27 October 2018

Canberra Raiders' balancing act to to keep regional and local fans happy

| Lachlan Roberts
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Canberra Raiders chief Don Furner will sit down with the ACT Government to plan a new agreement regarding GIO Stadium. Photo: Supplied.

The Canberra Raiders are working towards a new agreement with the ACT Government regarding home games in the ACT as the club looks to find the perfect balance to please both regional and local Green Machine fans.

The Raiders will host the Penrith Panthers in Wagga Wagga in the fifth round of the 2019 season after the club signed a two-year deal with the Wagga Wagga City Council to bring NRL matches to the ‘City of Good Sports’.

The agreement will see the Raiders send one of their 12 home games to the Riverina during the 2019 and 2020 season, as the club looks to reconnect with its Riverina fan base. The cost of sending a home game outside the ACT border has the potential to hit the back pocket of the club, regardless of the success of crowds due to their current agreement with the ACT Government.

The 10-year deal to play home games at GIO Stadium states the club has to pay $150,000 in damages for every home game played away from Canberra Stadium, but it remains to be seen if the fee will be enforced or waived away this season.

The decade-long deal expires at the end of next season and Raiders’ chief Don Furner said he will sit down with the government to plan a new deal which may remove the clause about playing all 12 matches in the capital.

“Our agreement expires at the end of 2019 and currently there is a clause in there and we are talking to the government about that,” Furner said.

“They are conscious that the NSW Government invested a lot of money into Canberra in the cross-border agreement and without their support we wouldn’t have got the funding for Braddon. We will sit down and work out a new hiring agreement, which might not have any clause like that in there.”

When asked whether he sees more than one game a season taken to rural areas, Furner said it was a balancing act the club was working on.

“It’s always a fine balance. You don’t want to give away the home ground advantage,” he said. “We do have to balance that with the commercial outcome of having a game that maybe makes a loss at the gate. It is possible that we will have fewer games in Canberra but it is not our preferred position.

“Other cities do approach you all the time with offers but we balance that off with our members and our fans and what is best for our team. At this stage, I couldn’t see more than one but you just never know what is going to happen.”

Support from the Riverina helped the Raiders to secure funding for their new $19 million centre of excellence in Braddon, with the club exploring more options to strengthen its reputation as the country region’s team.

“We have a Riverina academy going and we have had that for a couple of years, but we have been talking to the NSW rugby league about our under-20s team,” he said. “We have talked about maybe having a joint team run out of the Riverina so that just opens us back out to the country area a bit more and it gives kids a better pathway.

“We do feel that we are the country team and we are the only inland team in the NRL. We service the country and see it as our area, so we would like it to be successful.”

Canberra Raiders 2019 NRL draw

  • Round 1 – 17 March: Gold Coast Titans vs Canberra Raiders at Gold Coast, 6.30 pm
  • Round 2 – 22 March: Canberra Raiders vs Melbourne Storm at GIO Stadium, 6 pm
  • Round 3 – 29 March: Canberra Raiders vs Newcastle Knights at GIO Stadium, 6 pm
  • Round 4 – 6 April: North Queensland Cowboys vs Canberra Raiders at Townsville, 4.30 pm
  • Round 5 – 14 April: Canberra Raiders vs Parramatta Eels at Canberra Stadium, 6.10 pm
  • Round 6 – 21 April: Canberra Raiders vs Brisbane Broncos at Canberra Stadium, 4.05 pm
  • Round 7 – 28 April: Manly Sea Eagles vs Canberra Raiders at Brookvale, 2 pm
  • Round 8 – 4 May: Canberra Raiders vs Penrith Panthers at Wagga, 3 pm
  • Round 9 – 12 May: Sydney Roosters vs Canberra Raiders at Suncorp Stadium, 2 pm
  • Round 10 – 18 May: Canberra Raiders vs South Sydney Rabbitohs at Canberra Stadium, 7.30 pm
  • Round 11 – 25 May: Canberra Raiders vs North Queensland Cowboys at Canberra Stadium, 3 pm
  • Round 12 – 1 June: Canterbury Bulldogs vs Canberra Raiders at ANZ Stadium, 7.35 pm
  • Round 13 – 7 June: Wests Tigers vs Canberra Raiders at Western Sydney Stadium, 7.55 pm
  • Round 14 – 13 June: Canberra Raiders vs Cronulla Sharks at Canberra Stadium, 7.50 pm
  • Round 15 – 29 June: Parramatta Eels vs Canberra Raiders at Darwin, 7.35 pm
  • Round 16 – 6 July: BYE
  • Round 17 – 14 July: St George Dragons vs Canberra Raiders at Wollongong, 6.10 pm
  • Round 18 – 20 July: Canberra Raiders vs Wests Tigers at Canberra Stadium, 5.30 pm
  • Round 19- 28 July: Penrith Panthers vs Canberra Raiders at Penrith Stadium, 4.05 pm
  • Round 20 -2 August: New Zealand Warriors vs Canberra Raiders at Mt Smart Stadium, 8 pm
  • Round 21 – 11 August: Canberra Raiders vs Sydney Roosters at Canberra Stadium, 2 pm
  • Round 22 – 17 August: Melbourne Storm vs Canberra Raiders at AAMI Park, 5.30 pm
  • Round 23 – 25 August: Canberra Raiders vs Manly Sea Eagles at Canberra Stadium, 4.05 pm
  • Round 24 – 1 September: Cronulla Sharks vs Canberra Raiders at Southern Cross Stadium, 2 pm
  • Round 25 – 7 September: Canberra Raiders vs New Zealand Warriors at Canberra Stadium, 3 pm

Original Article published by Lachlan Roberts on the RiotACT.

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