Todd Greenberg strikes again

By The King of the World / Roar Guru

Todd Greenberg has made it clear to all 16 clubs captains after a horror offseason for them to keep their noses clean, from the juniors all the way to the senior staff.

Good on him for this long overdue call – better later than never. What I don’t understand, however, is how he praised Greg Inglis for drink driving and refused to suspend him for putting lives at risks – yet he wants to suspend Dylan Napa for his sex tapes.

Greenberg, I find it impressive telling captains their clubs must step up for their players to stay out of strife, but this will always be marked with you letting Greg Inglis off the hook – and he’s the captain of South Sydney.

As for the whole idea in general, I totally love it. The game is slowly dying with off-field nonsense from the players. We don’t just see them as football players, we see them as role models for the younger generation who see these players as heroes.

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When they see them as heroes, they want to reference them as heroes like Spider-Man, Batman and Superman, not any who get drunk and act sarcastic or uncivilised.

I remember mentioning the new policy the Newcastle Knights have and, despite it being totally severe, it could be very effective.

It’s a very high-risk move but we all know the phrase about the higher the risk, the higher the reward. Maybe this will spread through to the other clubs.

From the NRL’s point of view, they need to add on it. If the clubs choose to fine 25 per cent of the yearly salary, leave it as it is.

However, if the incident is so severe the player from any club who caused it has his contract revoked, don’t just stop there.

To show how serious it is, the terminated player shouldn’t just sign with another club right off the bat, he needs to be suspended from the game for 12 months.

In that time, he should take a look at life outside the game. Anything from stacking shelves at Woolworths to working on a construction site.

This way, they can look at it realising they spent 12 months away from the game missing out on what they love doing and they’ll never get it back. This truly teaches them a lesson.

I’ve said before that the board and the player’s union are too soft for their own good – and this offseason proved just that. The time to step up is now!

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-23T03:02:32+00:00

john

Guest


It's quite farcical that NRL is still consistently punishing a non-criminal activity over an actual crime.

2019-01-23T00:03:06+00:00

Greg

Guest


He stopped for lunch and a beer on his drive home

2019-01-22T21:49:21+00:00

Adrian Megale

Guest


It’s a reference to Hancock before he cleaned up.

2019-01-22T14:23:11+00:00

J.T. Delacroix

Guest


“Not any who get drunk and act sarcastic”? I reckon allegations of sarcasm are the least of these idiots’ concerns.

2019-01-22T04:17:10+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


There is context around that statement of wanting to remain captain. He tied one on Sunday night and went to bed at 1am and he was caught at 2pm the following day. Let's not pretend he was nursing a JD after just leaving the pub. It was an error in judgment at worst and he paid a heavy price in humiliation and losing this captaincy role and position for the next 2 tests. Not one time in his previous career has he got into any trouble outside of the game.

2019-01-22T03:57:20+00:00

eels47

Roar Rookie


No, but I am also not a public figure. That argument doesn't wash. I am not being paid $1M (approx) to play a sport and be the face of the national team. He takes all of the benefits that come from being in his position, and must also accept the responsibility that comes with that.

2019-01-22T02:17:30+00:00

Nick

Roar Guru


Should you be caught for drink driving, would you then insist on standing down from your job? No.

2019-01-22T02:15:58+00:00

eels47

Roar Rookie


I would have a lot more time for Inglis' remorse if he did not also state that he believed he should remain captain of Australia. He should have stood down from the test series, or at least as captain. I do agree though that Greenberg wasn't praising what he did, and he did in fact suspend him, from said test matches.

2019-01-22T01:41:20+00:00

Peter Piper

Guest


To be fair, I think that Todd was praising the way that Inglis admitted what he had done and the took the consequences of that on board with grace and dignity. It is also pretty obvious that Inglis is full of genuine remorse for his actions. I do not think for one minute that Todd was praising or supporting what he did. As for Napa, whilst I have some sympathy for him, he has behaved in a silly way that has caused a lot of bad publicity for the game. The dangers of social media cannot be overstated and when you are a public figure they are magnified 10 fold.

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