The Dolphins will be paddling upstream unless they settle on proper name

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Normally when a new team enters a professional sports league they ask the fans to come up with a nickname that suits the geographic location of the team.

For the Dolphins, they need to cast the net far and wide to come up with a name to sum up the regions they’ll represent when they enter the NRL in 2023.

The 17th franchise has indicated they are going to roll with The Dolphins but they need to stake their claim to land somewhere in the Redcliffe, Brisbane, Moreton Bay, Sunshine Coast area of South-East Queensland that they’ll represent.

It’s hard enough to be competitive and attract support from fans and the commercial sector as it is when you’re an expansion team, let alone if your identity is a source of confusion.

Club officials have said there is no name that sums up their region and they don’t want to use their traditional name of Redcliffe because they think it will stop fans among their Intrust Super Cup rivals from supporting them at NRL level.

Perhaps they should follow the lead of the Giants in the AFL, who basically made up the Greater Western Sydney tag.

It gave them an identity and the unique GWS brand stood out in the crowded sporting marketplace in Sydney’s west.

However, contriving a geographical name is not without its stuff-ups in Australian sport, particularly in the NRL.

In the early 1990s, the Roosters shed their traditional Eastern Suburbs moniker to become Sydney City (later dropping the City part) in a ploy to represent a bigger area and attract the business end of town.

What followed was a ridiculous situation which encapsulates how much this is a copycat league.

Despite two teams – North Sydney and South Sydney – already featuring the city’s name, two more clubs followed suit.

Canterbury switched to Sydney Bulldogs and Balmain, desperately fighting against the threat of extinction, threw away 80-plus years of history to become the Sydney Tigers, play home games on rival turf at Parramatta Stadium and even throw in some purple onto their iconic black and gold jerseys to supposedly attract more fans.

It couldn’t have backfired any worse with minuscule crowds turning out for their matches at Parramatta.

Confusing as it was, it made great satirical fodder for Roy Slaven and HG Nelson who started calling every team Sydney.

Balmain fortunately abandoned the plan after a couple of seasons and returned to Leichhardt for a few years before merging with Western Suburbs Magpies to form the Wests Tigers for the 2000 season.

They actually recovered well enough in the latter stages of the 1990s to have survived the rationalisation of the premiership to 14 teams as a standalone entity but chose the safety and extra funding that came with their merger.

Canterbury were technically the Sydney Bulldogs when they upset Manly in the 1995 grand final. They then tried to broaden their appeal by becoming The Bulldogs for more than a decade, taking out the 2004 title under that name before going back to their Canterbury-Bankstown roots in 2010.

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They adopted a cartoonish Bulldog as their logo during the time when the marketing suits held sway over commonsense and the fans’ wishes before reverting to their snarling traditional emblem.

Cronulla also made the mistake of listening to marketing experts by changing their name to The Sharks for a few seasons and also switching to a logo which elicited little fear but would supposedly attract a younger audience

They eventually abandoned the name, returned to a logo paying homage to their original menacing Shark and embraced their home territory with an “Our Shire, Our Team” philosophy which rallied the locals behind the club.

There is still plenty of time between now and kick-off next year for the Dolphins to learn from this history and come up with a proper name that doesn’t sound like another non-descript Super Rugby franchise.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Why not consult the local First Nations elders to see if there’s a traditional name they would be happy for the Dolphins to use which sums up the area?

There are a lot of NRL fans north, east, south, west and within Brisbane who don’t support the Broncos and have no affiliation with the Titans or Cowboys and if the Dolphins play their cards right, they will attract the disenfranchised to their franchise.

They’re off to a good start by hiring Wayne Bennett to be their foundation coach and his presence will ensure they will attract decent talent to their roster on top of the first key recruits, Felise Kaufusi and Ray Stone.

Whether the Dolphins’ location name ends up being South-East Queensland or Sunshine State or a totally new description of their diverse catchment area, anything is better than The.

The Crowd Says:

2022-01-14T15:11:56+00:00

The Magic Man

Roar Rookie


If they don't want a proper name, call them the Cape Town Dolphins and get them reaping the Super whirlwind

2022-01-07T13:24:01+00:00

Lyndon

Guest


I think this would be a great opportunity to work with the traditional owners to come up with a name.

2022-01-07T12:06:56+00:00

JennyfromPenny

Guest


I’ve always had a hunch this whole thing is about Munster. They wanted him as their marquee player, but they wanted the marquee player to be a local player. Problem being he comes from Rocky, 600km away. Solution: drop the Redcliffe. There was even talk of playing some of their games up there. Definitely a local if that happens. He has only committed to the Storm to save his ass. Playing the loyalty card gave them less cause to sack him on the spot. Guaranteed by June, he’ll be asking for a release, and we all know where he will be moving to.

2022-01-05T06:51:25+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


They’re Redcliffe. Anything else is a transparent joke! What’s the most popular sporting team in the world? Is it ‘North-West England Red Devils’ or ‘Manchester United’?

2022-01-05T06:49:00+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


:laughing:

2022-01-05T03:34:13+00:00

Sideline Commentator

Roar Guru


The Darwin Mozzies is a team name just waiting to explode :laughing:

2022-01-05T03:33:40+00:00

At work

Roar Rookie


:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: Well said, a team needs to represent an area, even if only for show, otherwise they should just relocate them to Perth to create a national comp :silly:

2022-01-05T03:14:37+00:00

AdamD

Roar Rookie


It was the NRL's decision for the Dolphins to not have a geographical name. Don't blame the Dolphins.

2022-01-04T22:25:31+00:00

Magnus

Guest


Moreton Bay Dolphins The bay extends some 125 kilometres (78 mi) from Caloundra in the north almost to Surfers Paradise in the south.[24] The bay's southern navigation entrance is the Gold Coast Seaway. The bay is 35 kilometres (22 mi) across at its widest point.

2022-01-04T09:42:34+00:00

Nuttybott

Guest


I kinda like the Sunshine State Dolphin's". Why would they put an apostrophe in their name? ????

2022-01-04T06:54:19+00:00

Trevor

Guest


Bay Area Dolphins. BAD.

2022-01-04T06:07:38+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


Humpy Bong is the original name for the Redcliffe area, I believe.

2022-01-04T05:52:16+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


Nicki, they dropped "Auckland" once they realised how unpopular Auckland is to the rest of the country. The term "JAFA" over there used to mean "Just Another F**King Australian" until "Aucklander" was substituted for "Australian".

2022-01-04T02:04:34+00:00

Paul

Guest


After years of potential new teams putting their cases forward to join the NRL as the 17th team, the best they have is the dolphins, but don’t call it a city or town name in case people don’t like it. Bloody hopeless management. Australian supporters want to be part of a community, have connections, watch youngsters go from juniors to NRL to origin. Being from Newcastle, they could of called them Hunter knights to capture the whole Hunter Region, but history showed it doesn’t matter. The Maitland pumpkin pickers and Cessnock Goanna people still support the knights. Call them Redcliffe Dolphins.

2022-01-03T20:32:56+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Thanks Greg.

2022-01-03T18:39:14+00:00

Ad-O

Guest


No, just stay the Redcliffe Dolphins. Everybody knows their history and harking back to the BRL is a good thing. They'll only come up with something stupid if they try anything else. Now we just need to get Brothers and Diehards back in the League.

2022-01-03T08:13:11+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


:laughing: true! :thumbup:

2022-01-03T08:09:48+00:00

GregM

Roar Rookie


most of the cuzzies are over here bro’ so probably helps to remind them where they are from, and when the Warriors win a game they can spout “Un Zuds the Bist bro’!” Beats saying “Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu are the bist bro!”

2022-01-03T08:06:34+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


The stupid part of all of the rhetoric around being mindful not to cannibalise the Broncos supporter and sponsor base, is that every business in expansion accepts cannibalisation of existing outlets in order to gain market share and repel competitors. V’landys knows and understands that, but he’s pushing the line of “plus business” to appease the masses who don’t really understand how expansion should work. Along the way what share you lose from the existing outlet is more than made up by the new one plus you get economies of scale in marketing and things like stadium deals and whole of game sponsorships. And with an overall stronger NRL presence and market share, you make it harder for AFL, Rugby and Football to grow. That said, Redcliffe will eventually be successful. It was just not the best option at the time when Brisbane is crying out for a genuine second Brisbane team.

2022-01-03T08:03:27+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


I still don't understand what the name change from "Auckland Warriors" to "NZ Warriors" was all about. Did New Zealanders not realise Auckland was in NZ? :silly: :laughing:

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