Judder Man wrote:
What annoyed me was Wakefield signing up quite a few players prior to the middle 8's, all legal but doesn't seem right. Maybe the championship sides should be allowed extra spending powers prior to the middle 8's for the sake of parity.
They were and Leigh used them to the full. Wakefield signed a few, but they also released players previous to that.
Ultimately it comes down to the disparity of the system. The SL clubs in the middle 8s are allowed to spend more because of the fact they were in SL and not the Championship. They can't responsibly do anything about that as if you allow Championship clubs to spend more and they don't get promoted there is a real risk of bankruptcy, which would be twice in about three years for Leigh. (Beaumont is looking as likely to fail as Koukash)
The current 8s system is unfair on the Championship clubs. In reality it would take a ridiculously poor SL side to lose to a Championship side in that format.
But clubs like Leigh cannot moan about it as they campaigned for it and supported it when it was brought it in. They arrogantly believed they would walk it and haven't performed, even to the level of their peers. The best system is still franchising. That would reward the clubs with the best facilities, fan bases and league performances. Why they ever moved away from that is beyond me.
IMO SL should be:
2 x Expansion clubs (As they need protection as unfair to expect the same crowds etc as established clubs. London should IMO have been replaced by Toulouse a LONG time ago). If a London or Paris or Spanish or Italian franchise found a serious backer with a proper business plan and had community backing with long term potential for 10k crowds they should be allowed in)
8 x franchised clubs (And change them at a full seasons notice. The likes of Wakefield should not be in SL, no matter how you slice things. A franchising system now would remove them and add Leigh, without the need for them to spend irresponsibly. Now would have been the perfect time to remove Wakefield and Wigan
as they don't own their own grounds. Wigan fans can't moan about that as they would have been relegated under the P&R system that year anyway, had they not cheated).
Long term Super League needs to go again. The Sky money unquestionably saved the sport, but it's now dying again. It needs to think bigger than a £1.6m cap, but can't currently without being irresponsible. It needs to get out there and sell itself. If a womens cricket Super league competition can attract bids for franchises of £2m per team per season (Mentioned on the radio recently) without any possibility of a paying crowd, why can't Super League attract some of the Indian, Chinese and Gulf money other sports seem to be able to?