Sunday Star-Times

Crazy times in NRL are good for no one

- DAVID LONG

OPINION: League fans enjoy the ride, because 2017 is a season like no other.

The uncertaint­y over next year’s salary cap has caused an unpreceden­ted number of high profile players to be off contract at the same time and in turn the rumour mill has been in full swing. It’s resulted to the on field action sometimes being secondary to player movement discussion­s.

In all, there are over 200 players off contract, that’s an average of more than 13 per team.

Wests Tigers, the Knights and the Bulldogs are the clubs grabbing most of the attention around recruitmen­t, but the Warriors haven’t been immune from the hype.

The focus has been on the top-end players like Kieran Foran, Shaun Johnson and Ben Matulino, but there are also 15 others at the club coming off contract.

This situation has been building for years. For the big name players, their agents didn’t want them to sign deals for beyond 2017, because they didn’t know how much the salary cap was going to go up.

The current salary cap is $7 million and will go up to around $9.6 million next season, possibly $10 million.

Signings like Ben Hunt to the Dragons next year for a reported $1.2million a season has inflated the market, leading to other players asking for bigger contracts.

Josh Reynolds is believed to have signed to Wests Tigers for $3million over four years, that’s a huge amount of money to pay a slightly above average five-eighth in the NRL.

The Bulldogs offered him around $450,000 to stay, so it’s no surprise he’s on the move.

While some Warriors fans may see it as a disappoint­ment that Ben Matulino has left the club, it was perhaps a sensible decision not to match the $750,000 a year Wests Tigers were prepared to throw at him, given his poor form last season.

Matulino is in a position where he could do with a fresh start somewhere else anyway.

The salary cap will cover the top 30 players, rather than 25, but those bottom five players will almost certainly be on the minimum wage, which is expected to rise from $80,000 a season to $100,000.

Thankfully or unfortunat­ely, depending if you’re into the constant speculatio­n, the situation will return to normality next season, once the new five-year broadcasti­ng deal kicks in and there’s certainty around what the salary cap will be.

It’s expected to go up by $200,000 each season, to reach $10.4m million in 2022 and then we’ll go through this same mess again.

One of the talking points this week has been on whether a transfer system would work in the NRL. It won’t, because of the salary cap.

If there was a midseason transfer window, say in June, there would be huge speculatio­n throughout the first half of the campaign on who clubs have already agreed deals with.

Also, because of the cap, a lot of players can’t instantly transfer between clubs because there might not be room for them inside the salary cap straight away.

When players come off contract at the end of a season a club can offload players to fit new ones in.

The Warriors have signed Tohu Harris for next year, but wouldn’t be able to fit him in now, because he’s taking the place of Ryan Hoffman, who won’t be kept on next year.

There’s no doubt that the current situation is a mess, which isn’t good for the players, clubs or fans. But the problem is, there’s no obvious solution.

 ??  ?? Warriors star Shaun Johnson has re-signed.
Warriors star Shaun Johnson has re-signed.

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