Quote SmokeyTA="SmokeyTA"whatever semantic gymnastics you wish to indulge in wont alter the fact you expect the players to accept less in the hope clubs spend more elsewhere. You expect that the earnings of the players should be the opportunity cost of investment in other areas of the business.
If clubs need financial input that comes from selling their product or it comes from owner investment, it shouldnt come from setting up a cartel to lower employees wages.
Not being able to compete with Union or the NRL or anything else is irrelevant.
There are many many many players who will leave our game with not a lot of money, at a disadvantage to the rest of the workforce in terms of skills and experience, whose bodies are shattered and broken by our game and who will struggle for the rest of their lives. That Wakefield might want pay managers more, or spend more on the club shop is pretty irrelevant to that.
If fans and owners want to see something, they pay for it. Players have no responsibility to earn less so fans and owners dont have to pay as much.'"
Again, stop being daft just because you don't like the salary cap.
I think players should be paid as much as clubs can afford whilst properly funding other aspects of their business. The problem we have is that there is a highly sought after amount of RL playing talent and so the costs of acquiring that talent (ie wages) can be easily and highly artificially inflated and, due to the low amount of clubs in RL, that inflation can be triggered by just 1 source (eg a Koukash).
That inflation can be hugely destabilising to clubs. We saw it happen in the 80's and 90's where clubs were trying to outdo each other to keep up with Wigan. The problem is this led to 2 of the sports biggest and richest clubs nearly going under in Leeds and Wigan. It took Leeds a decade and Wigan even longer to recover financially. If better, longer term decisions had been made in the 80's and 90's then both Leeds and Wigan would be in better situations now. Wigan could have either redeveloped Central Park or sold it on their own terms and Headingley would have had at least 1 other stand rebuilt by now.
Sports clubs aren't like regular businesses. The mobile phone industry didn't suffer when Nokia struggled/failed despite being previously the industry leader. Their customers don't have anything close to the brand loyalty that sport clubs enjoy. If Leeds go under their fans are largely lost to the sport, they don't go to another club/company.
So our companies/clubs need more protections than regular businesses, especially due to the very limited number of RL clubs.
If Salford pay significantly more than the average then everyone has to eventually. Just because Koukash is prepared to lose millions of pounds a year doesn't mean everyone can or should.
If we had 12 or even 6 Koukash's at our clubs then fine scrap the cap, but we don't. We have owners often benevolently loaning or writing off relatively small amounts of money in order to keep their dream from dying.
Unless you think that RL clubs currently spend enough on and properly prioritise areas such as management, marketing, commercial, sports science etc then those areas need funding more than currently.
I'm all for clubs increasing their turnover, let's do that absolutely, who wouldn't be for that? But I think that money should go into the massively under-invested areas of RL clubs that I've mentioned rather than players wages, which it would if the SC were scrapped.
I know your come back is that why would clubs alter their current business strategy and start losing money.
Well that's pretty simple to answer, because what's the alternative?
The alternative is accept you aren't going to win things. So the choice is:
1 - spend more on players wages to try and compete and rely on winning to make up the financial gap.
2 - reduce spending elsewhere. Club revenues fall and player performance suffers. Again rely on winning to bridge the financial gap.
3 - accept you're not going to compete. Keep spending where it is. Best case scenario an odd flukey win here or there but more likely is reduced club revenue as supporter expectation falls.
The point is, to raise players wages we HAVE to increase club revenues first. There's no magic wand to do that, it means hiring good people into the clubs. That costs money. And they require a budget which also costs money.
The best signings Leeds ever made weren't Kevin Sinfield or Jamie Peacock but Gary Hetherington and Rob Oates. They enabled Leeds to compete on the pitch by sorting it out off the pitch.
Do that at other clubs and they'll thrive too relatively speaking. Then when we've got enough clubs properly resourced and run then we can look at the salary cap and raising players wages. Until then the clubs can't afford to pay them more, even if some would decide to if there were no SC.