Don’t forget lichaa he was a big loss.Yeah and when you think about it, we've lost a lot of decent hookers.
Ennis, Mahoney, Cook
Don’t forget lichaa he was a big loss.Yeah and when you think about it, we've lost a lot of decent hookers.
Ennis, Mahoney, Cook
Thank you that’s exactly what I’ve been saying.Hang on, so NRL logic is if a (Bulldogs) player stuffs up they must sack him only for another NRL club to sign him?
Fuck this cunt of a sport.
Thank you that’s exactly what I’ve been saying.
Well said brother I feel the same way.This whole game is crooked/corrupt and as long as we're the good boys who play by the rules, we will continue coping the dick.
If Roosters are anywhere near the cap then I have a 45 metre dick. It's the same as Melbourne. A blind man from Sudan could see they were rorting the cap except the nrl. The Roosters are the new Melbourne.
Also, go back to every single team who has cheated the cap and tell me how they were exposed. It had NEVER been the NRL catching them.
What pisses me off about the whole rort, is whilst there is financial dent, do the fans REALLY care?Also, go back to every single team who has cheated the cap and tell me how they were exposed. It had NEVER been the NRL catching them.
Something I picked up at the time of the debacle, even their own gender adviser believed the pair were being hard done by, yet that was ignored!BY ALEX CAIAFA
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CONTRIBUTOR
JULY 3, 2020
A number of NRL clubs are keen on signing recently sacked Canterbury Bulldogs backrower Corey Harawira-Naera should he be allowed to get back on an NRL field in 2020, reports The Daily Telegraph.
Clubs are allowed to register players until August 3rd, meaning if Harawira-Naera is able to get back onto the field by then, plenty of NRL clubs will be keen to get their hands on him.
With the off-field actions in pre-season being in the spotlight, Harawira-Naera and also former teammate Jayden Okunbor had their contracts deregistered by the club.
The Bulldogs in the end opted to go for the tough stance in deregistering their contracts, but others, including the NRL’s chief gender adviser Catharine Lumby, believe the alleged behaviour by both players may not have been as bad.
“They have done nothing criminal as far as we know”, Lumby said at the time.
Harawira-Naera will likely have his hearing at some point in the near future, where he will learn his fate from his alleged off-field actions that will determine if he will be able to play NRL again.