Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Bye Marcus

Bradford Bulls winger Marcus Bai has announced his retirement from the game this morning, leaving the Bulls with immediate effect.








The Papua New Guinean winger, who became so much of a crowd favourite at Melbourne Storm that they unofficially renamed the North East Stand in his honour, leaves Odsal after one year in which he scored 12 tries in 26 appearances.

At 34 years of age, Bai remains the only player to have won the World Club Championship with three different clubs, with Melbourne in 2000, Leeds Rhinos in 2005 and Bradford Bulls in 2006 as well as having joined the select band of players who have won a Grand Final in both Australia and England.

A superb personality on and off the field, the 'no-nonsense' Bai was probably one of the most underrated players of the modern game. With 127 league tries in 245 appearances for Melbourne, Leeds and Bradford, the South-Sea islander boasted a strike record amongst the best in the business and his work ethic and honesty was unquestionable.

Whilst Bai's retirement is a loss to the sport, Bradford will move on. Wingers are scarce on the transfer market at present and so academy winger Andy Smith will see this as a prime opportunity to make the step from the U21's whilst the experience of Marcus St Hilare can also cover the number 2 position.

Whilst Bai might not go down as one of the most well-known players ever to take the field, his name should still be among the modern greats.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Saints Rattle a few Cages

"Fix", "Swindle" were the cries that surrounded the BBC Sports Personality of the Year ceremony in Birmingham last week.





As St Helens walked away with the Team of the Year and Coach of the Year awards for 2006, some people were not so congratulatory. OK, so Paul Sculthorpe is about as eloquent as an alcoholic on Christmas Eve and Sean Long might have looked entirely out of place surrounded by such sophisticated company but that doesn't detract from the achievements of the St Helens class of 2006.

The BBC have come out and defended the public voting system after various claims of rigging and suggestions that the voting system is open to abuse from Internet campaigns, stating that they will be retaining the voting system that clinched the night's major gong for Zara Phillips as well as seeing St Helens amass just over 67.6% of the public vote for team of the year, well ahead of Sussex County Cricket Club (17.1%) and the Ryder Cup boys (15.2%).

The Ryder cup apologists were distraught. Not only did Darren Clarke not win the individual prize, they were outraged that a European team didn't win the 'British Team of the Year' award by virtue of the fact that they beat an inept bunch of American golfers on a boozy week in Ireland.

So all the while the Southern-centric press start crying on their keyboards and typing with rage, we can sit back safe in the knowledge that the game isn't as 'minority' as those at Fleet Street like to think it is.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Mason Jets to NFL

Aussie cheap-shot merchant Willie Mason has found the perfect solution for off-season boredom.








The Bulldogs forward has jetted off the the States to take part in "non-contact" training with the New York Jets.

Mason, who is contracted at Canterbury until 2008, has made no secret of his desire to try his hand at gridiron will continue to train with the Jets before heading back to Sydney for the Doggie's NRL preparation.

Anyway, - if the Tri-Nations are anything to go by, those Yanks will be thankful of the extra headgear.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Vote Saints

The voting has opened for the BBC Sports Personality of the Year this week and Rugby League has a representative for the first time in I don't know how long.









Treble winners St Helens have made the three-name shortlist for the 'Team of the Year' award, along with the European Ryder Cup team and Sussex County Cricket Club.

To vote for the Saints, text the phrase "Team Saints" to 83199 or alternatively, stay tuned to BBC Radio Five Live (909MW)

Monday, November 27, 2006

We Have the Technology

Deep in the bowels of Red Hall, the Rugby Football League super computer has finally finished compilling it's 'randomly' drawn fixture list and the The 2007 Super League fixtures have finally been released to the great unwashed.


After two months anticipation, fans can start bombarding the websites of Ryanair, Jet2 and bmiBaby for their sojourn to the Mediterranean.

It's also been confirmed who each side will now play at the 'Millennium Magic' weekend. Not surprisingly, the RFL have kept it to 'derby' fixtures.

For the event to prove the sceptics wrong, the RFL needs to attract a crowd, both from the North and from Wales and so to do that, they've put their flagship games on parade. Leeds will play Bradford, Wigan will play St Helens and the two Hull sides will also meet each other by the River Taff.

And that all seems fine. If you want fans to embark on a 500mile round trip, you've got to make it seem their while. But unfortunately, the RFL have shot themselves in the foot.

For the sides that face each other on that May weekend, it will be just one of four times they'll go toe to toe in the regular Super League season. That's four Leeds vs Bradford games, four Wigan vs St Helens clashes and four Hull derbys.

For a neutral and for Sky Sports, that's like Christmas and Birthday in one. Sky love the big games and so they'll be rubbing their hands with glee.
But for the rest of us, it's overkill.

Three times is enough, after you've factored in possible cup and play-off games but four, with a feasible possibility of seven games between two sides is doing nothing for the credibility of Super League and taking the excitement and anticipation away from what should be the stand-out fixtures in the calendar.
Derby's are more than just two local sides. They have a rivalry and intensity which makes them special. By having two sides play each other so frequently means that grudges don't have time to grow and the whole build-up to the game becomes shorter. They essentially become just like any other game.

And lets look at fairness. Whilst Leeds, Bradford, St Helens and Wigan are all likely to be taking points off each other, Hull FC can sit back, quietly confident of eight points against relegation fodder in Hull KR. Wakefield coach John Kear is fairly happy as well, knowing that whilst he's got four decent looking games against Huddersfield, Hull KR's draw means that they will probably be rooted to the bottom from rounds one to 27.

The game needs to revert back to the simple 'home and away' format. Playing sides three times is excessive, four times is overkill. Forget the arguments about making a free weekend for internationals, just do it for the games credibility.
Unfortunately, it's the small clubs that are the barrier to this, those who fail to realise that match days are not the only day to create revenue. Take a look around the 12 Super League grounds and you'll find a hotel, a University campus, an NHS clinic, an upmarket restaurant, an athletics stadium, a Rugby Union club, three football clubs and a multitude of conference and function facilities. Some clubs make use of them, some don't and instead, wait for a bumper pay day from the visit of one of the 'big four'.
But anyway, that's another argument entirely.

The RFL were onto a winner with the Millennium Stadium weekend but they've let themselves down. Would a supporter who reluctant to make the long journey south at first be tempted now, knowing that they'll have three more opportunities to see the same two sides in the other 26 rounds?

Nothing can be done now, the fixtures computer has spoken. Lets just hope the RFL take head for 2008.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Stacey Jones to Retire from International Rugby - No Really

Kiwi ace Stacey Jones goes into Saturday's Tri-Nations final with Australia for what will probably be the last time he will wear a New Zealand test jersey.




I'm not kidding, really!

OK, so he might have "retired" in 2004 and "retired" again after he announced he'd joined Les Catalans in 2005.

But now he's stated that Saturday's clash in Sydney will "probably be his last" game for New Zealand

Who am I to doubt that?

Monday, November 20, 2006

Another Year, Another Failure

For the second year in succession, Great Britain are the first side to bow out of the Gillette Tri-Nations after yet another year of failure on the International stage.



Saturday's 33-10 defeat in Brisbane highlighted how far ahead the Australians are and showed just how little the British game has actually progressed in comparison.

The debates raged long into the night at Suncorp Stadium as to why the Lions were once again shown to be toothless. Scheduling, injuries, travelling, team selection and basic abilities were raised as factors in the Brisbane and Wellington defeats but what reasons actually hold any water?

Problem 1: The Talent Pool.
Phil Clarke, the recently resigned Great Britain team manager raised a point in Sky Sports' after match analysis which I felt was extremely pertinent:
It's no good saying that "we tried hard". Twenty years ago, Brian Noble "tried hard" against Australia and lost. Today, Great Britain "tried hard" and lost again. That tells you that the problem is not one of effort, but one of ability.
You just have to look at the two squads to see where Clarke is coming from. The likes of Jamie Peacock, Paul Wellens and Gareth Ellis could make a strong claim to be amongst the best players in the world but once you look past that, you start to see where the differences apply.
Once Sean Long departed the Great Britain set-up, not only did he leave the side without a recognised goal-kicker, but he also left the side without an experienced half-back. Both Richard Horne and Rob Burrow, as talented as they undoubtedly are, are not battle-hardened on the International stage. Asking an untested partnership in McGuire and Horne to go into a must-win game against the combination of Thurston and Lockyer is the personification of Rugby League suicide.

The talent pool in Britain is light years behind the NRL set-up. You could take any one player from that Australian side and come up with a raft of players suitable to fill the void.
In the full-back position for instance, aside from Paul Wellens, there was only the injured Richard Mathers who could make a realistic claim for a test jersey. The Australians on the other hand, have Karmichael Hunt, Billy Slater, Anthony Minichello and, if push comes to shove, Darren Lockyer.
It's the same story at scrum half. North Queensland's Jonathon Thurston became the Kangaroo's natural successor to Andrew Johns but even if he had he failed to make the grade, the likes of Matt Orford, Brett Finch, Brett Kimmorley or Scott Prince would no doubt have been able to fill the void.

Part of that problem has been fuelled by Brian Noble's decisions to persist with the tried and failed players instead of blooding young, upcoming players in warm-up and exhibition games but the problems also lie at home. The pressures imposed by the threat of automatic relegation coupled clubs' insistence on importing overseas talent prevents the talent pool from growing and forces players from the Super League academies into the National Leagues, where they then lose the benefit of full-time coaching.
This brings me onto the next point;

Problem 2: Maros Kolpak
Never again will a Slovakian handball player from the German second division have such an impact on British sport.
The 'Kolpak ruling' in 2003 opened the floodgates for players from Tonga, Samoa, Papua New Guinea, Fiji and South Africa (amongst other nations) to ply their trade in Super League without being subject to the overseas quota.
Just as an EU resident is able to work freely in the EU, so now is a member of a state which has a trading agreement with the EU.
Whilst this has meant the Super League fans have been thrilled by the skills of David Solomona, the power of Lesley Vainikolo and the personality and flair of Maurie Fa'asavalu, the quality of the imports has at times left much to be desired.
The fear for fans and supporters of Great Britain is that the overseas player are driving talent away from the Super League. In the round 27 clash between Bradford and Wakefield, just 16 of the 36 players on show were available for the watching Brain Noble to select. Such statistics show just how slim the talent pool is and it soon becomes little surprise why injuries and player withdrawals spell disaster of a touring GB side.
Rugby League isn't the only sport that has suffered from this. The same rules apply in Rugby Union but that too is to the detriment of Rugby League. Already we see the RFU, struggling to maintain a competitive England side with what is currently has, "importing" British talent from the 13-man game. Andy Farrell may not have been such a loss given his age, but perhaps the same could not be said for Chev Walker and Karl Pryce.

Problem 3: Scheduling
For the past three years, whilst Australia and New Zealand get two week-long breaks, Great Britain are asked to play four times in four weeks (five times had the made the final).
In such a physical and intense competition, such a schedule is difficult enough on home soil. On tour however, the problems are multiplied. The GB players are typically used to one hour drives across the M62 for away games and are, at worst, asked to endure a 90 minute flight to the south of France. To then ask those players to travel to the other side of the globe and then take no less than six domestic flights between venues is putting undue pressure on already overworked players.
The situation worsens when you factor in the number of games the players are asked to play domestically.
Any St Helens player in the GB squad that was lucky enough to play every game for his club would have played in 28 Super League games (two of which were in France), Five Challenge Cup games, including the final and two play-off fixtures (although this could possibly have been four had they finished lower in the table). That amounts to 35 domestic games in total from a possible 37 (excluding friendlies). In addition, add four Tri Nations matches and a mid-season international to give you 40 games in just ten months. Such a season is far from workable in such a physically intense sport and if GB are have the opportunity to prepare for success and prevent such a difficult international itinerary from occurring again, the the RFL needs to ensure that the number of Super League fixtures are cut.

Problem 4: Team Selection
A stand-off on the wing, a second row in the front row, a complete liability at loose forward, one of our most creative players sat on the couch at home and Sean Long at scrum half.
This years Great Britain team selection, like every other year, has been a mismatch of players picked on reputation being played out of position just so that they can all be accommodated.
Some selections paid off in the sense that they were one of few positives to emerge. James Roby and Gareth Hock played superbly and certainly staked their claim to be Lions regulars in the future.
But there were plenty of negatives. Leon Pryce was taken away from the area of the field where he is dangerous. He is a competent winger, but his talents are wasted there. The selection of Martin Gleeson was questionable to begin with but then his recall in place of the inform Kirk Yeaman suggested that Brian Noble had lost the plot and his persistence handing Sean O'Loughlin the number thirteen shirt showed quite simply that Nobby was indeed nuts.
Elsewhere, Andy Coley must have been wondering what he'd done wrong, after seeing Stuart Fielden keep him out of the side and Rob Burrow will also be questioning if he'll ever don a GB shirt in a test arena.

For many years now, we're constantly being told that we are catching up to the Australians. Those at Red Hall have been quick to point to British performances against NRL clubs in a pre-season friendly as an indicator that we are starting to get the better of the Roo's.
The results speak for themselves though and the past three decades have proved that the Australians are better in every facet of the game. Their infrastructures are better, their talent pool is better, their club game is better and their organisation is better.
Changes need to be made, not just to GB but to the British game in it's entirety, otherwise the Kangaroo's will continue to be leaps and bounds ahead of some very poor competition.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

So Long, Farewell

After Sean Long landed back in Blighty on Tuesday and was quickly led away by a St Helens official, the British media were still pondering what actually happened as the Lions returned to their Sydney base after the defeat in Wellington.


As the official line of "personal problems" is still maintained by the GB management, a line supported by the need to be with his expecting wife, rumours of mid-air shenanigans on the flight from New Zealand still persist.

But in an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Long claimed that his decision to leave the Tri-Nations early had nothing to do with the alleged drinking or gambling incidents, but was due to him believing that he had "nothing left to offer" the Great Britain side.
The man-of-the-match in the victory over Australia in Sydney reverted back to his usual GB standard in the 34-4 thumping at the hands of the Kiwi's and now it seems that the 30 year old has had enough.

So for Long, it will remain just one Test standard performance in eight years of International rugby. After making his debut in the 1998 series against the Kiwi's, Long has been consistently floundered once he comes up against notable opposition. The pin-point kicking game, clinical passing and devastating support play that has made him a favourite at Knowsley Road suddenly go AWOL as soon as he steps out into the International arena.

It also emerges on BBC Radio Five tonight that Long has retired from "tour rugby", effectively ending his International career.

At least now, Great Britain can move forward. Talented individuals such as Hull's Richard Horne, given the Number 7 shirt for Saturday's must win clash in Brisbane and Rob Burrow of Leeds will be handed their chance whilst Salford's Luke Robinson and of course, Lee Briers will be waiting for their chance come 2007 and for the 2008 World Cup.

It is of course, a far from ideal end for Long's International career but like Keiron Cunningham who announced his International retirement before him, few will bemoan the loss of a Great Briton.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The Chris Moyles Stadium?

Featherstone Rovers have made the headlines tonight with news off a major coup.






Apparently, the club's Post Office Road ground will now be named after BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles, according to a statement on the club's website.

The Leeds-born motor-mouth, who broadcasts to almost 6.8m listeners on Radio 1's flagship show often celebrates his West Yorkshire roots and his support for Rugby League but is more commonly known for his support of Leeds United.

Most of us will put this down to a belated April Fools Joke but the Rovers seem dead serious about this.

Perhaps more will emerge tomorrow morning on the Chris Moyles Show. Until then we'll just laugh at the inventiveness of the Featherstone marketing office.

Monday, November 13, 2006

A Long Flight Home

After Great Britain's capitulation in Wellington, scrum half Sean Long has left the Tri-Nations squad and returned to Blighty.








Saturday's 34-4 defeat to New Zealand means that the Lions must now go to Brisbane and at the very least, avoid defeat. That would be a tough task, even with a full strength squad but it then emerged this morning that the architect of GB's win over the Kangaroos in Sydney is heading back this morning.

The official line that came out this morning was that Long had asked permission to return home for "personal reasons" but rumours have been abound since the revelation.

The theory which most fits the reason and the one most of us will accept, is that Long has returned to be with his pregnant partner but more sinister claims have emerged both from the press here and in Sydney.

One story being banded about claims that Long had flouted an alcohol ban on the GB team's Sydney bound flight from Wellington, gambling exploits have also been mentioned - something that earned him a three month ban in 2004 and there is also the claim that Long had become unsettled after reportedly meeting with Australia coach Ricky Stuart over a possible move to Cronulla Sharks.

The Sydney Morning Herald has also put forward the notion of unrest in the GB camp surrounding the hooking role. The SMH has put forward that Long, amongst other players in the camp are unhappy at coach Brian Noble's insistence on starting Terry Newton at hooker, rather than Long's Saints team-mate James Roby.

Whilst I would suspect that the various theories are the result of the press looking for a story that isn't there, I suspect that we haven't heard the last of this. The SMH's "unrest in GB camp" story is the perfect paper seller and look out for plenty of follow-ups to that one leading up to the Brisbane clash.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Grounds for Celebration

With 2009 just over three years away and deadline day for Super League franchises fast approaching, clubs are eagerly sprucing up their grounds or upping sticks altogether.

Last week, Salford City Reds finally saw an end to their long-running planning saga as a Government equiry finally granted permission for the club to move to the 20,000 capacity City of Salford Stadium at Barton.
The £130m project next to the M60 wil include retail units a hotel and resteraunt, will finally allow Salford to move away from the notorious Weaste area which is often bemoaned by visiting supporters who have been witness to vandalised property and assaults on supporters by local youths.
Invariably, the Salford club and their supporters were unfairly tarred with the same brush as the local dellinquents and this stadium will go a long way to restoring their reputation amongst supporters.

Some 70 miles away in Doncaster, the Dragons are all set to move into their new home, the Lakeside Stadium.
The 15,000 seater facility, which will be shared with Doncaster Rovers FC, will give South Yorkshire a geniune Rugby League stadium and will certainly be the envy of the National Leagues and possible even in 2009, Super League.

Not only that, but both venues are further possibilities for RFL events. Hopefully well no longer see Challenge Cup semi-finals at Odsal.

With Castleford and St Helens both pushing plans for new grounds forward, Leeds and Bradford undertaking refurbishments of their homes, the future looks much more comfortable for a Rugby supporter.

But whilst the story may be a possitive one, it serves as a stark reminder to other clubs to get their act together. With clubs outside the elite showing progress, the less progressive in Super League need to get their act together or risk being left behind.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

GB Unchanged for NZ Clash

Great Britain coach Brian Noble has stuck with the same 17 that saw off Australia in Sydney for Saturday's decisive clash with New Zealand in Wellington.





After the 'grannygate' affair which saw the Kiwi's docked two points for fielding an ineligible player, a draw or better will see the Lions qualify for the final against the Roos in Sydney. New Zealand on the other hand, have to win and then hope that Great Britain lose to Australia in Brisbane if they are to sneak through to the Sydney showdown on points difference.

The saying often goes that you don't change a winning side, but concerns must surround Brian Carney. The Irish winger left the field on Saturday due to a suspected hamstring injury - problem that has plauged much of his career.
If Carney is fit there can be no complaints, but questions need to be asked as to why the current Great Britain squad only has two recognised wingmen amongst it's ranks. Leon Pryce has played wing before and Lee Gilmour performed well in that role in Sydney but one must still question the why the likes of Mark Calderwood or Stuart Reardon haven't made the trip.

Time will tell. I assume that Carney is fit but I'd expect the Kiwi's to be making numerous moves towards the GB No2.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Let's all Laugh at Willie Mason.

Ha Ha Ha!

So Aussie big gob Willie proved to the Rugby League world that he's all mouth and little action.





Not content with mouthing off in the press all week, disparraging the haka trying to batter anything that wore a white shirt, he then went and cost the convicts the game against Great Britain, winding up the GB side and bombing the ball when presented with a gap wider than the Mersey tunnel.

The result, a 23-12 victory for the Lions, their first on Australian soil since 1992 and a RLIF disciplinary for Mason in the coming week.

Let's not get carried away mind. The odd Great Britain victory over the Roos isn't as rare as people might make out, it's just two consecutive wins that happen to be the problem.

That said, it's still bloody funny!

Monday, October 30, 2006

Damn Those Dirty Cheating Kiwis!

New Zealand haven't exactly come away from Saturday's 18-14 victory over Great Britain in a good light have they?






Not content with mucking up the time keeping, shaving about three minutes off the second half, it then it emerges that they may have fielded an inelegible player.
Apparently, Nathan Fein isn't quite sure whether he is from New Zealand or not. The result could be a two-point deduction from the Tri Nations table.

Lets make an example of these nit-wits! ;)

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Noble's Lucky Thirteen?

Great Britain coach Brian Noble named a familiar looking side to take on New Zealand in the Lions Tri-Nations opener in Christchurch.






The usual suspects are there in the starting thirteen although three new caps will be awarded from the interchange bench against the Kiwi's with James Roby, Gareth Hock, Gareth Carvell and James Wilkin all in contention for their first appearance in the Great Britain shirt.

But whilst the line-up was in many ways expected, that still hasn't prevented the arguments and the criticisms regardign selection from surfacing once again. Here, The One Pointer looks at the pro's and con's of Noble's selection.

Great Britain are expected to line up as follows on Saturday:
1. Paul Wellens (St Helens)
2. Brian Carney (Newcastle Knights)
3. Martin Gleeson (Warrington Wolves)
4. Keith Senior (Leeds Rhinos)
5. Leon Pryce (St Helens)
6. Danny McGuire (Leeds Rhinos)
7. Sean Long (St Helens)
8. Stuart Fielden (Wigan Warriors)
9. Terry Newton (Bradford Bulls)
10. Adrian Morley (Sydney Roosters)
11. Jamie Peacock (C) (Leeds Rhinos)
12. Gareth Ellis (Leeds Rhinos)
13. Sean O'Loughlin (Wigan Warriors)

SUBS
Four from:
Gareth Hock (Wigan)
Gareth Carvell (Hull)
James Roby (St Helens)
Lee Gilmour (St Helens)
Jon Wilkin (St Helens)
On paper, that looks a strong enough side, certainly enough to match and even better the Kiwi's, so where do the arguments come from?

1. The Three-Quarters and the Left Centre/Wing Combination
With regards to the backline for Great Britain, Paul Wellens and Brain Carney picked themselves. They are the best British players in their position by some distance.
The rest of the players in that back line should be breathing a sigh of relief. Martin Gleeson hasn't recaptured the form he showed in the 2004 Tri-Nations series, when he returned from his lenghty suspension and Leeds centre Keith Senior has also struggled for form. All the while, Kirk Yeaman and Hull has impressed in the Super League and many argue that he is the one who should start at three or four in Christchurch.
As for the left wing, Leon Pryce's selection has upset many, particuarly those in Wigan and on Humberside.
Pryce, who was represented St Helens as stand-off throughout the season, and who has made not secret of his dislike for the wing positon, has been selected over Hull winger Gareth Raynor and Wigan flyer Mark Calderwood, with the later of the two not even making the trip down under. Many believe that Raynor should take the place of Pryce and that Noble should once again refrain from playing players out of position.
However, I think Noble has got this selection right. A victory on Saturday put GB in the driving seat for a final birth, leaving NZ facing a much win game a fortnight later. With this in mind, Noble has gone for experience. Playing the experience combination of Senior and Pryce on the left is, in my view, a much wiser choice than selecting Yeaman and Raynor, a combination that at present, has just one cap between them.

2. At Sixes and Sevens
Here at The One Pointer, our disapproval of Sean Long's Great Britain performances are hardly a secret.
The selection of Long at scrum half came as no suprise, but what was suprising is the decision to send home GB's best half-back alternative, Lee Briers after the warm-up game in Newcastle.
When he comes up against the world's best, Long has fails to produce. His kicking game goes awol and his attacking ideas are too predictable for the quality of the Kangaroos and Kiwi's.
McGuire is a decision I can support but his game is reliant on players around him making breaks and finding space. Unless Long suddenly finds a way to unlock the solid defences he'll encounter over the coming weeks, that partnership will be wasted.

3. The Loose Forward
In the absence of Paul Sculthorpe and Kevin Sinfield, Sean O'Loughlin will don the number '13' shirt this weekend. The only question is "why?"
O'Loughlin has got to be one of the most over-rated players currenly in the Super League. He has failed to find form this season in a poor Wigan side, his attacking abilities are unspectacular and his tackling technique is non-existent. Add to that a proneness to conceeding soft penalties and you immediatley have a weak link which any half-decent International side will exploit.
Compare the attributes that the Wigan captain brings with the likes of the in-form Jon Wilkin or Paul Cooke and the decision to include O'Loughlin starts to look even more perplexing and it is just a shame that whilst Noble has named a very strong pack based on merit, the last name on his starting team sheet happens to be a player who is completely undeserving of that place.

All in all, the side selected is more than capable of matching New Zealand on paper. The pack is particuarly strong, the back line is experienced and despite a few questionable decisions, Noble appears to have put together a strong side. How strong that side proves to be will be discovered once GB kick-off against a battle-hardened New Zealand outfit.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Schtop! This GB Team, It is Not Ready Yet

Great Britain officially join the Gillette Tri-Nations this Saturday against New Zealand in Christchurch and the obligatory "this is the best squad I've worked with" has already been trotted out.


The Lions go into the game against the Kiwi's, an indeed the entire tournament, as massive underdogs. The Aussie media have them down as no-hopers and are fully expecting Brian Noble's side to be on the plane home as Kangaroo's kick-off the final against New Zealand.

The Kiwi's however are in desperate need of a victory to keep their chances alive. Two successive defeats against Australia have left them with zero points having played two games more than Great Britain. A third defeat would leave them facing an uphill battle to secure a berth in the Sydney showdown.

They needn't worry though, as Great Britain are fully deserving of their underdogs tag.
This isn't particularly a go at the players. On the whole, the Aussies are certainly stronger and the Kiwi's would claim to be more gifted in many areas, but the current GB squad are capable and indeed have beaten both sides in the past in one-off encounters.
The problem however is putting in consistent performances. A one-off win has always been achievable, it's the second and third win that has proved elusive in the past.

Much of the blame for that must lie with the Rugby Football League.

This year, as in previous years, Great Britain go into the tournament under prepared in comparison to their rivals. A warm-up game against a Newcastle District select does not get you battle-hardened for the toughest competition in sport.
Whilst the Kiwi's and Roo's have two International games under their belts, GB have a series of training sessions and Friday night pub match victory to their name.

It is this shoddy preparation that provided the basis for Phil Clarke's resignation from the post of Great Britain team manager and the lack of support from the RFL has not been fully addressed. A warm-up against a part time team and pre-season friendly against a New Zealand 'A' side is far from good enough. Instead, what is needed is for the RFL to shorten the Super League season.

Rid the year of the six 'additional' games, introduce a larger representative calendar and send Great Britain to the Tri-Nations earlier.
The Yorkshire v Lancashire concept was scrapped far too quickly. The powers at Red Hall were clearly expecting this to be an instant hit. By being sandwiched between two Super League rounds with a mid-week kick-off, this was never going to be the case. In the tried format, the clubs were never going to support it and neither were the fans. Instead, the concept should have been given it's own weekend.
As for Internationals, the Les Catalan franchise will eventually lead to the development of a competitive French side but until then, GB will have to make do with another non-event against New Zealand 'A' in 2007.

The opposers to the 'reduce six games' argument claim that clubs would struggle financially through a loss in match-day income. However, I would argue that clubs that are financially dependent on six 'artificially produced' fixtures should have their Super League credentials called into question.

I could call into question the selection policies and the tactics employed by Noble. I personally would prefer to see Lee Briers in the squad ahead of Long and Roby but the fact remains, Brian Noble is far more knowledgeable about the game than they vast majority of people on this planet. He knows what his sides strengths are and he knows their weaknesses.

The GB players aren't far behind their Southern Hemisphere counterparts. Unfortunately, the Rugby Football League isn't giving them the chance to prove that.

Monday, October 23, 2006

The Super League Shirt Parade

Christmas is on the way and it's the time of year when Super League clubs start releasing the brand new kits that there players will be modeling next season.

Here at the One Pointer, we take a peak as they are officially unvieled and run the rule over the good, the bad and the downright ugly.

Bradford Bulls
Home:












Away:















Catalans Dragons

Home:

















Away:
















Harlequins RL
Home:

Away:


















Huddersfield Giants
Home:

Away:



















Hull FC
Home (Black & White) & Away (Blue):


















Hull KR
Home:














Away:


Leeds Rhinos
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Friday, October 20, 2006

A Fuss over Nothing

Wakefield forward David Solomona looks set to complete a move to Bradford Bulls early next week but as you might imagine, the Wildcats aren't happy about it.




The claim by Wakefield Chief Executive Steve Ferres is that the Bulls illegally approached the Kiwi second-rower whilst he was still under contract at Wakefield. Had Wakefield been relegated, Solomona would have become a free agent but with the Wildcats' avoiding relegation on the last day of the season, his contract at Belle Vue remained intact.

Allegations were then made by the Wildcats that the Bulls had illegally approached Solomona towards the end of this season and a complaint was made to the Rugby Football League, which has led to the Odsal club being investigated.
Seven days later, Solomona handed in a transfer request, with Ferres claiming that their prized star had become "unsettled because he has been offered a better financial deal elsewhere."

Unfortunately for Ferres, that is only half the story.

In today's game, agents are always touting players around the clubs. There is no denying that and for any agent that doesn't, it would be questionable if he had the best interests of his client to heart. Clubs are not prevented from contacting agents, just from directly approaching the players themselves whilst they are contracted elsewhere.

As for Solomona, I don't doubt that he's looking to increase his earnings, but I suspect that its more to do with the fact that Bradford are much more progressive, ambitious and forward thinking club than the Wildcats probably ever will be.

At Odsal, Solomona has the opportunity to progress his career, raise his profile and begin adding honours to his name. At Wakefield, he has the opportunity to put his career on the line, fighting against relegation and remaining a big fish in a small pond.

If Ferres wants to attract good players and, more crucially, keep them at Belle Vue he needs to look at his own club before pointing the finger at others. The Wildcats have a poor side. There is little quality that takes the field and with Korkidas already gone, Solomona going and players like Atkins will be picked up sooner rather than later should he continue to impress. With a junior set-up stifled by average overseas players, it seems that many promising players will be prevented from making the grade.
Off the field, they are stuck an unsuitable ground, playing in front of pitiful crowds and have little future in the game unless Wakefield Council step in to save the club with a new stadium.
As a result, Solomona's job security is seriously undermined and the lure of a secure playing contract and sound financial package is understandably too good to turn down.

The current state of the club is always going to lead to the scenario where players feel they have to leave to further their career. It happened with Ellis, it's happening now with Solomona.

The Wildcats bigwigs can cry foul all they want but they aren't doing themselves any favours.
One club will eventually come out of this situation with it's reputation further tarnished, but it won't be the Bulls.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Jonah Lomu Coming to League - Again

The word in the NRL is that new Queensland franchise Gold Coast Titans have lined up New Zealand Rugby Union legend Jonah Lomu on a one-year contract.






Not for the first time, the All Black winger has been linked with a move to the 13-a-side code. The powerful back, who has 73 International caps, has previously been linked with (the then) Auckland Warriors in the NRL, Wigan, Wakefield and a dual-code deal with Leeds Rhinos and Tykes.

Will this signing be good for the Titans though? For next season Gold Coast will already have Brian Carney, Steve Turner, Jake Webster and Matt Peterson on it's books for next year at 31 years of age, Lomu's best days are probably behind him, before you begin to factor in his health issues which stem back to 1996 and led to a Kidney transplant in 2004.

Since then, Lomu has struggled for fitness. He has appeared for North Harbour and Cardiff Blues but has been dogged by injuries and fitness concerns and missed out on a Super 14 contract for next year, effectively ending his 2007 World Cup hopes.

So from a playing side, it would appear the offering would be minimal. However, one suspects that this signing could be much more beneficial for the men in the marketing office at Carrara Stadium.
Lomu is a name recognised the World over, even by non-rugby enthusiasts. His game style and personality has earned him fans wherever he has played and even though fans remain from the days of the Chargers, the Titans looking to build up a fan base from scratch and there are few better names than that of Jonah Lomu to help shift season tickets.

If the deal does come off, don't expect to see much of Lomu on the field, but there will be plenty of opportunities for Titan's fans to see him off it.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

What Went Wrong for Hull?

After all the hype surrounding yesterday's Grand Final, St Helens eventually cantered to a 26-4 victory to complete a memorable and well-deserved treble.


A second-half blitz from the Saints overcame a Hull side that had promised so much, yet fell at the final hurdle despite a valiant attempt.

But where did it all go wrong?

St Helens are an outstanding side. They have created a side which can play superb attacking Rugby, keep the opposition scoring to a minimum and Daniel Anderson's side have set a benchmark that clubs will struggle to reach regardless of their resources. Give a side as strong as this an inch, and they won't only take a mile, they'll take far more than that.

As for the game itself, in my view, Hull made two critical mistakes. The first one came in the first 15 minutes. In the opening stages, Peter Sharpe's men had the better of the game. They took the game to St Helens and kept the minor premiers penned in their own half. They only thing they didn't do is score. They came close through Gareth Raynor, but after that initial quarter of an hour St Helens came back into the game and once Francis Meli gave them the lead, their tails were up.

The second mistake came on the stroke of half time. With the game at 4-4, Leon Pryce crossed to give St Helens the lead with the last action of the opening 40 minutes.

You can argue that the game was lost in the second half as fatigue caught up with Hull but that Pryce try took the wind out of Hull after a half where they probably should have been in front. Saints were ruthless in the second half, but they were allowed to take confidence from the first period by Hull's lack of composure in attack.

In the end, there was only going to be one winner of Super League XI. Hull can be proud of their performance this season, esspecially after overcoming a poor start to the season and the loss of their trophy winning coach from last season. Expect them to be around the higher reaches of the league next season and with the experience that yesterday will bring, they could go one better in SL12.