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Dangerous times lie ahead for NRL as latest skirmish with rugby union ramps up | Nick Tedeschi

about 4 hours ago
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The long-awaited R360 threat has finally hit the NRL with Storm fan favourite Ryan Papenhuyzen and Kangaroos three-quarter Zac Lomax quitting their clubs and the sport.While the first salvo has come under the shroud of mystery with neither player revealing their future plans, this war over the elite talent of the NRL is far more likely to escalate than it is to evaporate over the next two years.It is the first truly external threat to the NRL’s hold on its talent in nearly a quarter-century, since a newly professional and cock-a-hoop Rugby Australia (then known as the ARU) used its brief surge in relative popularity – spurred by the public’s disenchantment with rugby league following the Super League War – to sign big-name NRL players Wendell Sailor, Mat Rogers and Lote Tuqiri.It is a threat the NRL should take extremely seriously, even if R360’s attempt to sign a host of rugby league stars will not truly cut at the heart of the 13-man game and its ongoing viability.This, of course, is not the first skirmish between the two codes.

League was born out of union 130 years ago and for the century that followed, league poached union players and union leveraged its establishment power to threaten those tempted by the money of the 13-man game.League established itself as the football code of choice in two of Australia’s three most populous states while union found itself increasingly marginalised, viewed as elitist and unnecessarily confusing.Due to a general absence on free-to-air television, it has been considered generally irrelevant outside of private schools and well-to-do enclaves in Sydney and Brisbane.The latest attack on rugby league though is very different in two ways: it is not coming from the union establishment, and the money in the hands of the antagonists is far more plentiful than Rugby Australia – or World Rugby for that matter – has ever seen.This is far more akin to LIV – a major disruptor with unending sums of cash, grand ambition and a disregard for the conventions that typically limit how sporting organisations operate – going after the PGA Tour than the ARU pinching a star or two.

While the rebel union competition fronted by ex-England international Mike Tindall has not publicly named its investors, it is believed to have already attracted funding for three years with investment firm 885 Capital – the UAE-based investment firm that has major stakes in the Baller League and the Professional Fighters League – and sports advisory firm Albachiara among those Oakvale Capital have put together to fund the venture.This is not some fly-by-night project.This is well-considered and well-funded.When LIV took a similarly aggressive approach to signing golfers, it was not only big names in the sunset of their careers and young talent with potential they went after, but stars in their prime like Jon Rahm, Tyrell Hatton and Joaquin Niemann.Unsurprisingly promises of large sums of cash trump any fears over competition viability, concerns over bans and worries about a diminished public profile.

Papenhuyzen and Lomax – if they do indeed sign – would be no significant loss to rugby league, if that was where the raids were to end.Even if those that have been linked but have not made any formal moves to sign with R360, such as Payne Haas and Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, were to defect, the NRL will move on without losing a single viewer.But the more players who depart, the more the NRL’s shine wears off.The league’s greatest strength is its production line of talent.When Roosters rep duo Joey Manu and Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii left for union, their absences were hardly noted – the duo were replaced by Dally M Rookie of the Year Robert Toia and the competition’s top tryscorer Mark Nawaqanitawase.

There is a tipping point though.The concern for the NRL is when the talent drain reaches that point, with fans actually missing the departed along with the increased belief that the NRL is fertile ground to continue farming talent.It is telling that almost no Australian rugby union player of note has been linked with R360 – clearly the strategy is to chase NRL players.Sign up to Sport in FocusSign up to Sport in Focusafter newsletter promotionPart of R360’s plans is to run a parallel women’s competition, and a likely raid on the NRLW should be of far greater concern as it has the capacity to significantly damage the quality of the competition.The NRLW has been carefully developed over the last decade, and the ARLC has been careful to ensure the competition grew with the talent available.

But the well of talent is not as deep at the moment and losing names like Tamika Upton and Olivia Kernick would be devastating.NRLW players remain part-time and many of them have a history in rugby union, making them more susceptible to R360 overtures.The NRL has talked big with its threats of 10-year bans for players and agents who deal with R360.Actions have not backed this up though and the clubs have not fallen into line, with the Storm and Eels both dealing with agent Clinton Schifcofske to release Papenhuyzen and Lomax.The NRL has not pulled the trigger on any suspensions yet and given the game’s history of walking back long bans – from Sonny Bill Williams being allowed back to the NRL after walking out on Canterbury to Victor Radley’s 10-game club suspension being halved – fans are rightly sceptical that the NRL is anything more than tough talk.

These are dangerous times for the NRL.The league needs to be tough and they need to stand firm on their hefty suspensions or R360 is going to cherry pick the NRL’s best players and continue to do so.This is not a drill.
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UK officials ‘working day and night’ to resolve NHS drug pricing row’

The UK science minister has said officials are “working day and night” trying to resolve the standoff with big pharmaceutical companies over drug pricing.Speaking to industry leaders and investors at London life sciences week, Patrick Vallance, a former GSK executive, said the government was “clear eyed about the challenges”.“Recent headlines have not always been favourable, and we are acutely aware of the pressures that companies face in the current commercial environment here in the UK,” he said.“Many of us are working day and night right the way across government to make progress on these issues. And rest assured that we are laser focused on getting that resolved

about 13 hours ago
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GWR train fitted with F1 tech for two-month superfast wifi trial

Train wifi in the UK, long a source of frustration for passengers, is about to get radically faster – for a lucky few at least.A two-month trial has begun on one Great Western Railway (GWR) train, fitted with technology from Formula One that switches between the signals from 5G masts to low Earth-orbit satellites to provide almost seamless, superfast wifi.For now, only one of GWR’s 57 intercity express trains will have a connection good enough to deliver a Netflix series to the seat. However, a successful trial and the promise of lower costs could spell a wider rollout to the rest of the mainline railway by 2030.On a test run from London Paddington to Newbury and back, the Guardian found the wifi fast and reliable enough to video call editors at the office, catch up on old Match of the Days on iPlayer and listen to songs on YouTube at the same time, with only occasional blips and pixelation

about 13 hours ago
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AI firms must be clear on risks or repeat tobacco’s mistakes, says Anthropic chief

Artificial intelligence companies must be transparent about the risks posed by their products or be in danger of repeating the mistakes of tobacco and opioid firms, according to the chief executive of the AI startup Anthropic.Dario Amodei, who runs the US company behind the Claude chatbot, said he believed AI would become smarter than “most or all humans in most or all ways” and urged his peers to “call it as you see it”.Speaking to CBS News, Amodei said a lack of transparency about the impact of powerful AI would replay the errors of cigarette and opioid firms that failed to raise a red flag over the potential health damage of their own products.“You could end up in the world of, like, the cigarette companies, or the opioid companies, where they knew there were dangers, and they didn’t talk about them, and certainly did not prevent them,” he said.Amodei warned this year that AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs – office roles such as accountancy, law and banking – within five years

about 18 hours ago
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How Google’s DeepMind tool is ‘more quickly’ forecasting hurricane behavior

When then Tropical Storm Melissa was churning south of Haiti, Philippe Papin, a National Hurricane Center (NHC) meteorologist, had confidence it was about to grow into a monster hurricane.As the lead forecaster on duty, he predicted that in just 24 hours the storm would become a category 4 hurricane and begin a turn towards the coast of Jamaica. No NHC forecaster had ever issued such a bold forecast for rapid strengthening.But Papin had an ace up his sleeve: artificial intelligence in the form of Google’s new DeepMind hurricane model – released for the first time in June. And, as predicted, Melissa did become a storm of astonishing strength that tore through Jamaica

1 day ago
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Money lured Anthony Joshua to circus fight but he could really hurt Jake Paul | Donald McRae

The unsurprising confirmation of “a colossal global showdown” between Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua arrived on Monday morning with a dull thud. That grand description of an eight-round scrap between a former YouTuber and a former world heavyweight champion was supplied by Paul’s company, Most Valuable Promotions, which also announced that the contest will be screened live on Netflix on 19 December and called Judgment Day.Boxing operates in a netherworld that appears to have sunk far beyond any fear of judgment, while Paul has always had delusions of grandeur as a novice pro. But even boxing may have to consider its own culpability should Paul be badly hurt and end up in hospital after this fully sanctioned bout with regulation 10oz gloves is held in Miami.Paul is a brilliant hustler and, until now, he has chosen his opponents with deliberate care to avoid excessive danger

about 10 hours ago
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Bazball faces its ultimate test as England eye golden Ashes chance

Tourists have a clearly defined identity and optimism, but still need to compete in a manner that earns Australia’s respectWhen Rob Key named Brendon McCullum as England’s head coach in 2022, his quote in the official press release told supporters to “buckle up and get ready for the ride”. Now, with this hot-ticket Ashes series a few days from setting off in sun‑drenched Perth, the mix of fear and excitement among them has arguably never been greater.The difference being that rollercoasters tend to stay on the rails, whereas England tours of Australia often career off them. No one is quite certain which way this one will play out, other than a broad agreement that Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood missing the first Test (at least) presents Ben Stokes and his tourists a golden opportunity.Not that many locals are tipping England

about 11 hours ago
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TotalEnergies buys €5.1bn stake in Czech tycoon’s power plants business

about 16 hours ago
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Thames Water bidder says it is offering £1bn extra cash injection

about 17 hours ago
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WPP shares leap amid takeover bid speculation

about 19 hours ago
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Reeves could allow holiday tax on English hotel and Airbnb stays

about 19 hours ago
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FCA’s first deputy CEO calls for stronger grip on vital tech firms

about 24 hours ago
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Asking prices fall as UK housing market hit by budget speculation, Rightmove says

1 day ago