinking and that line of questionin­g because at the moment there is no agreement in place. Why go to that space? ‘‘No contracts have been signed.

‘‘It’s all speculatio­n. and round.’’

While Josh Reynolds, Michael Lichaa and Will Hopoate are off contract, their departures alone are unlikely to free up enough space to squeeze in the likely newcomers.

Several Bulldogs stars are on deals that are heavily back-ended for next year, including captain James Graham and back-rower Greg Eastwood.

Graham has been linked with rival clubs and Fairfax Media revealed Moses It just goes round The Sun-Herald of Mbye, despite re-signing until the end 2020, is being shopped to rival clubs.

Salary cap auditor Richard Gardham wrote to club chief executives during the week, warning them that the NRL wouldn’t be registerin­g contracts unless they are under the indicative salary cap figure of A$9.14 million for next year.

Clubs believe the real figure is effectivel­y about A$8.7 million for a 30-man squad, raising concerns that most have overestima­ted for next season and can’t comply. The players’ union is expected to table a counter to the NRL’s initial offer in coming weeks.

Castle provided assurances would be within the required limits.

‘‘The current uncertaint­y around the salary cap for 2018 makes the current contractin­g process more challengin­g,’’ Castle said.

‘‘The salary cap is hugely important to the competitio­n. The Bulldogs will always ensure that any decisions we are making in relation to recruitmen­t will result in us being in a salary cap-compliant position.’’

Hasler was a little more forthcomin­g on the on-field threat posed by the Tigers, who have been beaten down and dragged through the gutter off the field in the first two months of the season.

‘‘I think Ivan [Cleary] is well aware [how big his job is], but [the Tigers] have a really experience­d person and a very level-headed person and a very good person, which is what you need going forward,’’ Hasler said. the club spending

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