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Melbourne Storm stripped of two NRL titles

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by Axel96, Apr 22, 2010.

  1. Axel96

    Axel96
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    Not sure if people have an interest in this...I was in Oz in 2007 and seen the Storm play, they were fairly awesome!! Sad to see the greed of a certain few ruining a club...


    http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/rugby_league/8636565.stm

    Melbourne Storm have been stripped of two championships in Australia's National Rugby League for breaching the competition's strict salary cap rules.

    The Victoria club were found to have spent A$1.6m (£960,541) above the set limit over the course of five years.

    The Storm have been fined A$500,000 (£300,000) and forced to return the A$1.1m (£660,200) prize money they took for winning the 2007 and 2009 titles.

    The club will also accumulate no points for the entire 2010 NRL season.

    The Australian Rugby League also removed three minor premierships - the titles for finishing top of the lucrative NRL after the end of the regular season - between 2006 and 2008.

    But the NRL does not operate a promotion-relegation system, so Melbourne will still be able to participate in next season's competition.

    The ruling was the severest punishment administered in NRL history.

    Each of the 16 teams in the NRL must not exceed a A$4.4m (£2.645m) salary cap set by the league, which employs a special audit team to monitor the finances of each club.

    The investigations into Storm's accounts revealed the club maintained a dual contract system whereby promises of extra payments were kept separate and clandestine from the club's owners, News Ltd, and its board members.

    "While the amount itself is cause for concern, the most damning indictment is the systematic attempt by persons within the club to conceal payments from the salary cap auditor and, it would now seem certain from the club's board and from its owners, on an ongoing basis," said NRL chief executive David Gallop.

    "It was through this system that they were able to attract and retain some of the biggest names in rugby league.

    "In doing so they have let down the game, the players and the fans of the Melbourne Storm.


    Melbourne Storm are defending world club champions
    "Clearly there were some individuals who knew what was going on and perhaps many who did not.

    "By nature, that means innocent parties will suffer as a result of this punishment but the persons responsible are those who constructed the scheme and anyone who knowingly signed a false statutory declaration to deceive the game.

    "It would be unfair now on the players and fans of every other club in the competition to allow the Storm to enter this year's finals series or to retain the titles they won.

    "As a game we will do all we can to restore the faith of each of those parties but there is no alternative now but to deal with the situation that has been so deliberately engineered."

    News Limited chief executive John Hartigan said the company had referred the matter to police. "This club has had a couple of rats in its ranks," he added.

    Melbourne joined the NRL in 1998 and quickly became a force outside of the game's traditional heartlands of New South Wales and Queensland.

    They won their first Grand Final in 2007 before following that up with their second title in three years last season and defeated Super League champions Leeds 18-10 in the World Club Challenge at Elland Road in February.

    The club boast a host of top players including Australia stars Cameron Smith, Billy Slater, Greg Inglis, New Zealand second row Sika Manu as well as English player Gareth Widdop.

    They had been in fourth place in this season's ladder with four victory and two defeats after six matches before the NRL's unprecedented ruling.

    "Today is a most unbelievable blow and this is the lowest day in the club's history," said Storm chairman Rod Moodie.

    "On behalf of the Melbourne Storm I would like to sincerely apologise to our players, our staff, our sponsors, our members and our supporters, and we will continue to assist the NRL with their investigation.

    "We will absolutely endeavour to return this club back to the great heights where it deserves to be."

    Neither Manly nor Parramatta, who were beaten by Melbourne in the 2007 and 2009 Grand Finals respectively, will assume the Storm's stripped titles.

    Instead, those years will remain blank in the NRL's history books.

    Canterbury Bulldogs were docked 37 points and fined A$500,000 in 2002 for salary cap breaches, while New Zealand Warriors had four points removed for a similar offence in 2006.
     
  2. redbell

    redbell
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    Does anybody in Melbourne care about NRL? They are only interested in Aerial Ping Pong.
    The dual contract system is similar to what Derry City were doing.
     
  3. Axel96

    Axel96
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    Yeah very little interest for NRL in Melbourne, prob why the broke the rules trying to promote the game. Was in Melbourne when they won the Premiership in 2007 and there was nothing happening for it...yet Grand Final week for the Rules was packed all sorts of events on...
    Very similar to the Derry situation..how do these people think they will get away with it!!!
     
  4. dmac1989

    dmac1989
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    Greed, They think `il never get caught, it wont happen to me`.Delighted they were got, hate cheats!
     

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