No Cookies
www.dailytelegraph.com.au
Paul Kent:
Andrew Abdo risks following in Todd Greenberg’s footsteps with light Storm punishments
Andrew Abdo’s handling of the Storm white powder scandal came right from the Todd Greenberg manual — and we know how that ended.
If Andrew Abdo bothers to take a look at the path he treads he will see the light, free-stepping footprints of his predecessor Todd Greenberg.
Greenberg was as fluid as they come as a leader, which some admired.
We all know how it ended, though.
Abdo has led the NRL admirably through these past couple of covid years but Tuesday’s punishments of several players, for matters that might interest police, show that when the NRL finally emerges from the weight of Covid there is still a long way to go.
The street corner tip even before the announcement was that the
NRL’s chief executive did not want to punish Melbourne fans by suspending some of the Storm’s better players because, he reasoned, the Storm fans have endured so much already and they deserved to see their stars play.
This was the same frightening logic Greenberg used to lightly punish Parramatta by stripping the Eels of just 12-points for blatantly systematically cheating the salary cap in 2016.
It allowed Parramatta the chance to win the premiership in the very same season they had cheated for advantage — a stain that would never have been overcome — and somehow the outrageousness of that was irrelevant to the then boss.
He thought he was being fair to Parramatta fans.
The tip was that a similarly bizarre rationale was being considered and that is what happened.
Under the NRL’s strange logic, the Warriors might have a right to ask for a please explain.
Among the Integrity Unit sanctions announced, Abdo confirmed that Reece Walsh, the 19-year-old Warriors rookie, was fined $5000 and suspended two games.
Walsh was arrested on the Gold Coast for failing to move on after being ordered to by police and, when later searched at the police station, he was found to have a small bag which he immediately admitted was cocaine.
The following day Reece apologised to Warriors supporters in a Zoom press conference.
Several days later video emerged of Melbourne’s Cameron Munster, Brandon Smith and Chris Lewis in a room with Smith filmed cutting up a white powder on a table in a room full of strangers.
Munster is seen in another video dancing with a bag of white powder in his hand.
The Storm players told the Integrity Unit they have no idea what the powder was. The Integrity Unit, bless them, accepted this.
Their penalty was a one-game suspension — half Walsh received — as well as fines linked to the size of their contracts and an order to undergo an education program.
It took the Storm to finally show Abdo what strong leadership looks like.
On top of the NRL’s sanctions the Storm fined Munster $100,000 (suspended), banned him from drinking for 12 months and have ordered him to rehab, where he starts Wednesday.
The differences in Munster’s treatment was less about finding a punishment publicly acceptable, according to the standards of each office, as it was about trying to drive genuine change.
The Storm know what needs to be done.
They realise Munster is at a vulnerable stage of his career. They realise that unless drastic change happens Munster could be at risk of going the way of so many others who have partied their way out of professional sport.
So the Storm found a punishment to effect change — importantly without adding to the games Munster will miss.
The NRL uncorked one to give the appearance of it.
It shows that what matters in the game as player behaviour becomes an annual event.
The NRL needs a complete overhaul of its disciplinary system to bring it in line with professional standards.
The only punishments that clubs fully respect are those that affect their chances of winning.
The effect is that it will more quickly — and more effectively — force clubs to address their wayward players.
Until the game realises that the strongest way to enforce discipline is by enforcing punishments that can directly impact the team results there will always be a lag between current standards and community commentary.
Instead, the NRL does the exact opposite.
The clubs, headed by their coaches, are best placed to drive the change the NRL wants but are slow for very good reasons.
But until the game enforces a punishment that directly impacts the coach, and the win column, there will always be a lag between expectation and result.
Coaches have always acted out of self interest.
Long before the invention of the Integrity Unit a player urinated under a table at a well-known drinking establishment and security guards swiftly escorted him out.
As whispers began to spread and the League became aware, the coach, known for his discipline, knew immediately what he had to do.
He denied the incident because he needed the player in the side, and then he contacted the establishment in question to see that the security vision was immediately scrubbed.
He knew what the Storm players can now testify to; if it was not on camera, it did not happen.