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How to build an NRL team: Perth Bears hunt for hidden gems as PNG Chiefs splash cash | Angus Fontaine

about 9 hours ago
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The path to top-level Australian rugby league can take myriad forms.Clubs may win promotion from a second division (Cronulla and Penrith in 1967), command franchises with huge heartland support (Brisbane and Newcastle in 1988), get shoe-horned into an ill-fated rebel competition (Adelaide Rams and Hunter Mariners in 1997) or arrive fully formed to satiate a growing local demand (the Dolphins in 2023).The NRL’s 18th and 19th teams are taking different routes.The Perth Bears will enter in 2027 as a revamped foundation club (North Sydney) sent west to conquer an AFL territory.The PNG Chiefs land in 2028 as a $600m Trojan horse from Australian taxpayers to curb China’s influence in the South Pacific – a ploy Papua New Guinea prime minister James Marape calls “a unification strategy deployed under the flag of rugby league”.

However you get there, true NRL success depends on visionary leaders and great players, strong club culture and junior pathways, loyal fans … and tons of cash to splash.Australia’s prime minister Anthony Albanese is a famously passionate Rabbitohs fan and NRL devotee but the size of the PNG deal, the haste of its delivery and a lack of consultation with other Australian sports bodies and the smaller South Pacific nations has irked plenty.Despite decades of diplomacy in the region, rugby union receives just $12.5m every five years for development in Fiji, Tonga and Samoa via the PacificAus Sports scheme.The fact the $600m saw the existing 17 NRL clubs handed $3.

5m each to off-set fears players would jump to the Chiefs for its tax-free contracts and sponsor deals also drew ire.No such sweeteners are on offer to wannabe Bears and it’s a forced migration too, which had the West Australian growling: “Bad news Bears: Rugby mad Roger Cook forces WA taxpayers to pay Sydney NRL rejects $65m to play in Perth”.“Building a rugby league team starts with good people,” says Michael Chammas, who was hand-picked by NRL chair Peter V’landys to be the PNG Chiefs’ general manager of football.The former journalist joined a savvy local chief executive.“Lorna McPherson has lived in PNG for 16 years,” Chammas says.

“She knows how important the Chiefs will be to locals.” Coach Willie Peters signed next, having led Hull Kingston Rovers to glory in the UK Super League.Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.If you already have the Guardian app, make sure you’re on the most recent version.In the Guardian app, tap the Profile settings button at the top right, then select Notifications.

Turn on sport notifications,Taking their cue from the Dolphins who installed acclaimed mentor Wayne Bennett as their inaugural coach and player-magnet, the Bears installed Mal Meninga, absent from the NRL since 2001 but national coach since 2015,Despite CEO Anthony De Ceglie’s media executive past, the Bears have been conspicuously quiet in the press and disquiet ramped up when general manager of football, David Sharpe, quit last month,The Chiefs made headlines this past week by signing four-time premiership playmaker Jarome Luai on a three-year deal worth $1,2m a season.

“Jarome is a family man who brings culture and standards,” says Chammas.“His profile transcends the game and will lift a nation.” No wonder Marape feted Luai with private planes and tours of golf courses and private islands.Luai will be an active recruiter too, says Chammas.McPherson “was in tears when Jarome signed”, he adds.

“She knows the dream is becoming a reality.”The Bears’ reality is quickly becoming a nightmare.They are yet to sign a marquee star to lead the five-hour flight west, failing to woo Cam Munster and Tino Fa’asuamaleaui, and recruiting a worryingly motley crew of 19 utilities and rookies, of which only Storm centre Nick Meaney is a regular starter at his current club.Unlike the Dolphins who had 75 years of proven player development in south-east Queensland, the Bears are stymied by two AFL sides fed by strong WAFL pathways.It means they must ship in depth from feeder-founders North Sydney 4,000km away.

Meanwhile, of PNG’s 11 to 17 million citizens (there hasn’t been a census in 24 years), “85 per cent play league and 95 per cent support it,” says the National’s sports writer Michael Philip,Chammas wants the Chiefs to have “a strong Pasifika flavour” (Luai is Samoan) and the startup club has up to $240m of their $600m to recruit from traditional union nations Fiji, Tonga and Samoa,“Rugby sits at the heart of village life, tradition, and national pride in the Pacific,” warns Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh,Yet the NRL war chest “seems designed to set up a talent pathway for league”, says Senator David Pocock,Bears diehards have stayed loyal to the red-and-black since their 1999 exile from the NRL.

But the Perth Bears presence was notable by its absence at North Sydney Oval for the club’s first home game in April, and there are still no 2027 memberships on sale for the inaugural NRL season, whereas the Dolphins had 15,000 members secured before their 2023 debut.The Bears have a $6m jersey sponsor (Cash Converters) but fans are the true currency.Albanese wants the $600m outlay to bolster “people-to-people ties” in the South Pacific and build infrastructure in a country where 40% of people live on less than $2.15 per day.But how will Chiefs fans feel about their team living large in a new $66m resort? Even if they ever set foot on Port Moresby’s most notorious streets, “safety won’t be a concern”, says Philip.

“Those NRL players will be kings and heroes on the streets.”
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Solicitors report late flood of no-fault evictions before ban in England

Solicitors say they have been inundated with requests to serve last-minute section 21 no-fault eviction notices before they are banned when the Renters’ Rights Act comes into force in England on Friday.The legislation, which has been hailed as the biggest change to renting in a generation, bans no-fault evictions, limits rent increases and abolishes fixed-term tenancies.On the eve of the new rules, solicitors said they were working long hours to keep up with the sudden demand for eviction notices, while Citizens Advice said thousands of people facing a no-fault eviction had approached it for help in the last month.In March, the service helped 2,335 people dealing with a no-fault eviction, up 16% on the same time last year, as well as more than 1,800 people dealing with disrepair such as damp and mould, and more than 1,000 with rent increases.Thackray Williams, a London- and Kent-based law firm, said it had received a wave of last-minute instructions from landlords looking to evict their tenants and sell their properties because of the legislation

2 days ago
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Austerity to blame for the fall in healthy life expectancy | Letters

A major cause of the fall in healthy life expectancy (People in UK spend fewer years in good health than a decade ago, study finds, 27 April) is austerity and the continued cuts to social and health spending. In our report Still Digging Deeper: The Impact of Austerity on Inequalities and Deprivation in the Coalfield Areas, which covers Scotland, England and Wales for the period 1984-2024, we highlight how public expenditure cuts since 1984 have disproportionately impacted coalfield areas of the UK.Since 2010, austerity has been stepped up, and we have calculated that welfare reforms and benefit cuts amounted to £32.6bn over the period of 2010-21. Furthermore, in 2025-26 coalfield local authorities had a combined funding gap of £447m

3 days ago
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UK researchers develop tool to identify people most at risk of obesity-related diseases

A new tool that can shed light on who is most at risk of obesity-related diseases could help identify people who would benefit most from weight-loss medications, researchers have said.Recent data suggests about two-thirds of adults in England are overweight or obese – a situation that has caused concern among health experts.Now researchers have developed a tool that, they say, offers an accurate and personalised approach to identifying those at risk of obesity-related conditions.They add it could be useful for prioritising who should receive interventions, such as weight-loss jabs, given that access on the NHS is limited and currently based simply on having a high body mass index (BMI) and particular obesity-related health problems.Prof Nick Wareham, of the University of Cambridge, a co-author of the study, said the measure was not about extending the use of particular therapies

3 days ago
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Violence against women is at ‘breaking point’, says writer of John Worboys drama

Violence against women is “at breaking point” and the justice system needs to change, according to the writer of new ITV drama Believe Me about the survivors of “black-cab rapist” John Worboys.Jeff Pope, who is also writing a BBC drama about the murder of Sarah Everard, said he wanted to tell these stories because “something needs to happen” and the “police just won’t seem to me to change”.Believe Me tells the true story of how the women who were attacked by Worboys were failed and doubted by the Metropolitan police. He was eventually jailed in 2019, with the help of evidence from Carrie Symonds (now married to Boris Johnson) who was drugged, but escaped being raped. Symonds is portrayed in Believe Me by Industry actor Miriam Petche

3 days ago
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Raise tax on alcohol and junk food to cut deaths from liver disease, experts say

Governments in Europe should impose much higher taxes on alcohol and unhealthy food to tackle the continent’s 284,000 deaths a year from liver disease, experts say.Taxes on those products should rise sharply enough for the money raised to cover the huge costs they place on health services, the criminal justice system and social services.The call for tough action on common causes of serious liver disease comes from a commission of experts from the European Association for the Study of the Liver and the Lancet medical journal.They are urging governments in Europe to ensure all alcoholic products carry health warnings and stop under-18s being targeted with online advertisements for alcoholic drinks and junk food.Bold steps are needed to combat “an escalating and unsustainable burden of liver disease”, the commission says in a report published on Wednesday in the Lancet

3 days ago
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Leasehold ban in England and Wales unlikely before next general election, minister says

A ban on new leasehold properties in England and Wales is unlikely to come into force until after the next election, the housing minister has said, as he defended the government’s piecemeal attempts to dismantle the system.The long-promised end would take years to “switch on”, Matthew Pennycook said, even though the ban of leaseholds on new houses was passed in 2024 and the government intends to pass one on new flats soon.Pennycook was giving a speech defending the government’s approach to bringing a de facto end to the feudal-era system after years of complaints from leaseholders about crippling service charges and crumbling buildings. He said the process needed to be rolled out slowly to avoid undermining housing supply and falling into legal pitfalls.“I think it’s highly likely that we don’t switch on the ban in this parliament,” he told reporters afterwards

3 days ago
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Firm bookings, fast refunds: easyJet and On The Beach aim to reassure jittery travellers with holiday pledges

1 day ago
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Octopus Energy boss: some people would accept blackouts if bills cut

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ACCC v Woolworths may have exposed the ‘magic’ of supermarket discounts – but will it change how we shop?

1 day ago
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Renault says ‘seismic shift’ in electric car interest after Iran war oil price shock – as it happened

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‘Temu Range Rover’: what the bestselling Jaecoo 7 says about China’s electric car ascendancy

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Czech energy group hints at combined bid for British Steel and Speciality Steel UK

1 day ago